dimecres, 22 de juliol del 2015

Understanding information, understanding Ireland


On the first day we were in Dublin, the Yellow Shirts of the CES School offered a tour trough the main visit places in Dublin. One of them was the statue of O'Connell, in the O'Connell street.
He has been a very important person in the history of Ireland. And I took a very bad photo of him.

I would like to know more about him. Today, I have discovered some things about him  with my collegues in the class.

Reconstructing history
Samantha, the teacher, has projected some images from the history of Ireland, in order to warm up our knowledges (in my case, very few) about the history of Ireland. Then, she hanged different parts of the history of Ireland all around the class, divided in small texts. He has told us to work in groups of three, and has given us the first part of one of the chapters of the history of Ireland. Each group has had to search the following paragraphs, to decide the order of the entire text, and to take notes about it, in order to be able to retell the story.
Then, he has numbered each person of the group (1, 2, 3), and all the 1's, the 2's and the 3's has formed three different groups, in which each person knows a different part of the story of Ireland, and tells it to de rest of the members of the group.

This exercise combines two types of reading: skimm-reading and scann-reading. To put the paragraphs together, a skin reading is enough, but to be able to take notes and retell the story with the owns, you have to scann the text, to pay attention to the details, the names, the dates, etc.

The running dictation
With Stuart, we have practiced a tipe of exercise named Dictogloss. Instead of the teacher, there is one student in each group who has to read sentences from a text and retell them to a second member of the group, who retells them further to a third, and this to the fourth, who writes the sentences. It's funny to compare the result with the original text.
This activity combines perfectly the different learner types: linguistic, logical, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal, and intrapersonal.

Understanding Ireland
In the afternoon, we visited the prison of Kilmainham in Dublin, where unfortunately happened some parts of the history of this nice people, the irish people. Many Irish revolutionaries, including the leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising, were imprisoned and executed in the prison by the British, and in 1923 by the Irish Free State, during the Irish Civil War.


It was constructed in the form of a panopticum, as the philosopher Jeremy Bentham conceived. He thought that human beings don't know what is good or bad, but they do know what is pleasant and what is painful. So both are the instruments to educate and control the humans.


 About the prisons in general, we could ask some more questions that would make us think, speak, and maybe understand some things about human beings...




Cap comentari:

Publica un comentari a l'entrada