Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Long Lake


Detroit Lakes, MN








Please respond to two out of the four questions below (200-300 words)

1. What is ecology? and what did you learn about this topic on the pontoon boat today? 

2. what is entomology? and what did you do today that relates to this subject? 

3. Did you wade in the water today? if so, what did you experience in the water? 

4. Share your experience on the boat today. 





Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Buffalo River State Park

Buffalo River State Park

Choose one of the two questions below (250 words)

1. What did you learn about the plants and animals that are found in this area?

2. Did you talk to a Park Ranger? if so, what did you learn about a Park Ranger?


Monday, August 4, 2014

Week 2: Animal shelter

Please answer two of the four questions below: 

1. Compare the animal shelters in your home country with the one you visited today.

2. There are many homeless animals in the world, do you think that Animal shelters are helpful?

3. What did you learn today and how can you use the information you learned within your own life?

4. Do you think that all animals, despite their disabilities have a right to live?


Thursday, July 31, 2014

Week 1: Native Americans

Week 1: Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee

Answer two of the four questions below. Please write 200-250 words.

1. Who is Sitting Bull? Was he a good leader? What makes a good leader?

2. Which character had the most influence in the relationship between the Native Americans and the white people?

3. Why did Charles Eastman struggle with his name? and what was the meaning behind it?

4. What is the current status of Native American groups?

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Week 1: Otis family farm

Otis family farm
Please answer two of the four questions below. (200 words). 


1. How is the profession as a farmer different in the USA compared to the profession of farming in your country? 

2. What did you learn about American culture today? 

3. Did you ask any questions at the farm? if so, what were they? and what did you learn? 

4. How did the Otis family use the cattle on their farm? 

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Welcome American Culture Class! Session 2

Hi Class!
Welcome to American Culture class! It is so nice to meet you! I am looking forward to meeting with all of you each week to enjoy activities that will teach you more about American culture.

You will have class Monday-Thursday at 2pm. Please meet in the lounge.

Have a wonderful session!
Hope :)

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Week 4: Good bye American Culture class 2014

Dear students,
It has been a pleasure to work with you this session, at Collegetown, summer 2014! I hope you enjoyed all of the activities and have learned something new about American culture.

Study hard and always do you best! I hope to see you again.
Sincerely,

Hope
Lead Instructor: American Culture 113
Collegetown 2014
Concordia Moorhead, MN

Please check out the link below. Some of you took a picture with Dorothy from Eventide.
https://www.facebook.com/EventideSeniorLivingCommunities

Monday, July 21, 2014

Week 4: USA Fire Station 1/Moorhead, MN


Moorhead Fire Station 1more info
1120 1st Avenue North

Moorhead, MN 56560
(218) 299-5432




Answer two of the four questions below. 

1. What is the difference between the fire station at Bonanzaville and the fire station you saw today, in Moorhead? 

2. Do you think you could be a fire fighter? why or why not? 

3. How is the fire department different in the USA compared to your country? 

4. Looking at the article, what happened in 1918? and what caused this incident? 



Sunday, July 20, 2014

Week 4: Bonanzaville


Please respond to two of the following questions. (300 words total)

1. What did you learn at Bonanzaville about American culture?

2. How would your life be different if you lived in Bonanzaville? would you enjoy it? would you be happy there?

3. Do you think that the Nazis were correct in their ideologies towards book burning? why or why not?

4. How are Native Americans different from your average American person?

5. What exhibition or house did you like the most? and how does it help you understand how life was like in Fargo, North Dakota 100's of years ago?


Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Week 3: Which activity did you choose?









Describe the activities you participated in today and if they had a great impact on you? Did you talk to anyone from the town of Moorhead? Did you learn anything new today?  (200) words

Monday, July 14, 2014

Week 3: Thanksgiving: Farmers Market

Theme: Thanksgiving

Please go to the following website:
http://www.plimoth.org/learn/MRL/read/thanksgiving-history

                  
Sometime during 1620, a boat filled with more than 100 people (Pilgrims) left England and sailed across the Atlantic in search for new land. They finally found an appropriate destination (present day Massachusetts), and began a new life. The Pilgrims knew farming, and with the help of some locals (Indians) they even learned how to grow various crops. To celebrate their first bountiful harvest and to repay the gratitude of the locals, they organized a huge harvest celebration which is now known as the first Thanksgiving.
Read more at Buzzle: http://www.buzzle.com/articles/thanksgiving-trivia-questions-and-answers.html


1. What are you thankful for?

2. Are there any traditional days like Thanksgiving in your own country? please describe a holiday like Thanksgiving in your own country.

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Week 3: The Rourke Museum

http://www.therourke.org/


______________________________________________________________________________

1. Choose one painting/piece of art to analyze below:
What do you think of this piece of art?






http://www.therourke.org/55th-midwestern.html

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Week 2: Organic farm



http://www.lborganicbeef.com/
Choose two of the four questions:  write 300-350 words. 

1. What is BT corn and how is it harmful? (please refer to the article)


2. Describe your experience at the organic farm. Did you enjoy it? what did you enjoy the most?

3. What is organic production and why should you care? (please refer to the article)

4. How does climate change have an effect on organic products? (please refer to the article)






Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Week 2: Comstock historical house

Comstock House
1882 family home of railroad and academic pioneers. 
http://sites.mnhs.org/historic-sites/comstock-house

Choose two of the four questions. Please write 300 words.
1. Who lived in this house? please describe the family members.

2. Would you like to live during the 1800s in Moorhead? please describe how you would feel.

3. What was the most interesting fact you learned about the house/family?


Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Week 2: Eventide Nursing Home


http://eventide.org



http://gawker.com/brazilian-kids-learn-english-by-talking-to-lonely-chica-1573138921
Please respond to two of the four questions/statements below: 300 words.

1. Describe your experience at the nursing home today. How did you feel interacting with the residents?

2. If this was your first time playing bingo, please explain what you liked about the game and how it helped you to talk with people in English at the center.

3. How are the nursing homes in your country (China or Brazil) different from the one you saw today? here in Moorhead?

4. Would you like to participate in a skype chat with one of the residents? if so, why? and how would this help improve your English?



Monday, July 7, 2014

Week 2: Habitat for Humanity





http://www.lakeagassizhabitat.org/
http://www.habitatbrasil.org.br
http://www.habitatchina.org/eng

file://localhost/Users/mariewojcik/Desktop/giving_default.jpg


Week 2: Service and hospitality 
Please select two of the four questions. (300 words or more)

1. Who started Habitat for Humanity and where is this organization located?

2. What would you like to do when we go to the Habitat house in Moorhead? (paint, clean, plant, build? ect)

3. What did you learn from Pete today? please write about your experience listening to Pete and going to the Habitat house in Moorhead.

4. What can you do to help support Habitat for Humanity in your own country? 

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Week 2:Dorothy Day Food Pantry/Monday: July 7th, 2014

Week 2: Service and Hospitality

Please answer two of the four questions below. You should write 150 words each. 

1. Who is Dorothy Day? what impact did she make on society? Please watch the following video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsJw2S1wJQg

2. What did you learn at the Dorothy Day house? and how can you use what you learned today back in your home country? 

3. How can you help others who are poor in your own country? 

4. Can you name a person from your own country that helps the poor and homeless? if so, how do they help others? 

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Week 1: IDAY: International Day!!!

Please choose two of the four questions: IDAY



1. What did you like most about IDAY? and what can you tell your family and friends back at home about this day? 

2. What does "speak from the heart mean?" please give examples.

3. Please describe one event you were in and how it made you feel? soccer game, IDAY dance, song exchange, food festival. 

4. How did you change from this experience? please give examples. 





Sunday, June 29, 2014

WEEK 1

CRASH-movie

Race and Diversity

Topic: Race and Diversity

Activity: Dialogue and activity based on the movie Crash. 





Answer two questions below. Write 150-200 words. Have fun!

1. What racial incident in the film do you feel may be as impactful as the one told in the poem?
2. Which character in the film bet illustrates through action or dialogue the problem of Double consciousness?
3. What does the story line of Officer Hansen tell the audience about racism?
4. Choose a scene from the movie that you can relate to and express your thoughts on this topic.




Please watch the following videos about the problems of racism and diversity in the US:






Week 1: Hjemkomst – (Yem-komst: Norwegian for Homecoming)

Hjemkomst Viking Ship Replica

Week 1: Hjemkomst Center

Theme: Race and Diversity 

Please read the attached article and answer the following questions: http://www.hcscconline.org/current-exhibits/hjemkomst-viking-ship.

Please respond to two of the three questions with 200-300 words each
1. Name one thing you learned about at the museum today. 

2. Describe the viking ship and the history behind the ship. 

3. Describe the church that you saw today: the history and story behind the church.

4. Would you take a journey on a ship across the world? if so, where would you go?

5. How many trees did it take to build the viking ship and please explain the logging and construction of the viking ship.



ELL 113: American Culture

Summer 2014
Collegetown USA: Concordia Language Villages

___________________________________________________________________________

Class time: Monday-Friday, 2-5pm (Room: 337)

Instructor: Hope Wojcik

Office: Lounge in the Park Region

Office Hours: by appointment



Course Description: 

America Culture prepares students to immerse students in the English language through real world experiential learning using genuine pedagogy. With use of grand simulations, community-based learning, and activity-based environmental learning the class focuses on the process of integrating the theme of College town 2014, “with one heart.”


Required Materials:
Carnes, Jim. US and THEM: A History of Intolerance in America. Teaching Tolerance.
A Place at the Table: Struggles for Equality in America. Teaching Tolerance.
Charles and Pamela Laruel. (2000). Newcomers and the Environment: Advanced Level ESL textbook.

National Geographic Learning DVD: Pathways

Vincent DePaul: Charity saint



Objectives:

By the end of this term, a successful student will be able to do the following:

  1. Understand and appreciate cultural diversity through participation in local community events.  
  2. Develop confidence and cultural sensitivity using the English language by interacting in cultural simulations. 
  3. Respond creatively and critically to issues that transcend national boundaries through panel discussions with international students in America.
  4. Create a personal blog that will be a personal sustainable tool that will be a reflection based of comprehension of the activities throughout the course, and a take home tool that can be used when returning home to their home country.
  5. Promote a worldview of peace, justice, and sustainability for all by serving in local community based projects servicing the poor and the homeless.
  6. Establish a lasting pen pal relationship with the elderly in a local nursing home.
  7. Create a final project based on excursions, simulations and interactions with local community members: sharing their experience through the local TV station, newspapers, or radio stations in the area.
  8. Dialogue with local community activists based on issues of racism and diversity.
  9. Research and take part in an outside lab immersed in the outdoors, learning about the environment and agriculture. (Week 4/5)

    Requirements: To successfully complete this class you must:

  1. Illustrate mastery of the objectives listed above with at least 75% accuracy and complete the final project.  
  2. Be on time for class. Tardiness will be considered missed class time.
  3. Be prepared for class with writing assignments. If you are absent, it is your responsibility to find out what you missed and to do the homework. If you miss a quiz, you must make arrangements to make it up before the next class meeting.
  4. Actively participate in all class discussions and activities.
  5. Show improvement in writing and use of writing strategies with use of a blog.
  6. Do your own work. Plagiarism is using another person’s work, ideas, or words    without giving proper credit (such as quotation marks or stating to whom the work belongs). Using another student’s homework or test answers is unacceptable.  Allowing someone to copy from you is equally unacceptable.  It is cheating and a very serious offense. 
  7. Please turn off your cell phone before each class. Please use the restroom during   breaks so that you do not need to leave the classroom during class.


Evaluation
Simulations/excursions: 60%             
Class participation and homework: 15%
Final presentation: 25%


Schedule: This schedule is tentative and may change during the term depending on the

Weather and availability of excursions.


*Theme of first session: Race and Diversity

Week 1 (6/30-7/04)                

·         Monday: Intro to class; diagnostic testing.

·         Library visit: introducing the topic of a personal blog and preparing questions for the panel

·         Hjemkomst Center: mini lesson before the museum based on heritage and history/international panel: http://www.hcscconline.org/current-exhibits/hjemkomst-viking-ship.


·         *Open mike night: review concept before we go. Raven Espresso Parlor. 7-9. (Students will have a mini open mike night of their own)
       -Saul Williams
       -Ted Talks: Chimamanda Ngozi
·         IDAY: International Day:http://www.concordialanguagevillages.org/internationalday


Week 2 (7/07-7/11)

·         Food bank: Dorothy Day food pantry
Article: In The City of Brotherly Love in US and Them: 1844: A Philadelphia school controversy brings Protestant nativists and Catholic immigrants to blows. Found in A History of Intolerance in America. p.40.

      Habitat for Humanity/visiting the center: taking part in a project: http://www.fargomonthly.com/habitat-humanity


·        Organic farm

*Native American Indian reservation: speaker/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loving_v._Virginia.
http://abcnews.go.com/US/photos/south-dakota-native-american-reservation-nations-poorest-14692959/image
Article: Blankets for the Dead. US and THEM: A History of Intolerance in America. P.14.
Ghost Dance at Wounded Knee. 1890: The Governments campaign to subdue Native American Indians. US and Them: Intolerance in America. P. 58.

·         *Saturday: Service project with the Portuguese village: Project to be determined.


Week 3 (7/14- 7/18)

·         Rourke Museum: Perception’s of racism. http://www.therourke.org/

·         Guest speaker: Fireman/policeman
·         Blog time/update/ speaker: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racial_Integrity_Act_of_1924

·       Thanksgiving/Native Americans/museum 

·         Sound of Music/pre lesson on racism within the play/movie.


Article: Home was a Horse Stall (1942): A young Japanese American woman ponders the meaning of freedom behind barbed wire.
Homework: Article:
A Rumbling in the Mines: 1885: Chinese borders face deadly racial hatred in Wyoming. P. 48
Article: The Ballad of Leo Frank. 1913: A Northern Jew becomes a scapegoat for Southerners’ fears. P. 66.



Week 4 (7/21- 7/25)

·         Churches United: Homeless shelter: http://www.churches-united.org/

·         Create a final project based on excursions, simulations and interactions with local community members: sharing their experience through the local TV station, newspapers, or radio stations in the area.

  ***Simulation: Underground Railroad: key figures.

·         Blog time/update
Homework: Article of religious freedom: Apostles of Liberty
(1768) Virginia Baptists Challenge the State in the name of religious Freedom.

·         Thrift store/bringing clothes: St. Vincent Depaul thrift store.
      St Vincent De Paul Society 1425 1st Ave S Fargo, ND 58103 (701) 235- 5944


Week 5 (7/28-8/1) Theme: Agriculture

 Researching the local environment

·         Visiting a local farm where people are picking vegetable and fruits: mini lesson on Cesar Chavez: http://chavez.cde.ca.gov/ModelCurriculum/Public/Newspaper.aspx

·         Out door lab and research/boat: Concordia Property

·         Guest speaker: Professor from NDSU (Flooding/stilts/land of Fargo/Moorhead area) Donald P Schwert: 701-231-5924.  Donald.schwert@ndsu.edu

·         Local co op: scavenger hunt

·         Library tour/research introduction/introduction of final project/Introduction to blog.
Homework: Article: A Place at the Table: Struggles for equality in America.
The Strike for Three Loaves. Immigrant laborers in a Massachusetts mill town join forces to demand fair pay for a days work. p.54.


Week 6 (8/04-8/8)      

·         Farmers market: By the river/picnic.

·         Buffalo River state park: Chapter 9: Using State Parks in Newcomers and the Environment. p. 81. Activity with DNR.

·         Speaker: Agricultural activist.

·         Library and research time based on their topic

·         Homework: Article: Farming and the safe use of Chemicals in Newcomers and the Environment , Chapter 6 (p. 51).


Week 7 (8/11-8/15)

·         Keep America Beautiful: Recycling center/presentation/speaker: http://www.kab.org/site/PageServer?pagename=recycling_facts_and_stats

·         Tour of the cafĂ©. Blogging/research time

·         Speaker: parks and rec in the area: Beautification project: http://www.cityofmoorhead.com/departments/parks-and-recreation/volunteering

·         Homework: Article: Chapter 2: Recycling in Newcomers and the Environment (p. 11).


Week 8 (8/18-8/23)    

·         Concordia eco house. 

·         Research time in the library

·         Final panel with community rec and environmentalists in the local area.

All students MUST present a final project on what they learned throughout the semester based on what they learned that ties into the theme with one heart based Agriculture/environment.

___________________________________________________________________________


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