Category Archives: 1 Senior Current Issues

Ebola moves – First and Third World reactions

This week Ebola surfaced in New York City and in Mali – two places that could not be further removed from one another.  Reactions has been swift; and markedly different.  Concern is growing in both places.  The quality of health care and ebolainfrastructure of the two locations could not be further apart.  Over the next week, as you pursue American scholarships and European blogs, I want you to stay focused on Ebola in Mali and NYC.

For starters read this blog from the Washington Post.  Make sure to explore all of the links within the post.  They will bring you up to date on the status of each location.   As the week progresses I would like you to find two news stories that deal with ebola in Mali, and two news stories that deal with ebola in New York City.  Print all four and actively read each.  The four active readings will consist of one 80 point assignment to be turned in at the beginning of class on Monday, November 3.

Go here for reminders on the art of Active Reading.

In addition to the active reading requirements,  I will assign you an interactive google docs post that will be due posted to google docs – not to google classroom – by 11:59 PM on Sunday November 2.  Stay tuned here for specific directions for the google docs posting.  I will have it up and posted below (in blue) by Tuesday.

Meanwhile you have the week to dig into blogs and scholarships.  So let’s get moving…

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The Cider House Rules – Senior Current Issues

Loneliness, in fact, is the main subject of The Cider House Rules — that and the notion that people shouldn’t live by rules or destinies prescribed for them by others. Of course, isolation and independence are the yin and yang of living one’s own life, and the places in The Cider House Rules — an orphanage/clinic, an apple orchard — are proudly divorced from the societies they serve. People stay in these places because they have nowhere else to go, and they might as well be someplace where people care whether they live or die. At the orphanage, lives are saved and put on a shelf for possible later adoption. At the orchard, apples are picked and turned into cider, or shipped out into the world like orphans.

by Robert Gonsalves efilmcritic.com

Senior Current Issues Essay – 400 words minimum – due to Mr Wood’s school account google docs by  Sunday Oct 19, 11:59 PM.

PLEASE SHARE WITH bwood@oakridgeschools.org – and use your school gmail account. 

Prompt – As Mr. Rose lies dying,  he says…”sometimes you gotta break the rules in order to put things straight.”  This film is filled with breaking rules and putting things straight.  So many of the characters, for whatever reason, broke rules and set things straight.  Talk to me about those characters and those rules and their lives….  Instead of a list – how bout you do some deep reflective thinking and tell me WHY…

 

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Out of Control

Go here for an extremely thorough report from the Washington Post on how world health organizations failed to stop the Ebola disaster.

Muller_Ebola_SierraLeone_29

 

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Filed under 1 Senior Current Issues, 2 Government, 3 Economics

Bravo to the Federal Republic of Germany – Free College Tuition

Congratulations – Sara and Laura and Sarah and Helena!b23671f0-41b5-11e4-_772194c

Take a look guys...what do we have to do, what do you have to do, to keep the United States from becoming a third world state?  What do we have to do, what do you have to do keep yourself from accumulating thousands of dollars of debt just to get a college  education.  What do you have to do to keep your unborn children from accumulating tens of thousands of dollars of debt, just to get a college education?

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Stop. Look. Listen. What’s going on in Hong Kong? An Umbrella Revolution.

HONG KONG

Please go here  for Friday October 3  Assignments.  

 Wednesday, October 1 – in Senior Current Issues – we used Twitter, Snap Chat, Facebook, and Fire Chat to connect with Chinese students in real time in Occupy Central in the main square of Hong Kong.  8:00 AM Tuesday in Muskegon is 8:00 PM Wednesday night in Hong Kong.   The kids are out there fighting for democracy.   We were there with them.  We tweeted them our photo of support…and spent the hour talking with and learning from and posting with those courageous students from the umbrella revolution.  We love you Hong Kong!

There is something going on in this world people.  And it is being driven by  students.  Different issues, in various regions of the world; young people are beginning to challenge the system.  Bricks in a wall they are not.  Social media, twitter, Facebook, Snapchat, Firechat is spreading the message.

There will a tipping point when you too, will have had enough and question a system that impedes your opportunities for the future.  It may be the cost of college that pushes that envelope; it may be something else.  But change is in the air.  Stop.  Look.  Listen….

Let’s educate ourselves to the events playing out on the coast of China in Hong Kong.  Let us learn…

  • The Umbrella Revolution…
  • (9/2/14) Democracy Now – 8:00 – very good overview /interview
  • (9/29/14) Huffington Post – cell phone video captures tear gas chaos
  • (9/29/14) CNN 2:37 – live on the streets
  • (9/29/14) The World – 4:08 – radio interview live on the streets
  • NPR – news – Firechat connecting with or without cell towers
  • (9/30/14) – BBC News – today video top of article / down the page great short video – Martin Yip “a day in life of protesters”
  • (2/29/30) – Wall Street Journal – 55:00 video walk through Hong Kong central district
  • Facebook posts from Hong Kong – check translations

Hong Kong – “Despite presence of inhabitants in Imperial China, the idea of modern Hong Kong, including its name, geographical and cultural make-up, owes much to the developments during the 155-year British rule. Hong Kong became a colony of the British Empire after the first Opium War (1839 – 42).  The region espoused minimum government intervention  during the colonial era.  The time period greatly influenced the current culture of Hong Kong and the educational system which used to loosely follow the system in England. As a result of the negotiations and the 1984 agreement between China and Britain, Hong Kong was handed over to the People’s Republic of China on 1 July 1997, under the principle of “one country, two systems” It has a different political system from mainland China.”  from Wikipedia

Umbrella-Revolution-Explainer-01


 

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