Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Learning English with CBC Listening Lessons for Intermediate Students Based on CBC Manitoba Radio Broadcasts October 11, 2013 Lesson 91: Teacher’s Edition Level: CLB 5 and up Topic: Cross Cultural Adoption Language Skills and Functions: Listening – listening to a short interview for main ideas, detail and implied meaning Speaking – expressing opinions Reading – reading a text/completing a chart Writing – writing a paragraph Language Competencies: Language Tasks: Vocabulary, Pronunciation, Listening and Speaking Strategies, Socio-cultural/sociolinguistic Competence Expressing opinions on cross cultural adoption Using new vocabulary in context Listening to an interview on cross cultural adoption for main ideas, detail and implied meaning Using conjunctions in parallel structures to describe a situation Reading a news story on a cross cultural adoption court case for fact and opinion Summarizing key information about people’s positions on cross cultural adoption on a chart Writing a paragraph to express an opinion about the ruling of the adjudicator on a cross cultural adoption case Essential Skills: Reading text, working with others, oral communication, writing Worksheets1: 1. Expressing Opinions on Cross Cultural Adoption 2. Using New Vocabulary in Context 3. Listen for Main Ideas, Detail and Implied Meaning 4. Using Conjunctions in Parallel Structures to Describe a Situation 5. Read for Fact and Opinion 6. Summarize Key Information on a Chart 7. Write a Paragraph on Your Reaction to the Adjudicator’s Decision Appendices: 1 Transcript of the podcast CBC story: Manitoba/Filipino parents fight to keep part Métis foster child Answers to worksheets are in the self-study version of the lesson plan. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 1 of 19 Manitoba Memo This lesson is about two points of view. The first is that no Aboriginal child should ever be adopted permanently by a non-aboriginal family. The second is that no child, aboriginal or non-aboriginal, should be moved from a foster family where a strong emotional attachment has been formed. The principle of child welfare is that decisions should be made in the best interests of the child. However, as these two points of view indicate, not everyone agrees on what defines a child’s best interest. It can be difficult for the non-aboriginal population to understand why a First Nations or Métis agency would object to an aboriginal foster child being adopted into a loving, non-aboriginal family. To understand the agency’s position, you have to understand aboriginal people’s history and experience. There have been two wide scale attempts to remove aboriginal children from their families and communities in the past two centuries. The first was through the residential school system. It operated in Canada from the late1800‘s until the1950’s. Residential schools tried to assimilate thousands of aboriginal students into the English mainstream by taking young people from their communities and placing them in boarding schools. The trauma, abuse and loss of identity that came out of the residential school experience still affect the well-being of many aboriginal families today. In the 1960’s, a lesser known event took place. This second historical event is referred to as the sixties scoop. During the 1960’s and 1970’s child welfare agencies removed large numbers of aboriginal children from their parents and communities. It is difficult to know just how many children were affected but one study estimated that a Manitoba aboriginal community of 800 people lost 150 children to adoption between 1966 and 1980. In many instances, children were apprehended without the knowledge or consent of their extended families. Newborns were literally “scooped” from their mother’s arms. The rationale for the sixties scoop was primarily economic. Many aboriginal families lived in poverty and housing conditions were sub-standard. The child welfare system assumed aboriginal children would be better off if they were adopted by white middle class families in Canada and the United States. While some children adapted well to their new families and communities, others grew up feeling torn between two cultures. A high percentage of adopted families broke down. Many adoptees faced psychological problems, violence, physical and sexual abuse, and drug or alcohol abuse. Some studies speculate that the high failure rate of these adoptions was because adoptive parents did not understand the racism and discrimination their children faced. Since that time, laws have changed and the child welfare system has been restructured. Aboriginal agencies have far greater responsibility for the care and protection of aboriginal children and families. The caseloads of these agencies are high as a majority of children in care in Manitoba are aboriginal. It can be difficult to find culturally appropriate foster care and adoptive parents for all of the children who need a home. In an ideal world, all children would remain with their families of origin. In the real world, the next best option may be to ensure that every child in the system has the right to a family with a lifelong commitment to them. And all children have the right to their identity and to maintain connections with their extended family and cultural community. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 2 of 19 Pre-listening activities 1. Expressing opinions and arguing positions on cross cultural adoptions Ask student to work in small groups. Hand out Worksheet 1 and review it with the class. 2. Vocabulary Elicit or present key vocabulary that students need to understand prior to listening to the podcast (see suggested vocabulary and explanations which follow). You can write the words on the board and elicit possible meanings from the class or break students into groups and give each group a few words to review. Groups can then present the vocabulary to the rest of the class. You can also ask students to mark the syllables and stress for each word, identify word families and practise pronouncing the words. You may want to ask students to think of sentences that use the new vocabulary. If your students keep a vocabulary journal, they can copy the vocabulary into their journal. Vocabulary a foster parent A foster parent is someone who agrees to take someone else’s child into their life/family for a period of time, without becoming the legal parent of that child. to adopt a child If someone adopts a child, they agree to take someone else’s child into their home and become that child’s parent/legal guardian. Métis The Métis are one of Canada’s aboriginal peoples. The original Métis people were born from the marriages of Cree, Ojibwa and Salteaux women, and the French and Scottish fur traders. Later, Métis ancestry expanded to also include Scandinavian, Irish and English settlers. The word Métis means “to mix”. Métis Child and Family Services Manitoba has established Métis Child and Family Services agencies to support Métis children and families and protect children from situations that could harm them. The services and programs the agencies offer are culturally appropriate. to be culturally appropriate If a service is culturally appropriate it means that it is sensitive to the different needs and traditions of different cultures. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 3 of 19 cross cultural adoption Cross cultural adoption refers to situations where the child being adopted and the adoptive family come from different cultures/races. assimilation Assimilation is a process by which members of an ethnic minority group lose the cultural characteristics that distinguish them from the dominant cultural group or take on the cultural characteristics of another group. For example, Aboriginal people were assimilated into the dominant culture against their will through the residential school system. the sixties scoop The sixties scoop describes a time in the 1960’s and 1970’s when large numbers of aboriginal children were removed from their homes and their birth parents. These children were adopted by white middle class families in Canada and the United States. Many lost their language and culture and a high percentage of these adoptions broke down. Caucasian Someone who is Caucasian is part of the race of people who have white or pale skin. quote unquote The phrase “quote unquote” is used in spoken English. Use of this phrase tells the listener that the speaker would use quotation marks if the word or phrase was in writing. Saying “quote unquote” can mean you are actually quoting a source, or it can be used to draw attention to the word or phrase you are using. Inuk/Inuit The Inuit are a group of culturally similar peoples who come from the Arctic regions of Greenland, Canada, the United States, and Russia. They were the first peoples to live in those regions. Inuit is a plural noun. The singular form of the noun is Inuk. to track down If you are searching for someone or something, we say you are tracking them/it down. For example: Nicki looked for her birth mother and was able to track her down. a birth mother or birth family Someone’s birth mother is their natural or biological mother. Their birth family consists of their birth mother, father, siblings etc. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 4 of 19 the nature versus nurture debate The nature versus nurture debate has been going on for a long time. The debate centers on whether a person’s genetics (the genes they inherit from their birth parents) or the environment in which they grow up has greater influence on the person they become. It is generally accepted today that behavior and development are influenced by both nature and nurture. a child in care A child in care is a child who is temporarily or permanently removed from their home by a Child and Family Services Agency. That agency becomes responsible for caring for the child, working with the family so the child can return home, or finding alternative placement for the child through foster care and adoption. MMF MMF is the acronym for the Manitoba Métis Federation. This organization works on behalf of Métis people to promote, protect and advance the political, social and economic interests of its members. in the same breath This expression means “at the same time.” For example, you can support someone’s argument but in the same breath (at the same time), you understand what the other side is saying. a bunch of dynamics A bunch of dynamics is an expression that means a lot of things are going on at the same time which may affect the process and/or the outcome. Michif Michif is the language of the Métis. 2. Developing vocabulary using new words in context Hand out and review Worksheet 2. Ask students to work with a partner to complete it. Take up the answers as a class. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 5 of 19 3. Predict what the interview is about In this interview Marcy Markusa interviews Nicki Batzel. Nicki is Inuit and she was cross culturally adopted as an infant. In the interview, she tells Marcy about her own experience. Ask students if they can predict what Marcy will ask Nicki. Here are some examples of what she could ask: I think she’ll ask…if she had a happy childhood. Maybe she’ll ask … if she knows anything about her birth family. I don’t think she’ll ask…if she knows why her birth mother gave her up for adoption. I wonder if she’ll ask…if Nicki thinks she would have been better off in an aboriginal family. While-listening activities 1. Introduce the podcast Tell students that in this podcast, they will hear two speakers. They will hear: Marcy Markusa – host Nicki Batzel – Winnipeg resident who was cross culturally adopted as a child Play the podcast for the first time. 2. Listen for detail, main ideas and implied meaning Handout Worksheet 3 and review it with students. Ask students to work with a partner to complete it. Play the podcast as many times as needed. Take up the answers as a class. After-listening activities 1. Review pre-listening predictions Ask students if they were able to predict what Marcy asked Nicki about her own experience. Extension activities 1. Use conjunctions in parallel structures to describe a situation Handout and review Worksheet 4. Ask students to work with a partner to complete it. Take up the answers as a class. 2. Read for fact and opinion Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 6 of 19 Handout and review Worksheet 5 and Appendix A. Ask students to work with a partner or small group to read the news story and complete the worksheet. 3. Summarize Key Information about Positions on Cross Cultural Adoption on a Chart Handout and review Worksheet 6. Ask students to work with their group to complete it. 4. Write a paragraph to express an opinion about the adjudicator’s ruling on the case Handout and review Worksheet 7. Ask students to work individually to complete it. Want to know more…. The background for the Manitoba Memo is from the following sources: CBC archives has a video on the sixties scoop: www.cbc.ca/archives/discover/programs/o/our-native-land-1/stolen-generations.html This news story talks about the number of foster children in Manitoba: www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/highest-rate-of-foster-kids-here-209302811.html A good review of how Manitoba’s child welfare system has evolved is in a 2010 report by Carrie Bourassa of Infinity Consulting. It’s called Final Summary Review of the Manitoba Child Welfare System for the Saskatchewan Child Welfare Review: http://saskchildwelfarereview.ca/final-report.htm This article by Sandra Scarth raises good questions about cross cultural adoption. It’s called Straight Talk About Aboriginal Children and Adoption was published in the Caring Network News Newsletter Summer 2005: www.cfncs.com/downloads/summer-05.pdf Other websites of interest: These two government of Manitoba websites have information on foster care: www.gov.mb.ca/fs/childfam/fostercare.html www.manitobaparentzone.ca/becoming-a-parent/fostering/ More information of Métis Child Child, Family and Community Services is found on their website: www.metiscfs.mb.ca/ CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external websites Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 7 of 19 Worksheet 1: Expressing Opinions on Cross Cultural Adoption Think about the laws and traditions around adoptions in your community. Read and think about the following questions. Discuss with your group. Do you have the listening and speaking skills to participate in a discussion on a familiar topic? Can you give your opinion and argue your point? 1. When children are adopted in your community are there specific laws dictating that the adopting family must be the same culture or religion as the child? 2. Do you think that children should be adopted by parents who are the same culture? The same religion? Why or why not? 3. What other factors should be considered when placing a child for adoption? 4. Should race or culture be the first consideration when deciding where to place a child? Why or why not? Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 8 of 19 Worksheet 2: Using New Vocabulary in Context It is important to understand the vocabulary you hear around you. Practise some of the vocabulary items that you will hear in the newscast. Listen to the context that the vocabulary is used in. Watch for clues. This will help you understand new vocabulary. foster parents Métis cross cultural adoption nature versus nurture Caucasian track down assimilation adoption Look at the words in the box and choose the correct vocabulary item to match each definition. Then use the item to complete a sample sentence. 1. (people who are employed by the government to provide care for children who can’t be with their birth family) foster parents Two Winnipeg foster parents have cared for a young child since he was 6 months old, because he can’t be with his birth family. 2. (aboriginal Canadians who have mixed ancestry, e.g. French and Cree) ________ However, the child is ______________ and the foster parents are Filipino. 3. (a legal arrangement where someone takes someone else’s child into their home and becomes that child’s legal parent(s)) ________ While there are similarities between foster parenting and ______________, foster parenting is usually a short term relationship while adoption requires a long term legal commitment. 4. (when the child being adopted and the family adopting the child come from different racial/cultural backgrounds) ______ ______________ __________ As a result, the Métis Child and Family Services Agency does not agree with this ______ ______________ __________ and wants the boy to be placed with a Métis family. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 9 of 19 5. (a process where members of a minority ethnic group lose cultural characteristics that distinguish them from the dominant cultural group) _________________ In the 1960s, many aboriginal and Métis children were placed with non-aboriginal families. This _______________________ broke apart families and was a form of cultural genocide. 6. (people who have white or pale skin) _________________ In this interview, Nicki tells us that as an Inuit child she was adopted by a __________________ family, but she always knew that she was Inuit. 7. (to try to find someone) ___________ ____________ Nicki was able to ________ _________ her birth family and get to know them. 8. (the name of a debate about whether children are influenced more by genetics inherited from their parents or by the environment in which they grew up) ___________ ____________ ___________ Most experts believe that there is no simple answer to the ________ _________ __________ debate. They believe that a child’s behavior and development is influenced by both. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 10 of 19 Worksheet 3: Listen for Detail, Main Ideas and Implied Meaning Listen to the CBC interview with Nicki as Marcy interviews her on the topic of cross cultural adoption. Do you have the listening skills to identify factual details, main ideas and implied meanings? Read each statement and decide if it is true or false. 1. The two Filipino foster parents would like to adopt a Métis child. True False 2. This would be an example of cross cultural adoption. True False 3. Attitudes toward cross cultural adoption have changed very little since the 1960’s and 1970’s. True False 4. Nicki was in foster care for five years before she was adopted. True False 5. Nicki always knew she was Inuk. True False 6. Nicki felt it was important for her to get to know her birth parents. True False 7. Her adoptive parents were supportive of her efforts to track down her birth parents. True False 8. Nicki believes she would have been better off if she had been adopted by an Inuit family. True False 9. Nicki thinks culture should be the only consideration in adoption. True False 10. Cross cultural adoption is a complex topic. True False Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 11 of 19 Worksheet 4: Using Conjunctions in Parallel Structures to Describe Situations We use conjunctions in many ways. One way is to connect phrases or words that have the same grammatical use, for example two nouns or two verbs. We call this parallel structure and the conjunctions we use are and, but and or. The table below provides some examples of how conjunctions are used in parallel structures to describe situations. Example Sentence Structure The child calls his foster parents Moma and Papa. noun + and + noun The foster parents are hiring a lawyer and (are) appealing the decision. verb + and + verb (the second auxiliary verb is optional) The foster parents are sad but determined. adjective + but + adjective When placing foster children is it better to look only at nature or to consider nurture as well? infinitive + or + infinitive The Métis Child and Family Agency is concerned the child will lose his identity, his community, and his culture. When a parallel structure has more than two parts, commas are used to separate them. The final comma before the conjunction is optional. If there are just two items, there is no comma. Use these three conjunctions to complete the sentences below. 1. The child has foster parents but they are not his legal guardians. 2. The family’s lawyer thinks that bonding, attachment, _____ other factors are more important than culture in this case. 3. Is it better to place a child with a family based on only culture ____ to consider other factors as well? 4. The child’s birth mother wants him to stay with the foster parents he knows _____ loves. 5. The foster parents are fighting their battle in court ____ they are hoping to succeed. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 12 of 19 Worksheet 5: Read for Fact and Opinion Is it fact or opinion? Sometimes it can be hard to tell. Read the story in Appendix 2 with your group. Decide whether the following statements are fact or opinion. Here is a guide you can use to help you decide. F fact A fact is a statement that can be proven true or false, by using an objective standard. To determine whether something is a fact, ask yourself: Can I prove it? Can I check whether it is true? Can I find statistics on this topic? O opinion Opinions are ideas or beliefs about a subject that someone believes to be true but which cannot be measured against an objective standard. People often believe opinions are facts when others share the same opinion. But if it can’t be proven, it’s not a fact, it’s an opinion. Words such as always, never, should, all, none, most, least, greatest, best and worst are often used to express an opinion. Statement Fact or Opinion? F 1 Two foster parents are fighting a legal battle. 2 The system is treating them unfairly. 3 They have been caring for the child since he was six months old. 4 It is in the child’s best interest to stay with the foster family. 5 Cross cultural adoptions don’t work. 6 There is a Métis family willing to adopt the child. 7 In this case, the agency is not acting in the best interest of the child. 8 The most important thing is the bond that has developed between the child and the foster parents. 9 The decision on what will happen to the child will be made by an adjudicator. 10 Many cross cultural adoptions of aboriginal children into non-aboriginal families have broken down. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 13 of 19 Worksheet 6: Summarize Key Information on a Chart Can you summarize key information from the story in Appendix 2 on a chart? Which of the individuals quoted in the news story support keeping the foster child with the Filipino family? Who is opposed? Can you find a reason for each person’s position in the text? The first one is completed as an example. Name Support or Oppose Keeping the Child with the Filipino Family Reason the foster parents support - they are very attached to the child Billie Schibler Paul Walsh the child’s birth mother Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 14 of 19 Worksheet 7: Write a Paragraph on Your Reaction to the Adjudicator’s Decision The adjudicator has made a ruling on this case. She ruled in favour of the foster family keeping the child, at least for the time being. Here is some of what she said:2 Adjudicator Jennifer Cooper wrote in her decision the boy "loves his foster parents and they love him. That love should be given an opportunity to continue and blossom." She did acknowledge the parents speak Tagalog primarily at home and the child understands and speaks both English and Tagalog. She also said he has little knowledge of Métis culture, something she said she hopes will change. She recommended the family embrace the child's Métis culture going forward. She also recommended the CFS agency consent to the couple adopting the boy after seeing "sincere efforts of the foster parents to assist [him] in understanding and honouring his cultural and racial heritage." She also said it appeared the parents were "sincere, honest and hardworking individuals who were deeply in love with [the child.]" Can you write a paragraph summarizing how you personally feel about the adjudicator’s decision? Use the format below to help you. Opening sentence to introduce the topic When I first read that the Filipino foster parents had won their case, I felt very (happy/sad) because_____________________________ ______________________________________________________. Supporting point/argument I think the adjudicator made the (right/wrong) decision because _______________________________________________ ______________________________________________________. When I think about the future of this child, I hope that _______ Concluding point ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________. 2 Adapted from a CBC online story: www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/filipino-parents-win-fight-to-keep-partm%C3%A9tis-foster-child-1.1876137 Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 15 of 19 Appendix 1: Transcript September 24, 2013 (broadcast date)3 Speaker Podcast Line Marcy Hi I'm Marcy Markusa and you're listening to Learning English with CBC. Two Winnipeg foster parents would like to adopt the child whose been living with them for two years. But the couple is Filipino and the child is Métis. Métis Child and Family Services believe the boy would be better off if he was placed 5 with a culturally appropriate Métis family. My guest today, Nicki Batzel, shares her personal experience on the topic of cross cultural adoption. Marcy So tell me a little bit about your own experience of adoption. Nicki Well I was born in 1970, up in Churchill Manitoba. I think um 10 the general thinking around adopting and child care was quite different in those days. I think ah we were just coming out of assimilation and children being taken in the sixties scoop and all that kind of situation. I was ah my birth mother could not keep me so I was in foster care until I was five months old and 15 then I was adopted and ah flown down to Winnipeg and raised here in St. Vital in Winnipeg. Marcy By a Caucasian family? Nicki Yup, that’s right. Marcy And so ah when you were raised were you aware that were 20 differences between yourself and your Mom and Dad? Nicki Ya, my Mom and Dad are both white, quote unquote white, and I had two older brothers who were also their own children. Marcy Were you raised ah with cultural awareness of the fact you were Inuk? 3 25 For the complete interview or other recent CBC Information Radio podcasts, go to: www.cbc.ca/podcasting/includes/mbinforadio.xml Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 16 of 19 Nicki My parents told me I was Inuit my whole life. All we had was books because there were very few resources for Inuit people down here in Winnipeg. Marcy Now you eventually tracked down though and reached out to your birth family. Why did you do that? Nicki 30 To me, the cultural connection was important. And my parents were very open and sort of encouraged me to do it, so I felt very free to find them. Just to be able to – I think part of it is identity – there is that whole nurture versus nature way of thinking out there. 35 Marcy Would you have been better off adopted into an Inuit family? Nicki I dunno and but I’m very happy where I was. I mean I’m certainly glad I was adopted and not a child in care my whole life. Marcy Should the race or culture be the first consideration when 40 deciding where to place a child? Nicki I dunno know about the first and only consideration. I think it can be a consideration for sure and I think that partly has to do with our history here, so much power was taken away from people, that people wanna say that they have the power to 45 decide where their children go. So I appreciate where MMF is coming from and where Métis people are coming from. But in the same breath, there’s a whole bunch of dynamics that make a good life for a child. Marcy What did you first think when you heard about the current 50 case? Nicki I was kind of upset. I understand where they’re coming from, saying that the family should be Métis but if the child has been with the Filipino family for two and a half years and they’re connected, like what does it mean to be Métis? Does that mean they have to speak Michif? Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 17 of 19 55 Appendix 2: Manitoba/Filipino parents fight to keep part Métis foster child4 Two Winnipeg foster parents are waging an emotional legal battle to keep the child they have been raising for nearly two years. They have been in love with the 2½-year-old boy they have been caring for since he was six months old, and they would like to adopt him. But the child's guardian, an agency under the Métis Child and Family Services Authority, objects. The foster parents have been told that since they are Filipino and the child is part Métis, his long-term interests would be better served by placing him with a "culturally appropriate" Métis family. Appealing child's removal Last spring, the foster parents were told a match had been found and that the boy would soon be placed with the new adoptive family that is Métis. That's when the foster parents launched legal action, appealing the removal of the child. Billie Schibler, chief executive officer of the Métis Child and Family Services Authority, says many past adoptions of aboriginal children into non-aboriginal homes have broken down over the years, with the children seeking their cultural identities and communities when they are adults. The foster mother said the little boy now calls her and her husband "Mama" and "Papa." "We are disappointed. We feel sad," she said, adding that losing the child would be devastating. The couple’s lawyer, Paul Walsh, said a bond has developed between the foster parents and the toddler over nearly two years, and that should be a bigger factor in his placement than one part of his cultural background. Aiming to preserve culture Billie Schibler, chief executive officer of the Métis Child and Family Services Authority, said that if a primary caregiver identifies as Métis, the mandate is to place the child in a Métis home long-term. "We want to always do what we believe is in the best interest of children, but we also want to ensure that with every effort we are preserving our culture and our families, because that's what our communities are built on," said Schibler. 4 Adapted from a CBC online story: www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/filipino-parents-fight-to-keep-partm%C3%A9tis-foster-child-1.1862980 Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 18 of 19 Birth mom wants boy to stay with couple However, the boy's birth mother said that shouldn't matter in this case. "Why does it have to be Métis? Métis is only one small part of him. The rest of him is the bigger part," she said. The birth mother said she would like to see the boy stay with the foster parents he knows and has grown to love. The arbitration hearing in this case wrapped up Sept. 12. The adjudicator has 15 days from that date to make a decision on the foster parents' appeal to have the boy remain in their home. In the meantime, Walsh said the couple are filing a petition for guardianship of the boy. Cross Cultural Adoption Learning English with CBC Page 19 of 19