...Article excerpt Introduction In order to achieve America's educational goals, it is imperative that excellent teachers be recruited, prepared, and supported in every school (National Research Council, 1999; Pikulski, 2000). Professional development, as defined by Hassel (1999), is the process of improving staff skills and competencies needed to produce outstanding educational results for students. Teachers are becoming recognized as the centerpiece of educational change; active and powerful change agents who have the power to make a difference, both individually and collectively (Castellano and Datnow, 2000; Hurst, 1999). Reform efforts must address core processes of teaching and learning if they are to markedly change what happens in schools. Teachers must explore implementation of research insights in their own classrooms regarding needs, interest, instructional history, and proficiency of individual students. Teacher beliefs about an innovation, its consequences, concerns, and contextual variables associated with it, are important in determining teacher behavior (Burke et al., 1996; Castellano and Datnow, 2000; Kennedy and Kennedy, 1996; Laine and Otto, 2000; Ros and van den Berg, 1999). Attitude, in conjunction with action, are critical change factors (C. Kennedy and J. Kennedy, 1996). Ultimately, the individual teacher determines the extent to which any innovation occurs. With that in mind, the best teachers never assume they have arrived, but constantly strive to refine...
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...Suki Kim’s story “Facing Poverty With a Rich Girl’s Habits” was published in the New York Times back in November 2004. Suki Kim originally lived in South Korea where her dad owned a pretty reputable company. Things were going pretty well for the family until she entered the seventh grade. Her dad’s lost all of his money in an instant and since bankruptcy was punishable by law in South Korea, they had no choice but to leave their comfortable living style in South Korea and decided to start over in the United States. They ended up moving to Queens, New York in 1983 to a two family brownstone that Suki didn’t find attractive. She was comfortable in the life she had in South Korea that coming to America and moving into a two family brownstone was a shock to her core. It was something that she wasn’t used to. At the age of 13, Suki was trying to adjust to her new life in New York. She began taking public transportation back and forth to her new school. She didn’t have the luxury of having a driver or doing homework with someone watching over her nor was she use to washing her own clothes. She actually found these things embarrassing but I believe she was beginning to understand how she had to live for the time being. She also had to get used to being called ‘Asian’ and the only time she heard that term was when she was in a social studies class. I believe the writer’s purpose was to show you her transition from Korean life (living in a mansion, having personal drivers and governesses...
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...Ballet has entertained and enchanted audiences for over 400 years. Within these centuries of grace and elegance, ballet has branched out into several techniques and styles. Along the way, George Balanchine, accredited for “developing the neo-classical style distinct to the 20th century,” has placed a significant mark on the face of ballet (George). Even after his death in the late 20th century, his disciples, such as Suki Schorer, have preserved and continued disseminating his work. Schorer’s ongoing instruction of his technique at the School of American Ballet, and her book, Suki Schorer on Balanchine Technique, have kept the works and teaching methods of Balanchine alive. Being a great performer does not necessarily equate to being a great...
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...Summary and Personal Response Professor D. Ogden, Ph.D. English 115 Jeremy Hardison April, 13, 2015 In the essay “Facing Poverty with a Rich Girl’s Habits,” author Suki Kim describes how her lifestyle as a wealthy child of a millionaire changed overnight. Due to bankruptcy her father lost everything and being that in Korea bankruptcy is a crime punishable by jail time, her family fled to America. They lived in Queens, New York where they rented a home from another Korean family as she describes queens as “the wild west” (62). An interesting focal in her essay is when she explains her first English word she learned in junior high school which was “F.O.B., short for fresh of the boat” (62). She could not grasp the understanding to why the other kids referred to her that way when her family had flown from Korea to America. She also learned that she was “Asian” and found it to be very offensive because the skin reminded her of the Forsythia flowers that characterized the lower class when she was in Korea. Another interesting key point Kim describes is taking public transportation for her very first time. This was an important moment she defines as she was used to being chauffeured. Without the use of maids she had when her family was rich, she noticed things became seriously messy around the house, and found it to be humiliating to take their dirty clothes to the laundromat. This was a challenge for her because she was accustomed to her princess lifestyle of servants for...
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... October 20, 2013 I feel that Suki Kim was a spoiled child. She had a governess, maid, and a chauffeur when she lived in Korea. She didn’t need anything as she was growing up there. Her father was a millionaire from having a shipping company, a mining business and hotels. Then one day they lost all of their money and had to flee to America. Bankruptcy in Korea had jail time behind it, something that her father didn’t want to go through or put his family through. So they left Korea in the ‘80’s and moved to Woodside, Queens in New York. To what Suki says was an “ugly house” that a Korean family owned that ran a dry cleaners. Their sons, Billy and Andy became her playmates. Suki was picked on from the other Korean children both at home and in school. She felt out of place. Therefore the other students didn’t want anything to do with her kind. They were Koreans, but not Korean American. They would call her FOB, “fresh out the boat,” or “yellow.” Funny because they didn’t arrive in a boat, they flew here in an airplane. Even the rich Koreans that left there and came here moved to Manhattan or Westchester. The children were ashamed of her and her kind. In order for her to learn English, she would watch reruns of “Three’s Company.” “Immigration is meant to be the great equalizer, yet it is not easy to eradicate the class divisions of the old country.” (para. 7 pg. 63) Suki says that, “more brutal than learning English was...
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... By Suki Kim Professor Michelle James English 115 April 18, 2016 The short essay “Facing Poverty with a Rich Girl’s Habit” written by Suki Kim starts out in the early 80’s. Suki and her family came to America from Korea because her father lost his business and in Korea you could be placed in jail for bankruptcy. Suki and her family stayed in a house that belonged to another Korean family. Suki thought the house was ugly. There in the house she met her first playmates Billy and Andy. They spoke English and she learned to speak from them. One of the first term she learned from being around them was F.O.B(Fresh off the Boat). She couldn’t understand what they meant, but she was pretty sure she flew on a plane from Korea. Being in America life changed for her, from having people do things for her such as laundry to her being chaffureffed everywhere. Now she had to do all things as she said “Each week I found it humiliating to wheel out dirty clothes to a bleak place called the laundromat”. (Kim,2002 para.3) Manners and being respectful were taught to all Korean school children, but here in America kids didn’t bow, girls wore skimpy clothing and made out with boys in class. The school also was different, graffiti on the walls, guards at the front doors with metal detectors to check book bags. Suki found that she had...
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...Gordon Theisen Eng. 115 October 20, 2013 I feel that Suki Kim was a spoiled child. She had a governess, maid, and a chauffeur when she lived in Korea. She didn’t need anything as she was growing up there. Her father was a millionaire from having a shipping company, a mining business and hotels. Then one day they lost all of their money and had to flee to America. Bankruptcy in Korea had jail time behind it, something that her father didn’t want to go through or put his family through. So they left Korea in the ‘80’s and moved to Woodside, Queens in New York. To what Suki says was an “ugly house” that a Korean family owned that ran a dry cleaners. Their sons, Billy and Andy became her playmates. Suki was picked on from the other Korean children both at home and in school. She felt out of place. Therefore the other students didn’t want anything to do with her kind. They were Koreans, but not Korean American. They would call her FOB, “fresh out the boat,” or “yellow.” Funny because they didn’t arrive in a boat, they flew here in an airplane. Even the rich Koreans that left there and came here moved to Manhattan or Westchester. The children were ashamed of her and her kind. In order for her to learn English, she would watch reruns of “Three’s Company.” “Immigration is meant to be the great equalizer, yet it is not easy to eradicate the class divisions of the old country.” (para. 7 pg. 63) Suki says that, “more brutal than learning English was facing...
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...teacher, Suki Kim, going to teach at the Pyongyang University of Science and Technology. She had no freedom while in North Korea, she was always under surveillance and could never voice her opinions. North Korea is known for being isolated from the rest of the world, they are locked in. No one has a complete understanding of what it happening in North Korea, except the citizens who live there. Suki wrote to book to enlighten people around the world what it’s like in North Korea.. Suki wants to share her experience and tell everyone what it’s really like. Since Suki didn’t grow up in North Korea, she doesn’t understand how they think, in...
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...“Facing Poverty with a Rich Girl’s Habits” by Suki Kim, recounts the real-life experience Suki endured when she and her family were forced to migrate from Korea to America in the early 80s. In Korea, bankruptcy resulted in jail time, so when her millionaire father fell on hard financial times, the only other option was to leave behind the only home Suki and her family knew. Raised in a luxurious mansion until she was in the seventh grade, and adapting to a second floor apartment in a Queens, New York brownstone did not come easy. She described the apartment as, “a cramped and ugly place” (2011, p.62). Suki revisited the humiliation she felt having to wash her own clothes at a laundry mat every week and also how it felt to be referred to as an Asian for the first time. When she was thirteen, is when she experienced her first taste of culture shock. Not only did she not know English, but she also had to become familiar with the lack of formalities at her American public school. In Korea she was accustomed to bowing in front of teachers and wearing slippers to prevent from dirtying the floor. Students lip locking in class during attendance and graffiti covered walls were just inconceivable. Her only solace in school was when she got to go to her E.S.L “English as a second language” class. There she was able to converse with other students in her first language and because they had similar situations as her, she didn’t feel as alienated. She soon noticed that there was a...
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...“Facing Poverty with a Rich Girl’s Habits” Ariel Terrell Professor Kimberly,Sinott ENG 115 January 25, 2013 “Facing Poverty with a Rich Girl’s Habits” By: Suki Kim Reading this essay Suki Kim examined about how you should never get adequate with your style of living because it can change spontaneously. She had to get a mindset that she was no longer going to live in a lifestyle like she did in Korea. She had it utterly made living in Korea. She was treated rich in Korea, but suddenly this flickered. She went from being rich to poor and now she was facing paucity. She had to learn and accept that this is the change and lifestyle she must grow into. One thing I realize is even though she moved to an American State, she will would still abide the same race and she couldn’t change what was within her anima. She also had to comprehend that just because she to move to New York, did not mean she had to change the way she have faith in or her civilization. As she went to high school, she quoted, “Yet it did not take me long to realize that the other students and I had little in common.”( Roen, D., Glau, G., & Maid, B. (2011).). Suki Kim was facing the same thing kids from her school were facing. I trust Suki Kim main purpose in writing this essay is she wanted to explain that she cultivated tough situations conforming to what it was like living in America than living in Korea. She had to realize that how she was living in Korea is not going to be same living in America...
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...Response By cause of unforeseen circumstances, Suki and her family are forced to give up their "fairy tale" life in South Korea. In her essay “Facing Poverty with a Rich Girl’s Habits,” Suki Kim (2011, p. 62) shares some of the struggles of fitting in that she endures after moving to America. Due to the financial collapse of her father’s businesses and the option of bankruptcy being out of the question, Suki and her family are forced to abandon their extravagant life in South Korea. After arriving in America, the family takes up residence in Queens, New York (Kim, 2011, p. 62). Suki’s new home is anything but glamorous. She describes it as “a crammed, ugly place” compared to the “hilltop mansion” where she grew up. For the first time in 13 years, she has to make her way through the day-to-day routines without the aid of the hired help. Aside from being stripped of her pampered lifestyle, Suki is now attempting to knock down the language and cultural barriers that separate her from her peers. In her new school, Suki is enrolled in an English as a Second Language class. With this class comes the opportunity for Suki to converse with fellow students in her native language. However, in the midst of these common bonds is also the obvious distinction of social status (Kim, 2011, p. 63). America is most often looked upon as a melting pot where all are welcome with the expectation of being treated equally. It doesn’t take long for Suki to realize that this is not always the case...
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...Strayer University April 16, 2012 ‘Facing Poverty With a Rich Girl’s Habits’ The main topic of this article is about a South Korea girl name SUKI KIM who was use of being a millionaire in South Korea with her father‘s own his on business and living in a mansion.’’ Kim father had lost has business. Because of bankruptcy, bankruptcy in South Korea was punishable by jail term, so they were force to flee without any money to America and forces to live in poverty’’( Suki Kim,2004, p1). Kim was force to take the public transportation to school not a chauffeur. She had to do her own work not with a governess helping her. Kim did not have a maid, so she had to do all her cleaning. When Kim came to America she and her “family first home was upstairs of a two-family brownstone in Woodside.” Queens Boulevard was F.O.B: short for “fresh off the boat” (Suki Kim, 2004, p.1). She had to learn how to adjust to American school because in Korean schools they were taught to how to teachers at every turn. When she came to America she had to have E.S.L. English as a second language. Kim “watched reruns of Three’s Company” in attempt to learn English” (Suki Kim, 2004.p.3). Before the year was over, her parents moved them out of the neighborhood in search of a better job, housing and education. In a conclusion, this article was about a women named Suki Kim, a women forced to move to America and learn how to live in poverty as a poor girl not a rich girl that was used of live good in South Korea...
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...girl’s habits is an essay written by Suki Kim. This essay is about a young girl and her struggles to be accepted in the American culture as a Korean immigrant. One would view the most important point of this essay is understanding the shock Suki kim and her family went through adjusting from their extravagant life style, to working class, even being considered lower class family. Suki kim had to realize what life would be like living in America without the comforts of money, maids, chauffeurs and tutors at her side at all times. Suki Kim was thrown into a world she had never known before, coming to America in 1983, a teenager that had lived in Korea until that point. She was facing and seeing things that would be hard for her to understand and she would face challenges that she would work hard to overcome. One of the important facts of this essay about Suki Kim is the complete difference in culture she faced. She came from a country and a world of luxury and wealth, to living in a two-family brownstone house in Woodside, NY. Kim herself said the house was a “crammed, ugly place”. Suki reflected on the differences she saw in her school in Korea and the new school she went to in America. She said the children in Korea were taught to bow at their teachers to show respect, they would wear slippers in the building to keep the floors clean, a big difference from the graffiti filled walls and policeman guarded gate of her new school. As Suki Kim didn’t know English she was put...
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...FACING POVERTY WITH A RICH GIRL'S HABITS Suki Kim was born in south America from a millionaire father. Until she entered to seventh grade, she growing up in a hilltop manison. After her father lose everything, they escape to America with no money. Suki kim starts to live with a Korean family in extremely unattractive and unpleasant house. Their sons Andy and Billy becomes her playmates,but they could not understand each other because of understanding. They spoke English and she did not. She learned the first English word at the junior high, and it was '' fresh off the boat '' . she learned because some kids call her that word. For the first time Suki Kim took a public transportation instead of being driven by a chauffer, and she start to do her homework by herself. So she realized that thing become complicated and unpleasant to deal with if no maids were around. Suki Kim found Americas students unlike students in Korean school. The Korean students are humbles and respectfully for their teachers, when the teacher entered to the classroom no one batted an eye. And they wore slippers to keep the school floor clean, but in America the walls were covered with graffiti. She got Korean classmates in English as a second language class. Most of them was from poor families. They who huddled in the E.S.L class grew up to represent the so called 1.5 generation. Many of them came to America in their teens. So they are 100 percent American on paper but not quite in their soul. She needs to...
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...FACING POVERTY WITH A RICH GIRL'S HABITS Suki Kim was born in south America from a millionaire father. Until she entered to seventh grade, she growing up in a hilltop manison. After her father lose everything, they escape to America with no money. Suki kim starts to live with a Korean family in extremely unattractive and unpleasant house. Their sons Andy and Billy becomes her playmates,but they could not understand each other because of understanding. They spoke English and she did not. She learned the first English word at the junior high, and it was '' fresh off the boat '' . she learned because some kids call her that word. For the first time Suki Kim took a public transportation instead of being driven by a chauffer, and she start to do her homework by herself. So she realized that thing become complicated and unpleasant to deal with if no maids were around. Suki Kim found Americas students unlike students in Korean school. The Korean students are humbles and respectfully for their teachers, when the teacher entered to the classroom no one batted an eye. And they wore slippers to keep the school floor clean, but in America the walls were covered with graffiti. She got Korean classmates in English as a second language class. Most of them was from poor families. They who huddled in the E.S.L class grew up to represent the so called 1.5 generation. Many of them came to America in their teens. So they are 100 percent American on paper but not quite in their soul. She needs to...
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