Posts

Showing posts from September, 2024

Ethnic Studies Post

Image
     Last semester, I had a professor who talked about the excitement of setting up her classroom for the first time. She was able to decorate how she wanted, supply the materials she wanted and overall give it the vibe she felt best represented her and her teaching styles. As she is setting up her classroom, she also supplies the books she feels best represents her as well. These books are the books she loved as a child herself and varied in genres that would interest both boys and girls at that age. One day, she starts to notice that one student in particular wasn't as responsive to her reading area as she liked. When she asked that student why, they replied with "None of the people on the cover look like me." Realizing that the stories she provided were primarily that of a white child, this opened my professors eyes to the bigger issue at hand as she thought to herself "Well I don't see color." That in and of itself was precisely the issue.     I remembe...

Delpit Reflection

Image
     Our understanding of power and obedience starts at childhood. Schedules and routines are put into place for us, punishments given whether necessary or not. Parents/guardians and teachers at the forefront of our lives telling us what to do and when. Childhood is probably where an individual feels powerless the most. Sadly enough, for some of us, the nightmare of living under the thumb of another doesn't go away. Even in adulthood. There is always going to be an individual or groups of people who wave their power over us and how we choose to challenge that power is what I believe Delpit wants to help us understand.       Educators are put in a unique position to explore all backgrounds of individuals in a common space. They have the ability to gain a deeper understanding of those that are similar and those that are different. The bravery educators face in diving into backgrounds that are not their own is precisely the type of bravery that helps star...

S.C.W.A.A.M.P Post

Image
       Differences amongst a community is always going to be a defining moment. Commonality is a basis that can form alliances and friendships but differences are what individuals sees what separates us from them. At least, that is the American perspective. In chapter one, "Rodney King's Question" we are left with that big inquiry "Can't we all just get along?" and are then reminded of the many reasons why the answer is and always will be 'no.' Society breaks us down into many classifications. Those are by race, gender, class, sexual orientation, religion and more. The reading states that Du Bois believed that color would be a defining issue but that there are others that are also factors. Slavery was once a civil issue that had blacks inferior to whites and that ideology still carries today in different forms. This can look like a white man and black man going for the same job with the same qualifications and backgrounds but the white man still gett...