Souad 153 reflect

*** no AI

**the student is from Iraq

Discussion #1-Reflecting on Your Upbringing

This week you will begin to reflect on biasand how it is formed. This requires us to reflect on our own upbringing.

Take some time to reflect on the questions below before you begin to write your post. There are no right or wrong answers to the questions in this assignment. It is important to think about how your upbringing made you the person you are today.

We ALL have bias, it is unavoidable to be a human and not have conscious or unconscious bias. Our goal as teachers, or future teachers, is to confront our bias and to be role models for working on ourselves to become more accepting. As a teacher, you will work with all types of people and you’ll need to be able to work as a team with any parent for the benefit of their child.

IMPORTANT! It is up to you to reveal as much or as little as you are comfortable with here. The purpose of this discussion is for YOU to think more deeply about how you have become the person you are today. Our parents, home culture, our religious training, the economic circumstances we grow up with, our home language and our experiences as a child, and much more combine to make us who we are.

The following questions are only for you to think about and consider. You do not need to respond to each question. After you spend this week thinking about these questions and how you have become the person you are today, please answer the questions at the bottom of this discussion assignment by the due date. It is optional to reply to your peers this week but you may if you choose to.

GENERAL MESSAGES-Reflection questions only

  • Where geographically were you were born or adopted?
  • Did you grow up in a traditional or nontraditional family? Same sex parents, single parent, blended family, raised in foster care, or by a grandparent or guardians, or in a two parent family.
  • Your parent(s) racial and ethnic background(s)if known
  • The number of siblings you grew up with
  • Was your first language English or other?

FAMILY MESSAGES-Reflection questions only

  • What messages were you given by the people in your immediate family and extended family members about your abilities, your challenges and your appearance?
  • What did/does your family value? These core values are often about what is very important in the family.
  • How did these spoken or unspoken messages affect you as a child? How do they affect you today?
  • Do you still hold these same values today? If not what changed?
  • Were you told by parents or extended family members to avoid any particular group or type of person as a child?
  • Did you ever begin to question your parent’s views about people who looked or behaved or believed differently?

MESSAGES FROM YOUR WIDER COMMUNITY-Reflection questions only

  • What do you recall about your personal experiences related to how you were treated by others in your community, school, religious organization, or other social groups?
  • Was there any social/societal group that you were part of where you did not feel socially, emotionally or physically safe or accepted for who you are? What were the circumstances and how did you deal with this?
  • How do you think the messages you received as a child impacted you in your life choices and personal development?
  • Did you ever experience mistreatment or bullying in school based on your appearance, your characteristics or who you are in terms of racial, ethnic, cultural identity, your abilities, your gender your sexual orientation or other?
  • Did you discuss the mistreatment with others? What was the result?
  • Did you ever notice others being bullied? What was the reason this person was targeted by bullies? What did you want to do about this?
  • Did you ever see anyone stand up to a bully? What was the situation? Have you personally ever stood up to a bully?

PERSONAL REFLECTION/CONCLUSION -Required discussion questions

After spending some time thinking about the questions above, answer the following discussion prompts.

  1. What question or questions above impacted you when you were thinking about them?
  2. Did anything come up in your memory while thinking about your childhood or upbringing?
  3. Is there anything that happened as a child that you as a teacher or educator would want to help children in your classroom deal with?
  4. Did you identify any personal bias in yourself that was part of your upbringing? How do you feel about it? Is it a bias you want to work to change?
  5. Is there anything you want to share about your experience reflecting on these questions?

Word Count” 150-200 words

Example 1

BIAS: HOW IS IT FORMED?

As a Muslim person I grew up with bias related to my religion, those biases were the base of my upbringing in my childhood. I tough a lot about all the questions which were related with religion, because sometimes you do not want to follow certain rules or beliefs from your religion, in my case, the dress code I needed to follow when I was younger and when I used to live in Iraq.

As a teacher I would love to help children to feel secure in all the aspects, I am mother of three beautiful kids, so my biggest wish is to make all children feel listened to, feel that they really matter, does not care anything more, kids really deserve a good treat and education.

Currently I do not have bias which can result negative in my process of being an instructor, but I really hope a lot from parents and children, I mean, I would like to include all of them in a process where they do not result as the negative factor, no problems, non-sense complains, etc. About this I do not feel always comfortable, but I would not like to change it, I think I can really achieve an environment where everyone acts according totheir values.

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Example 2

.While thinking about these questions, I saw how my childhood helped shape who I am today. The questions about family and school impacted me the most. I was born in Southern California and raised in Mexico in a traditional family. Spanish was my first language, and I learned English in school. Growing up in Mexico helped me learn a lot about family, culture, and community. My family taught me to be respectful, work hard, and be kind to others. They also taught me to help family members and stay close as a family. These values are still very important to me today.

When I thought about my childhood, I remembered times in school when I felt left out or not understood. I also saw other kids being treated unfairly or judged. In Mexico, I also saw how some children did not have the same opportunities in school. These experiences helped me understand how important it is for children to feel safe, accepted, and supported at school.

Reflecting on bias helped me see that some of my ideas come from what I learned growing up and from my culture and environment. I want to keep learning and try to be more open, fair, and understanding with everyone. This activity reminded me why I want to be a teacher who creates a caring, safe, and welcoming classroom for all children.

Requirements: Follow

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