26 Matching Annotations
  1. Last 7 days
    1. vely about the students in the Asian Corner Group, who only gathered with Asian students and tended to exclude others. Zullie described, ‘There [They] are like quiet and just by themselves ... They are nice people but I don’t feel like welcomed when I pass by there.’ The girls in the basement also scru-tinized the students in the Asian Corner Group who mostly dated Asians. Mino articulated, ‘The girls only date the Asian guys.’ The girls in the basement who dated boys of different races and ethnicities seemed to think that confinement to intra-racial dating was a loss of opportunity to learn from other cultures.5 They also disassociated themselves from the Asian Corner Group for their limited interest in consuming Asian popular culture. Mino stated, ‘They don’t really talk about Asian things like how we do.’ The girls’ ‘othering’ of the Asian Corner Group did not fit into the labeling of ‘FOB’ (too ethnic) or ‘Whitewashed’ (too assimilated) described in Pyke and dang’s (2003) study of second-generation Vietnamese and Korean immigrants. rather, it was a complex rejection of a lack of racial and ethnic diversity (e.g. racial homogeneity and intra-racial dating) as well as a lack of enthusiasm about engaging in Asian popular culture. While these two elements seemed to be contradictory, the girls selectively singled out characteristics o

      The passage raises an important problem with the way teachers historically treat bilingual literacy. The usual emphasis on monolingual/monoglossic thinking denies us an awareness and understanding of the fluidity of bilingual literacy. Language students don’t simply read linear, linguistically-based text. Rather, they engage in translanguaging as part of their textual and cognitive process The text highlights "intraethnic othering": individuals from the same ethnic group criticise one another’s behaviours and cultural forms. Against this backdrop, the basement girls think of the Asian Corner Group as unmixed and disconnected from broader cultural experience. They deride the Asian Corner’s racial uniformity, self-consolidation and lack of interest in Asian pop culture, which the basement group finds suffocating. It’s difficult to explain this othering in terms of its consistency with conventional descriptions such as "FOB" or "Whitewashed," which are standard descriptions of assimilation in Asian American communities. Rather, the basement clique finds behaviours that don’t align with their own, and employs this dichotomy to define themselves.

  2. Oct 2024
  3. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. confidence in students. Look up the word educator in a dictionary and you will find definitions that include teacher, instructor, and mentor. I want to teach all my students that they are no less (and no more) important than the other kids in class and that everyone they come in contact with deserves their respect, just as they deserve to be shown respect. I aim to instruct them on standards-in writing and reading, math, science, and social studies-but also standards such as valuing diversity. I mentor students by caring for what's best for them and showing interest in their lives. I do this in an attempt to provid

      It reflects the multiplicity of the role that teachers play not only in the classroom, but also in the personal and social life of students. This focus on student equality and respect ensures that everyone feels included in the class and, hence, creates a climate of confidence and self-esteem. Standards in core subjects are essential, but so too is a commitment to life skills like the appreciation of diversity and respect. These lessons run far beyond the school gates and nurture children to be well-intentioned and compassionate citizens.

    1. Helena provides an example of how Asian Americans are often classed together by others. Some white classmates did not bother to find out that she was Korean. When discussing such events, Helena, like other respondents, is still in pain from them and has a difficult time making eye contact. She keeps her head down and speaks softly, crying a few times as she recounts painful memories. She was not accepted for being the smart, high-achieving youngster she was, but was ostra-cized for her intelligence and identity

      This statement is deeply impactful as it highlights the pain and alienation that Helena, as an Asian American, has experienced due to being grouped together with others based on superficial perceptions and stereotypes. It emphasizes how often people don't take the time to understand individual differences in Asian American communities, leading to feelings of being misunderstood and isolated. Helena's experience demonstrates the emotional toll and the profound sense of exclusion that can result from such stereotyping and ignorance.

    2. are gradually introduced to racial socialization in peer groups. Young children’s racist behavior is often excused by adults on the grounds that children are naïve innocents and often slip and fall in the realm of social behavior, yet the assumption that children’s racist comments and actions are innocuous is incorrect. Based on extensive field research in a large child-care center, Debra Van Ausdale and Joe Feagin concluded that the “strongest evidence of white adults’ conceptual bia

      I’m all for recognising that racist attitudes in children aren’t harmless. It makes me afraid of these behaviors being unchecked without early intervention. Children do experience this period of development of learning from and imitating. If we simply reject them as childish in the sense of not learning anything, then we are cutting off critical opportunities to teach them how to embrace difference.

    1. White Americans may prize Asian Americans relative to African Americans in certain limited ways so as to ensure white dominance over both. Whites may sometimes place or consider Asians “nearer to whites,” a relative valorization, because of Asian American achieve-ments in certain educational and economic areas. Yet this middling status is possible only because other Americans of color, such as African Americans or Mexican Americans, have been allowed fewer opportunities by whites. Whites’ use of Asian Americans as a measuring stick for other Americans of color is highly divisive, for it pits groups of color against each other, as well as isolates Asian Americans from white Americans.Kim underscores well the price paid

      I find it odd that sometimes white Americans frame Asian Americans in such a way that makes them seem superior to other people of colour, particularly African Americans, as an extension of maintaining control over them. And yes, this strategy can divide minority groups into competing or competing for status or recognition in a white world order. Asian Americans being "nearer to whites" is often driven by a combination of academic and economic accomplishments that contrast the resentment against structural inequality among African Americans and other minorities who have enjoyed less.

    2. social science

      I see that a number of Asian American researchers have indeed played a significant role in explaining Asian Americans’ adaptive disadvantages. It has been an innovator in illuminated racism and the oppressions faced by this community. Moreover, the fact that we’re less likely to explicitly cite whites as critical to generating and maintaining racist spaces parallels a trend in scholarship generally.

  4. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. Billings, 1994). Conclusion Schools such as Seguin High School are faced with a special challenge. To significantly alter the stubborn pattern of underachievement, they need to become authentically caring institutions. To become authentically caring institutions, the'y need to at once stop sub-tracting resources from youth and deal with th~ effects of subtraction. Although it is up to each school to determine what a more additive perspective might entail, my study suggests that an important point of departure is a critical examination of the existing curriculum. The operant model of schooling structurally deprives acculturated, U.S.-born youth o

      Combatting the problem of poor achievement in institutions such as Seguin High School requires real attention to the students. In creating true, loving schools, schools can meet the needs of diverse students and counteract the consequences of subtraction of resources. The suggestion that we must evaluate the curriculum as we know it is important. This ensures that schools offer a broader and more fulfilling educational experience that is more responsive to the cultural and personal desires of US-born children.

    2. tried to talk to as many of them as possible and to incorporate their voices and experiences into this ethnographic account. Although my study makes use of quantitative data, the key modes of data collection are based on participant observation and open-ended interviews with individuals and with groups of students. Group interviews enabled me not only to tap into peer-group culture but also to investigate the social, cultural, and linguistic divisions that I observed among teenagers at Seguin. Before elaborating my framework, I will first address relevant survey findings that pertain to parental education, schooling orientations, and generational differences in achievement.~ First, students' parental education levels are very low, hovering around nine years of schooling completed for th

      A diverse sample of voices and experiences is arguably valuable in an ethnographic analysis. Participant observation and open-ended interviewing – both one-to-one and in groups – allows researchers to better appreciate the subtle social dynamics involved. Group interviews are especially useful since they allow one to get inside peer-group cultures and reveal the social, cultural and linguistic fractures that might be invisible from other methods.

  5. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. part of her pedagogy. Teachers must not merely take courses that tell them how to treat their students as multicultural clients, in ocher words, those that cell them how co identify differences in interac-tional or communicative strategies and remediate appropri-ately. They muse also learn about the brilliance the students bring with them "in their blood." Until they appreciate the wonders of the cultures represented before them - and they cannot do chat without extensive study most appropriately begun in college-level courses - they cannot appreciate the potential of those who sit

      It’s important to know that all students are different in their learning preferences and social orientation. If we design the classroom to accommodate these differences, including the demand for movement and interaction, we can promote the inherent talents of African-American boys. This helps to make the learning more diverse and participatory as well as less likely to incur negative consequences from such students in a classroom environment that doesn’t offer such an opportunity.

    2. earcher Harry Morgan documents in a 1990 study what most of us who have worked with African-American children have learned intuitively: that African-American children, more than white, and boys more than girls, initiate interac-tions with peers in the classroom in performing assigned tasks. Morgan concludes that a classroom that allows for greater movement and interaction will better facilitate the learning and social styles of African-American boys, while one that disallows such activ

      There is an important point that each student may have different learning styles and social needs. If we are able to set up a classroom to support these difference and most importantly to accommodate the need for movement and interaction, we can nurture African-American boys’ inherent qualities. Not only does it create an inclusive and engaging learning experience, but it also helps reduce negative repercussions these students may receive in a more traditional classroom environment.

  6. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. also reflected in Orange County schools. Consider two high schools chat "input" measures (see Table 4.1) suggest are sur-prisingly similar: Troy High School in Fullerton and Santa Ana High School. Spending per pupil at the two schools is comparable, for exam-ple, as are the student-teacher ratios, the number of guidance counselors, and two standard measures of teacher quality: formal education and experience. Troy offers a richer menu of extracurricular activities than Santa Ana, but, as we shall see, private fund-raising explains chat differ-ence, not unequal investment by the school districts. On the measures most obviously controlled by school systems-spending

      It certainly makes sense of the community involvement and resources to determine extra-curricular options for students. In this analogy, if the key levers manipulated by school districts – such as pupil-per-child spending, ratios of students to teachers, and teacher credentials – provide a backbone, then the reinforcement that private fundraising can bring to the students’ education is a tremendous positive addition. The relationship reflects the crucial role of community resources and funding channels in enhancing what the school district delivers.

    2. Most Latinos in Orange County live in the impoverished cities of the inland valleys of the northern half of the county, among them Santa Ana. A 2004 report by rhe Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government identified Santa Ana as the Most Troubled City in America because of its high unemployment, high poverty rate, undereducated population, and crowded housing. Latinos in Orange County are more likely to live not only in poverty bur also amidst street violence and gang activity. Santa Ana alone is home co 29 street gangs.

      These circumstances are reflective of the persisting struggle faced by Latinos in Orange County – including in neighborhoods such as Santa Ana. Unemployment, poverty, educational inequalities, all of this do indeed leave a tough climate for citizens to succeed. Then there’s street violence and gangs that just make it all the more aggravating, rendering daily living and upward mobility harder for Latino people. This knowledge is critical in the quest to understand the root causes of these problems and seek a better life for these communities. Problems such as education, employment, and public safety could do a lot to mitigate some of those concerns.

  7. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. ules. In this way I was raised to be compliant, one element of the hidden curriculum in our schools. This insistence on compliance is also one aspect of schooling that keeps some students from feeling they can challenge the very structures that repress them. They often feel silenced and alienated from public education at an early age. In my household, we did not have many books. I believe my lack of books contributed to my below average reading test scores. In third grade I was read-ing at a second-grade level. Research indicates that social class can influence cognitive abilities because a lack of money results in fewer experiences at muse-ums and traveling, fewer books in the home, and less access to preschool educa-tion (Bowles & Gintis, 2002; Good & Brophy, 1987).

      The hidden, conformist curriculum does, in fact, discourage the freedom of students to question and resist repressive systems, creating alienation. Students may feel that their opinions or views aren’t heard, and then leave their education to a silent partner. Moreover, the absence of material like books can also affect academic skills. Inadequate access to home-schooling materials can seriously impact literacy and learning outcomes.

    2. students rarely out themselves as being poor. You could not tell they struggle financially by the papers they turn in to me or by what they say when we discuss things in my sociology classes at the University of St. Thomas. During office hours, however, students reveal to me that they grew up poor, and often they tell me that they are the first person from their family to go to college. They talk about the social distance they feel from their peers who have money. They tell me t

      Economic inequality in scholarly settings can erect a social distance that’s seldom perceived by those who don’t feel it. Schools have a dark curriculum, which is also outside the classroom and forming social norms and reifying class differences. Inclusion: for low-income students, not being afforded materials or experiences comparable to their wealthier peers creates isolation and reinforces alienation. These students usually create social networks of peers from the same income bracket, which is useful for them coping with such problems but could reduce their opportunities to be able to socialize with more diverse peer groups.

  8. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. Research has shown that economic capital, that is, the w~alch and income of parents, is one of the primary factors influ-ep.cing student achieveme11t (Coleman and others, 1966; Roth-stein, 2004; Farkas, 2004 ). Student achievement is also influenced _l,y more subtle resources sud; as social capital-the benefits derived from c<;mnections to networks and individuals with power and influence (Coleman, 1988; Stanton-Salazar, 1997, 2001; Noguera, 2003 )-and cultural capital (Bourdieu and Wacquant, 1992)-the t~sces, styles, habits, language, behaviors, appearance, and customs c.hat serve as indicators of status anJ privilege.

      This emphasizes the significant role of economic capital for student achievement. Economic capital provides students with good education, opportunities for extracurricular activities and security that could be applied towards improving their learning. Social capital comes into play, too because connecting with influencers or belonging to networks can enable you to get access to opportunities that one may not have had access to otherwise. Involvement can translate into mentorship, mentorship, knowledge and these things can motivate students.

    2. BHS). Our exami-nation of school structures also includes a focus on the organization of the school-the decentralized nature of decision making within departments, the distribution of authority and responsibility among administrators, the accountability (or lack thereof) anJ funcrion of special programs (such ::ts English as a Second Language, Ach-anced Placement, and Special Education). We examine how these struc-tures shape and influence the acad

      Teacher content, course content, allocation of resources are some of the most important things that affect student learning. These structures shape the opportunities given to students and help or hinder their success. Discrepancy in decisions, in the division of authority and responsibility, have a direct impact on the capacity of a school to cater for its children. As decision-making doesn’t fit well together or accountability is inadequate, program and policy implementation will be skewed and might perpetuate inequities unnecessarily.

  9. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. The Hart and Risley study is a sobering reminder that it takes more than money to promote young children's development.28 Parents from higher-income families appear to offer their children language advantages that would persist even if their annual incomes rose or fell by $10,000 or even $20,000. Research has shown that maternal education and IQ levels, not family income, are most closely associated with parental use of lan-guage. 29 So while money matters, other family factors do too. Lareau's detailed look at the lives of the children in her study revealed other striking differences between high-and low-income families, includ-ing the degree to which middle-class parents "managed" their children's lives, while working-class and poor parents left children alone to play and otherwise organize their activities.

      The Hart and Risley paper certainly contains an important clue to what goes on with children. There is something profound about a child’s upbringing in that money does not have to determine the child’s language growth. This focus on maternal education and IQ also emphasises the need for a linguistically enriching context in which a child can develop his or her mind.

    2. study of children who entered kindergarten in the fall of 1998 allow for a more detailed look at income-based gaps as chil-dren progress through school (figure 3.1).1 As before, a 100-point difference in figure 3.1 corresponds to one standard deviation. Each bar shows the relative size of the gap between high-and low-income childre

      The math and reading deficits between children of high and low incomes has been increasing sharply in the past 30 years. This expanding inequality is alarming because it illustrates a systemic problem of educational unequality and resources. The fact that the national study you reference provides an examination in greater depth of these differences throughout the school years is interesting. It is clear from this statistic that early intervention should be taken to address socioeconomic inequalities and ensure equitable educational opportunity for all children. This needs to be addressed by both policymakers and teachers to close those disconnects and bring what support can be needed for low-income students.

    1. their efforts to say that they could accept the need for change, but were uncertain about the implications o f the changes. This reminded us that it is difficult for individuals to shift paradigms and that there must be a setting for folks to voice fears, to talk about what they are doing, how they are doing it, and why. One of our most useful meetings was one in which we asked professors from different disciplines (including math and science) to talk informally about how their teaching had been changed by a desire to be more inclusive. Hearing individuals describe concrete strate-gies was an approach that helped dispel fears. It was crucial that more traditional or conservative professors who had been will-ing to make changes talk about motivations and strategies. When the meetings concluded, Chandra and I initially felt a tremendous sense of disappointment. We had not realized how much faculty would need to unlearn racism to learn about col-onization and decolonization and to fully appreciate the neces-sity for creating a democratic liberal arts learning experience.

      It is extremely difficult to transform paradigms when it involves beliefs and practices. There’s resistance to change, not because people are reluctant, but because the effects of change can be uncertain and overwhelming. And that's what works for the method I just described: collaborative and dialogical. When you enable a community where faculty can speak candidly about their concerns and strategies, you enable learning and development. I think this is particularly helpful if more traditionalists and conservationists can relate their experience with change. That inclusion invites others to think about their own practices, to think critically.

    2. es that have shaped the way knowledge is shared in the classroom. It forces us all to recognize our complicity in accepting and perpetuating biases of any kind. Students are eager to break through barriers to knowing. They are willing to surrender to the wonder of re-learning and learning ways of knowing that go against the grain. When we, as educators, allow our pedagogy to be radically changed by our recognition of a multicultural world, we can give students the education they desire and deserve. We can teach in ways that transform consciousness, creating a climate of free expression that is the essence of a truly liberatory liberal arts education. 4 Paulo Freire This is a playful dialogue with myself, Gloria Watkins, talking with bell hooks, my writing voice. I wanted to speak about Paulo and his work in this way for it afforded me an intimacy-a familiarity-I do nat find it possible to achieve in the essay. And here I have found a way to share the sweetness, the soli-darity I talk a bo ut. Watkins: Reading your books Ain 't I a Woman: Black Women a nd Feminism, Feminist The!Yfy: From Margin to Center, and Talk-ing Bach, it is clear that your development as a critica! thinker has been greatly influenced by the work of Paulo Freire. Can you speak abou~ why his work has touched your life so deeply? hooks: Years before I met Paulo Freire, I had learned so much from hi s work, learned new ways o f thinking a bo ut social reality that were liberatory. Often when university stu-45

      it is really the doors to many new possibilities for teachers and students to consider multiculturalism as part of the curriculum. If educators recognise and respect these strict limits, they make room for alternative viewpoints. This recognition drives us to work on breaking down prejudice and create a more equitable and welcoming classroom.

    3. Despite the focus on diversity, our desires for inclusion, many professors still teach in classrooms that are predominant-ly white. Often a spirit of tokenism prevails in those settings. This is why it is so crucial that "whiteness" be studied, under-stood, discussed-so that everyone learns that affirmation of multiculturalism, and an unbiased inclusive perspective, can and should be present whether or not people of color are pre-sent. Tr

      The ability to truly know and examine "whiteness" is critical to the idea of being diverse and inclusive. The lens of whiteness allows teachers and students to uncover prejudices and hierarchies that perpetuate oppression, even inadvertently. It’s about recognizing that diversity means more than merely pouring more races into a room, it means being aware of and pushing back against one group’s hegemony. In so doing, it also affirms multiculturalism and helps to ensure that every child, regardless of the demographic makeup of a classroom, is growing to respect and incorporate perspectives from all groups. This education is essential to curbing tokenism and making inclusion happen, meaningfully.

  10. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. of the most popular college entrance exams, as part of my GAT program in the seventh grade. We were told that this was a very important test that would prepare us for another · . d k. de Tak-very important test, and 1f we scored well enough, we coul s 1p a gra · . ing the PSAT early and being aware of the SAT, ACT, and standardized_ teSttngf · f · 1 h t neither 0 requirements or college entry were vital pieces of class capita t a my parents could offer. Like so many other children in first-generation col_lege f ·1· tered in a

      I felt the pressure to perform well and meet these expectations. The focus on exams like the PSAT, SAT, and ACT from a young age certainly put an emphasis on academic excellence and preparation. Testing early does provide students with a better understanding of what to expect, helping to alleviate some of the anxiety associated with these important exams.

    2. Lack of access to health care and, more specifically, to prenatal health care plagues far too many women in poverty and, consequent!~, their chil~ren a~d future public school students. Inadequate nutrition, und1~gnosed d1fficult1es prior to childbirth and treatable in vitro illnesses all contnbute to the poorer health of these fut~re scholars. And because so many poor neighbor~oods are veritable "food deserts" where fresh produce, meats, and healthy items are

      Access to proper health care, including prenatal care, is often lacking for women living in poverty, and the consequences of this, for both the mother and her children, can be long-term. Malnutrition and undiagnosed health problems during pregnancy can cause serious health problems for a baby even before he is born, and aggressive learning and achievement later on in school.

    3. Racial minorities (better phrased, "global majorities") are dispro h f . d. d por-tionately represented in poverty. T ere ore, an mor mate an overwhelmingly fewer number of people of color have access to ~enerational wealth based on their recognition as only three-fifths of a human bemg and the subsequent denial of property ownership as a direct result of being property themselves. Masses of people of color who have been denied personhood, rights to stolen lands citizenship, and any number of basic human freedoms based solely on race hav; also been denied generational access to wealth in the form of inherited property and assets

      Historical injustices – such as the legacies of slavery, segregation, dispossession of land and discriminatory policies – have played a major role in creating and perpetuating economic disparities. Global majorities have historically been overrepresented in poverty and, as a consequence, people of color have disproportionately been deprived of private accumulation in the form of generational wealth, which has been central to their investments and opportunities to accumulate capital and access resources.

    4. morrow are particularly concerned that even after all students h been offered "12 years of free schooling," they are unable to "lift themselv::~ out of poverty. In short, they genuinely wonder how such dismal outcomes f poor children could persist when the great equalizer undoubtedly works andor poverty-ending solution is clearly at hand. Year after year, I continue to observ: that as a result of this flawed, deficit thinking, both pre-and in-service teachers have come to develop and staunchly cling to their disgust at what they perceive to be squandered opportunities. Poor children fail in schools because they are not taking advantage. Poor people exist because they wasted a good, free educa-tion. The poor themselve

      Teachers need to be ready to engage with such nuanced concerns in sympathetic ways and under an expanded sense of equity. The ultimate goal would be to shift the blame away from the individual and towards the systems that create sustained poverty and educational disadvantage in the first place – with the goal of challenging and transforming those forces. This is the way to create a more just environment.

  11. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. Public schools are essential to make the American dream work, but schools are also the arena in which many Americans first fail. Failure there almost cer-tainly guarantees failure from then on. In the dream, failure results from lack of individual merit and effort; in reality, failure in school too closely tracks structures of racial and class inequality. Schools too often reinforce rather than contend against the intergenerational paradox at the heart of the American dream. That is understandable but not acceptabl

      From kindergarten to college, public schools are the facilities that define and circumscribe the futures of the next generation of Americans – and the path to a possible American dream. Yet there is no doubt that, for too many students, the school system is still where they experience their first big failures. When failure is connected to the inimical structural inequalities of race and class, it is also reproduction of these disparities over generations.