12
1 A Glimpse into a Mixed Ethnic Elementary School in Jaffa, Israel Dr. Tamar Margalit Center of Critical Pedagogy, Kibbutzim College of Education April, 2008

A Glimpse into a Mixed Ethnic Elementary School in Jaffa, Israel

  • Upload
    ayame

  • View
    28

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

A Glimpse into a Mixed Ethnic Elementary School in Jaffa, Israel. Dr. Tamar Margalit Center of Critical Pedagogy, Kibbutzim College of Education April, 2008. Outline :. Arab and Jewish Segregation in Schools Jaffa and the Neighborhood The Weitzman School Dilemmas at the School - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

1

A Glimpse into a

Mixed Ethnic Elementary School

in Jaffa, Israel

Dr. Tamar MargalitCenter of Critical Pedagogy,

Kibbutzim College of Education

April, 2008

Page 2: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

2

Outline:

• Arab and Jewish Segregation in Schools

• Jaffa and the Neighborhood

• The Weitzman School

• Dilemmas at the School Trend for Change

• Critical Pedagogy Projects at the School

• Conclusions

Page 3: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

4

Arab and Jewish Segregation in Schools

• 20% of Israeli citizens are Arab citizens

• Segregated educational systems

• Jewish-Arab conflict

Inequality

• Budgets

• Gaps in scholastic achievements

• Preconceived attitudes, fear and animosity

Page 4: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

5

Jaffa

• A part of Tel Aviv metropolis

– Tel Aviv-Jaffa population: 371,400

– Jaffa population: 45,000

• Jews and Arabs (Muslims and Christians)

– Jews: 30,000; Arabs: 15,000 (third are Christians)

• Low socio-economic status

• Historical significance (an ancient port city)

• Gentrification

Page 5: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

6

Weitzman School

• Israeli - Jewish “state school”.

• 316 children (Pre-school – 6th grade).

• 50:50 Arab to Jewish children ratio.

Arab include Christians and Muslims.

• Marginalized community.

Page 6: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

7

Dilemmas at School

Language

Religious holidaysCulture and heritage

Israeli-Palestinian conflict

Identity

Equality

Violence

Low scholastic achievements

Page 7: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

9

Trend for Change

An Experimental Plan:

“Together and Alone”

Previous Change

Language Hebrew Hebrew and Arabic

Culture and Heritage

Jewish Jewish, Muslim Christian

Teachers Jew Jew and Arab teachers together

Page 8: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

10

Critical Pedagogy: Principles and Implementation

From ToFrontal teaching Cooperative

learning, Empowerment

Passive learning,

“Banking” education

Dialogue, relevance, Problem posing

Hidden messages in textbooks

Questions of Social Justice and Peace Education, Problematization

Page 9: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

12

Projects at Schoolby Student Teachers from

the Center of Critical Pedagogy

• Principles: Arab and Jewish student

teachers work together

Multi-aged groups

Children select their projects

Page 10: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

13

Projects at School

• The Projects: Bilingual School magazine

School Design

“I am from Jaffa”

Children’s Rights

Page 11: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

14

Friendships(From the Weitzman school magazine)

Achmed: “There is one boy in the class, his name is Eliraz. He and I are almost like brothers.”

Cristin: “My two friends, Lina and Cristina, and I belong to different religions. Despite this, our friendship iswonderful. I believe that if you want to feel belonging, religious issues don’t matter, what you really feel is in your heart.”

Page 12: A Glimpse into a  Mixed Ethnic  Elementary School in  Jaffa, Israel

15

Thank You

“We are all children of life”

Translation from a painting by children from Weitzman School,

Jaffa, 2008