created by Juliana Palacio Q
Charles W. Flanagan High School
Introduction | The Task | The Process & Resources | Conclusion | HyperText Dictionary
How Children Feel Being Adopted?
In this WebQuest you will be working together with a group of students in class. Each group will answer the Task or Quest(ion). As a member of the group you will explore Webpages from people all over the world who care about Sexual Abuse. Because these are real Webpages we're tapping into, not things made just for schools, the reading level might challenge you. Feel free to use the online Webster dictionary or one in your classroom.
You'll begin with everyone in your group getting some background before dividing into roles where people on your team become experts on one part of the topic.
1. Today more than half of all North American adoptions are independent adoptions. This is when birth parents are actively involved in finding an adoptive family
1. Child
2. Parents
3. Adoption Agency
4. Psychologist
Child that was adopted
Use the Internet information linked below to answer these questions specifically related to role, job or perspective #1:
1.
Parents that adopted the child
Use the Internet information linked below to answer these questions specifically related to role, job or perspective #2:
1.
Psychologist
Use the Internet information linked below to answer these questions specifically related to role, job or perspective #3:
1.
Adoption agency
Use the Internet information linked below to answer these questions specifically related to role, job or perspective #4:
1.
You have all learned about a different part of Sexual Abuse. Now group members come back to the larger WebQuest team with expertise gained by searching from one perspective. You must all now answer the Task / Quest(ion) as a group. Each of you will bring a certain viewpoint to the answer: some of you will agree and others disagree. Use information, pictures, movies, facts, opinions, etc. from the Webpages you explored to convince your teammates that your viewpoint is important and should be part of your team's answer to the Task / Quest(ion). Your WebQuest team should write out an answer that everyone on the team can live with.
You and your teammates have learned a lot by dividing up into different roles. Now's the time to put your learning into a letter you'll send out for real world feedback. Together you will write a letter that contains opinions, information, and perspectives that you've gained. Here's the process:
1. Begin your letter with a statement of who you are and why you are writing your message to this particular person or organization.
2. Give background information that shows you understand the topic.
STATE THE TASK / QUEST(ION) AND YOUR GROUP'S ANSWER.
3. Each person in your group should write a paragraph that gives two good reasons supporting the group's opinion. Make sure to be specific in both the information (like where you got it from on the Web) and the reasoning (why the information proves your group's point).
4. Have each person on the team proofread the message. Use correct letter format and make sure you have correctly addressed the email message. Use the link below to make contact. Send your message and make sure your teacher gets a copy.Your Contact is: the designated contact
So is an elephant smooth, rough, soft, or hard? Well, when you're blindfolded and only *looking* at one part, it's easy to come up with an answer that may not be completely right. It's the same for understanding a topic as broad or complex as Sexual Abuse: when you only know part of the picture, you only know part of the picture. Now you all know a lot more. Nice work. You should be proud of yourselves! How can you use what you've learned to see beyond the black and white of a topic and into the grayer areas? What other parts of Sexual Abuse could still be explored? Remember, learning never stops.
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Content by Juliana Palacio Q, juli134@hotmail.com http://www.kn.sbc.com/wired/fil/pages/websexualaju.html Last revised Fri Jan 30 11:24:56 US/Pacific 2004 |