Monday, October 15, 2007
Mexico School Part 2
What I learned from this section of the article:
1. Text books are provided for free for primary levels of schooling. Grades 7-12 have to pay for their books, similar to the U.S.
2. The grading scale is different than our though. In Mexico, they are graded on a scale of 1-10. Teachers give exams 5 times a year, similar to state testing in the united states, because this exam must cover national curriculum. But then there is an additional national exam at the end of the year. If students score below a 6 on this test, they are required to repeat the grade.
3. The secondary schooling is divided into strict content areas. Grades 7 and 8 curriculum includes geometry and algebra. All 9th grade students must take trigonometry. All students must take a foreign language 3 hours a week. Science is also a requirement but because of the lack of laboratories, it is hard for students to engage in hands-on science. All students take 2 hours of art a week and 3 hours of technology. But again, because of lack of resources, sometimes these are subject to change.
4. By the time high school arrives, students are required to choose a school that will specialize in a certain career option. The school they attend will also prepare them for college, where they will continue to study in the same field.
Mexico School Part 1
It stresses that most educators keep in the front of their mind, the background of their students and where they have come from. This is especially important in San Diego, and specifically at Bell because so many students were born out of the United States. Not only from Mexico, but from other places around the world as well.
Here are some things I found :)
1. The first education law was created in 1867 and it stated that education should be nonreligious, mandatory, and free.
2. Although Mexico has come a long way in creating a school for all children in Mexico, they still struggle with educational failure. Millions of students drop out after primary school, up to 9th grade.
3. Very rural communities struggle with this because the people are indigenous and speak Spanish as a second language. Most of the children only do the required amount of schooling time so that they can help support their families. Unfortunately, this contributes to lowering Mexicos' literacy rate.
The organizational structure is as follows:
Primary school
- Pre-escolar: Federally Funded programs for children ages 4-5.
- Primaria: Schools with grades 1-6 and at aleast one teacher per grade.
- Multigrados: One-room schools with one teacher for grades 1-6 or multigrade schools with several teachers, each teaching more that one grade.
Preschool and Primary
- Pre-escolar: Federally Funded programs for children ages 4-5.
- Primaria: Schools with grades 1-6 and at aleast one teacher per grade.
- Multigrados: One-room schools with one teacher for grades 1-6 or multigrade schools with several teachers, each teaching more that one grade.
High School (Grades 10-12)
- Preparatorias and Bachilleratos: Schools for college-bound youth, where students must choose one of 4 professional areas: physical-mathematics, chemical-biological, economic-administrative, or humanities.
- Tecnnologicas and Comercios: Schools for students who have a particular vocational career in mind.
There is a lot more that I will blog about tonight, but for now, class is over :)
http://www.ericdigests.org/2003-4/mexico.html
Thursday, October 11, 2007
10 tons of cocaine seized in Mexican port town!
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/latinamerica/la-fg-mexico6oct06,1,2033087.story?coll=la-latinamerica
Monday, October 8, 2007
Our interview today! Beyond the Border update
Over all, we got some really good footage and Im glad everything went well.
Bottled Water - How it is effecting our planet (pt. 2)
Worldwide about 2.7 million TONS of plastic is used to bottle water, anually. The most commonly used source for plastic polyethylene terepthalate (PET), which comes from oil. That means that 1.5 billion barrels of oil is used to package water each year. That amount of oil could fuel about 100,000 cares for a year. This wouldnt be such a big problem if people recycled more. Byt some 86% of bottled water is trashed or littered. Plastic can take up to 1,000 years to biodegrade. Thankfully, some companies are trying to take a more earth friendly approach at bottling their water. An example is BIOTA which puts its spring water into an eco-friendly, biodegradable plastic called polylactic acid, which comes from corn. This bottle will only take about 80 days to dissapear, as opposed to 1,000 years. So if youre going to bottle your water, at least think about the earth before yourself.
Bottled Water - How it is effecting our planet.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/02/0224_060224_bottled_water.html
Heres what I got out of it:
Putting a bottle around some water is not only taking unessecary cash out of Americans pockets, its hurting our planet too! It is producing mass amounts of garbage and using a ton of energy. A report by the Earth Policy Institute (EPI) says that the amount of bottled water consumed by the world doubled between 1999 and 2004, reaching an all time high of 41 billion gallons a year. Bottled water is proven to cost more than gasoline! It doesnt make sense that people complain so much about the sky-rocketing gas prices when bottled water is even more expensive! Most of the money that goes into bottled water is through transportation. An example: 1.4 million bottles of a finnish botted water company were shipped to Saudi Arabia, which is about 2,700 miles away. Evian water delivers 60% of its water to destinations across the globe as well. The united states, not so schockingly, is the biggest consumers of bottled water, 7 billion gallons a year, followed by Mexico, China, and Brazil. Although this is true, Italians drink the most bottled water a day, per person; the equivlant of about 2 glasses a day.
Even the The Natural Resources Defense Council, says that there is no assurance that just because water comes out of a bottle, it is any cleaner or safer than water from the tap." A activist group in New York concluded that 25% of bottled water is just tap water, sometimes treated, usually not. In fact, if the water is treated, the amount of chemicals put into the water to "purify it" can actually make it unsafe for babies or younge children to drink it. The only places where bottled water would be a batter alternative to the tap is in 3rd world countries where healthy tap is not available.
Bottled water - An ABC special
"Americans are spending Billions on a drink that is virtually free."
John Stossel reports!
http://abcnews.go.com/2020/Health/story?id=728070
Here is what I got out of this online report:
Many americans claim that they drink bottled water because it tastes better, but what if they filled up a glass of tap water and popped in a few ice cubes? Would it taste the same? 5 brands of bottled water were compared to a sample of tap water from a drinking fountian right smack dab in the middle of New York City. Surprise! There wasnt a single difference, yet Americans are paying 500 times more for their brand name water to be put into a bottle. Did you know that Everest water in fact ISNT transported all the way from Everest? Nope! It's from the oh so refreshing Chorpus Christi, Texas. And Glacier clear water isnt from a glacier in Alaska but is simply tap water that got put into a bottle that fooled millions of Americans into believeing it was "fresher" than the tap. More popular dasani and aquafinas' sources are from scattered cities around the world. A few people off of the streets of New York (Bottled drinkers) were asked to taste samples of 5 different bottled water companies and tap, without knowing which was which. Most of the people liked tap water when they were the ones who claimed tap is "dull and flat." They were asked to rate the water with a good, average, or bad. The K-mart brand or bottled water came in 1st place, Aquifina in 2nd, Iceland Spring and tap tied for 3rd, 5th place, Poland springs bottled water, and in last place, by far, was the chic, overpriced french water; Evian. In conclusion, test after test has showed that bottled water is of equal level on the health scale. And if you are purchasing trendy bottled water such as Evian, you're probably just believeing the social hype, and wasting your money.
Balboa Park - Art
Wiz Kudowor, Wisdom Edinam Kudowor is a contemperary artist from Ghana. He graduated from Ghanas College of Art at the University of Science and Technology in 1981 with flying colors. His work has been sold in individual auctions all over the world. When you first glance at his work, you see his Ghanian culture, and a bit of Africa. If not seen at first glance, if you look a bit deeper, you will find a bit of Africa in every one of his paintings.
Here are some of my favorites :)
Balboa Park - The Mayans
I saw a lot of things that I alread knew from researching the Mayans for Spencers class, but here is some information I gathered from the exhibit:
There were 30,000 - 50,000 subjects in the Mayan society. They were accurate in the areas of mathematics, calander making, and they had a lot of skill and proficiency in architecture.
The mayan civilization began around 1000 BC and collapsed around 900 AD.
Pre Classic Period -> 1100 BC - 250 AD
Classic Period -> 250AD - 900 AD
Post Classic Period -> 900 AD - 1541 AD
The Mayans had the ealiest record of pottery which was in the Pre-Classic Period. Things were found such as; necklaces, bowls and clay figurines. These items gave historians a really good idea about what the following social aspects were like in the Mayan era: daily life, male and female roles, social structure, clothing and rituals.
Today, about 7.5 million Mayans are living and they live over approximately 125 acres of land.
Balboa Park - Copper
The expedition was lead by Professor Levy in 1997. He took a group of college students to Jordan to collect copper. They traveled on the backs of Donkeys and with only the nessesities. They traveled nearly 100 miles just to reach their destination. Most of the copper was found in Faynan (southern Jordan), Timma, and Sinai (both in southern Isreal). The copper they found was completely homogeneous which means pure, hasnt been touched by man. The prosess in which they preserved the copper goes as follows:
1. The copper is crushes using a stone tool in a stone bowl.
2. The crushed copper was then smelted. Smelting is when the copper is put into a small fire and blown on with hollowed out bamboo pipes. The copper has to reach a temperature of 1083 degrees Celcius when it becomes liquid.
This prosess takes 30-45 minutes. Then the copper is left to dry.
In its natural state, copper is a soft, pinkish red, metalic element. When exposed to oxygen though, a thin, blueish green layer of copper sulfate is formed.
Agent Moffit
Thursday, October 4, 2007
Water Quality Project
This website was really helpful because it gave one really strong side of the argument of which is better, tap or bottled. It shares information that is purely factual, and not opinion. It mentions the price of bottled water vs. Tap, and although it favors one side, it still is stating facts. I found it interesting how it said that tap water costs only .003 dollars per gallon while bottled costs between 1 & 4 dollars a gallon. That is one of the may facts shared on this website.
Water Quality Testing
This site gives a direct table comparison of bottled water and tap water. It states the exact requirments of tap and bottled water before they are available to the public.
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Wednesday, October 3, 2007
Water Quality Project
This website gives an example of someone who uses bottled water vs. tap on a daily basis, as a mother taxi driver. It also shares what the standards are for bottled water. Ex: The amount of chemicals allowed in the bottle, the sealant mechanism, and groups that are responsible for monitoring labels and nutrition facts etc. It also asks the question; Is the extra expense of bottled water worth it?
Monday, October 1, 2007
Beyond the border
Here is a link to the longer version of the S.A.R.C. report;
http://studata.sandi.net/research/sarcs/2006-07/SARC302.pdf
The information is overwhelming!
Hopefully we can find a report similar to this one for the Mexico school.
Please let me know if anyone knows anything about a middle school in Mexico, we are really struggling to find one.
Thank you :)