Hello Class 5-102!
This Monday our close reading questions are due :(
Here is the question that Ms. Brochard wants us to answer:
Discussion Question:
What is the main idea of the article? Quote at least two details directly from the article to support your answer.
For those of you who want a prize you might be upset to know that there is no prize here but you may have an online debate in the comments section below this post.
If you want help with close reading strategies here's a really cool video to teach you how to close read: Close Reading Video
Here is the text below for those of you who have have conveniently lost your Homework packet:
See you!
How teens choose their friends
Published: Friday, November 15, 2013
Source: Michigan State University
It's a
common perception portrayed in movies from "The Breakfast Club" to
"Mean Girls." Teenage friendships are formed by joining cliques such
as jocks, geeks and goths. But a national study led by a Michigan State
University scholar finds that the courses students take have powerful effects
on the friendships they make. The study was funded by the National Science
Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.
The findings, published in the American
Journal of Sociology indicate the pattern of course-taking is distinctive to
each high school. In one school, for example, friendships may form among
students taking woodshop, Spanish and European history, while in another it may
be among students taking agricultural business management, advanced accounting
and calculus.
"People
generally want to think that kids are choosing their friends from the
well-known categories like jocks and nerds -- that it's like "The
Breakfast Club" and the same at every school," said Kenneth Frank,
professor in MSU's College of Education.
"But
our argument is that the opportunities an adolescent has to choose friends are
guided by the courses the adolescent takes and the other students who take the
courses with them. Moreover, the pattern of opportunities differs from school
to school."
Frank
and colleagues analyzed survey data and academic transcripts from some 3,000
students at 78 high schools across the United States. The researchers developed
a new computer algorithm and software to identify the unique sets of students
and courses from the transcripts in each school.
Students
were more likely to make friends in small classes, often electives, which set
them off from the general student population. Friendships were more likely to
be created in Latin 4 and woodshop, for example, than in a large physical
education class that is required of everyone in a particular grade.
Students
who take the same set of courses tend to get to know each another very well and
focus less on social status, such as how "cool" someone is. They're
also less likely to judge classmates on visible characteristics like race and
gender.
In
addition, Frank said girls are more likely to take more demanding math classes
if other girls in their shared sets of courses took advanced math. "In
other words," he said, "the peer groups that formed around shared
courses had implications for students' academic effort as well as their social
world."
The
findings have implications for school administrators as well. Schools that
simply offer classes without thought to mixing up high- and low-achieving
students run the risk of driving them apart socially and academically, Frank
said.
To
combat this, he said schools could better highlight the value of certain
academic pursuits -- such as math -- and also group students together in ninth
grade so the low-achievers have high-achievers in their classes potentially
throughout high school.
"This
would give the students in the lower group a 'beacon' of sorts -- or others who
could be there as a marker to help them move along."
Discussion Question:
1 What is the main idea of the article?
Quote at least two details directly from the article to support your answer.
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