Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Event Blog Post! Art Department Interview Presentation for New Ceramics Professor

A few weeks ago the Art Department here at Rhode Island College began holding interviews for a new ceramics professor for the Fall 2014 semester. Like many job interviews for becoming a ceramics professor the candidates had to successfully demonstrate their abilities as not only a ceramist but as an educator as well.
Wheel thrown pots done by me in Craig Bachman's class
However, something was slightly different about these interviews than most other job interviews. The final four candidates for the position would have to complete this final interview in the form of a presentation, a presentation that they would have to give in front of the entire Art Department. The department posts flyers all over Alex and Ani Hall when interviews are taking place. This ensures that every student and faculty member in the department is aware of the event and they can decide to attend if they want to.

When new positions open up in the art department the final candidates for the position are asked to prepare a presentation on why they should be picked for the job. Their presentations usually go over their schooling and their experience as well as how they plan to run their class if selected for the position.

The interview presentation that I attended was for Craig Bachman. Craig currently is the ceramics professor at RIC, but he was just hired temporarily for the 2013-2014 school year.
Teapot made by Craig Bachman

Having had Craig Bachman last semester for Ceramics I, I was extremely eager to see his presentation. Craig started off his presentation with a picture of him and his family to introduce himself. Which was totally adorable, because he would talk about his kids and his wife alllll the time last semester so I loved that he put them first in the presentation. Craig then began discussing the way he teaches ceramics. He showed slides of him in the classroom as well as slides of student work. Which was awesome because two of my Ceramics I pieces made it into the presentation!
Grandma made by me, was featured in the presentation!
After that Craig moved onto discussing his own work and education. I learned that he had spent years traveling the world and visiting numerous potters villages and learning techniques from them and vice versa. After traveling the world with his wife, the two settled down after the birth of their first child, which led Craig to pursue being an educator in addition to being a ceramist. Craig wrapped up his presentation with another picture of his family, to remind us all whats truly important. 

Overall, it was an awesome experience. I thought it was fantastic that the Art Department wanted the students to attend the interviews as well and be part of the decision making along side the faculty, seeing as the students are the ones who need to learn from this person on a daily basis anyway.

At first I struggled with how I would connect this event to some of the things we've been doing in class all semester. But then finally Shor came along. Shor tells us that "This would set a questioning tone and show the children that you trust them and that they are intelligent enough at their own level, to investigate and come up with answers” (11) To me this quote connected perfectly with the interview presentations. The Art Department allowing the art students to sit and listen to the interviews shows the students that, like Shor says, "they are intelligent enough...to investigate and come up with answers". By being able to attend the event, the art students were shown that their opinion matters and that we are intelligent enough to be able to decide who would work best as an educator for us. 

So there ya have it, my event blog! In general the event was really fun and I totally enjoyed listening to my professor share his story with us all ! :) Thanks for reading! 

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Shor Extended Comments !

For my final post I noticed that a lot of people already had their blogs up, after reading a few of them I felt that everything that I wanted to say in my blog was pretty much already mentioned by everyone else so I thought that an extended comments post would suit nicely. So for my extended comments I decided to base my post off of Jaclyn's blog because I really agreed with everything she had to say this week and the things she brings up in her blog were points that I too wanted to make in mine. So here we go !

One of the first things Jaclyn mentions is Shor describing that students should question why they are at school in the first place. "You must arouse children's curiosity and make them think about school. For example, it's very important to begin the school year with a discussion of why we go to school"
(11). This is a wonderful statement that I've never really thought about. Throughout my entire schooling career I don't think a teacher has ever started off the year by discussing the purpose of school. I mean of course we all knew we had to go, but why? In Jaclyn's blog she includes the passage from page 11 that concludes the above quote, "This would set a questioning tone and show the children that you trust them and that they are intelligent enough at their own level, to investigate and come up with answers” (11). This quote perfectly explains why the above mentioned discussion is so important to have with students at the beginning of the year. If as a teacher, you can establish that relationship with your students right off the bat I'm sure that the year runs a lot more smoothly if they know what you trust them and believe in them. 

The next quote Jaclyn pulls from the Shor reading is “If the students’ task is to memorize rules and existing knowledge without questioning the subject matter or the learning process, their potential for critical thought and action will be restricted” (12). Jaclyn connects this quote to the in class assignment that we all did a few weeks ago. Which is exactly what I connected it to while I was reading as well. Jaclyn writes "We all simply took the paper and wrote down as many answers as we could find, assuming that we read the article, knew what it was about and went to it. None of us questioned why we were answering the questions, or thought the questions were irrelevant while finishing the assignment."
Everything Jaclyn writes is true, I didn't question at all why I was being forced to answer so many random and somewhat stupid and irrelevant questions about the article. And in fact after having the class discussion I was practically shocked that I even had the option to question that worksheet and not answer the questions. Who knows, maybe if I had more teachers explain why we go to school to me like Shor states on page 11 then maybe I would have known better than to just sit and quietly fill in a worksheet. 

So with all that said, I think Jaclyn did an awesome job on her post this week and I was so glad it inspired mine. Jacklyn wrapped up her blog post this week by saying "This past semester has truly prepared me to take the next step on the path to becoming a teacher." Once again, I couldn't agree more. I guess you could say I felt rather ill prepared for becoming a teacher before this semester. But after this class I don't feel that way anymore. This class has provided me with numerous "tools in my tool-belt of teaching" that I can use throughout my future.
The lessons I've learned in this class will follow me throughout my entire career and I truly believe that this class has definitely helped me feel ready to move on towards the path of becoming an educator.

Throughout this semester one of my favorite parts of the blog each week has been putting in a video or a link at the end of each post. For my last link I figured this Buzzfeed Article would be most appropriate to leave off on. I hope each and every one of us becomes a teacher like the ones described on Buzzfeed ! :) .


So thanks to all of you for reading each week and being a part of this amazing class throughout the semester and to Dr. Bogad for being a fantastic professor! I wish you all the best of luck in the future, and hopefully we'll see each other around campus ! :)

Sunday, April 6, 2014

"Citizenship in School: Reconceptualizing Down Syndrome" by Kliewer

Starting the reading this week was pretty difficult. I really wasn't feeling like doing it. But I pushed through and actually found myself enjoying it once I got past the introduction part and onto some of the real stories from people.

After reading I noticed that there was some quotes that particularly stood out to me as being a major part of the authors main argument. So my post this week is going to be a "quotes/argument" piece.

So for my first quote I picked this short sentence from the beginning of the reading, "We have got to learn to get along as individuals and as citizens" (74).  Can I just say AMEN !! Simply put, the problem isn't that people have Down Syndrome or other disabilities/differences, the problem is the way people act towards these individuals. I've never really understood why people find it necessary to insult others who are different from them. Why do we have to challenge everyone who doesn't fit into the norm.
I think this is exactly the argument that Kliewer is making at this point in the reading. We as people need to learn to accept that people have differences and that those differences are something that needs to be embraced and accepted in a positive manner.

The next quote that I thought supported Kliewer's argument of acceptance is, "To eliminate a single person through any form of banishment, no matter how benevolent the logic, reduces the web and makes the community a less democratic and less rich place" (95-100).  With this quote Kliewer seems to be saying that not accepting people doesn't just affect that person. It affects the whole community. For example, when I was in high school my school had a group of students with varying disabilities. Although they were sectioned off into their own group they traveled to different classes just like every other high school student. Within that group of students there was one boy with Down Syndrome, we'll call him Tom. Every day that they would go to art class my class would also be in the art room. My art teacher was always playing music, which Tom absolutely loved ! Dancing before settling down to do his artwork became a habitual routine for Tom. His face would light up and he'd be smiling ear to ear as he danced around the room with the other students joining in. The joy that Tom brought to that room was incredible, it was impossible not smile and dance along with him.
Had my school not integrated students with disabilities into the classes with other kids I would not have this wonderful memory and Tom would not have gotten dance around the classroom with his peers like any regular kid could. Even though it was a kind of long story, I think it connects perfectly to the argument that Kliewer is making with that quote.

The final quote that I chose ties back into integrating special needs individuals into classrooms with other students. On page 95 Kliewer says "Educating all children together reconfigures the representation of Down Syndrome from burden toward citizenship" (95).
This this quote goes hand in hand with the above quote and story that I just told. By having children with special needs in classrooms with their peers it eliminates the stigma that those children are different, which is what I think Kliewer is trying to say with this quote.

So there you have it, my "quotes/connections" post ! Also I remembered seeing this short video a while back on Facebook. It's a very heartwarming video about people with Down Syndrome and I think Kliewer would love it!


Sunday, March 30, 2014

Literacy With an Attitude Connentions to Delpit

This week I decided I would do a connections post because while I was reading this week I kept being reminded of Delpit's arguments and thought that it would make a good connections piece !
Lisa Delpit
 


So of course I struggled like insanely with this reading. I'm assuming this was most likely because of the length. Long readings intimidate me and I tend to get lost in them. But just like with the Delpit reading I was able to get through it and I believe get the author's main point out of it. 

So as we all know, Lisa Delpit's argument is that teachers must explicitly state these rules and codes of power when in a classroom. This is because not every child will learn these rules in their homes and without knowing the rules and codes a child will never actually succeed in school. 

Within Finn's article we can see this same beliefs system emerging. Finn states, "I didn't say to an errant student, 'What are you doing?' I said, 'Stop that and get to work.' No discussions. No openings for an argument." This is dialogue that would Delpit would be thrilled with. When Finn is interacting with his students he doesn't beat around the bush and give them the opportunity to answer questions and sort of defend their actions.
If Finn saw a child not doing what they were supposed to be doing he was explicit with them, much like Delpit would be. He quickly addresses the situation and tells that child what he or she should be doing at that point in time. This  leaves the child with clear directions instead of an open ended question that he or she might not understand.

Although Finn states that he felt "controlling" over his classroom, that was exactly what needed to happen. Finn says the he knew those children needed an authoritative figure. This was obvious because otherwise, those kids would have walked all over him. Finn being controlling and explicitly stating to his students what he expected of them was a way to make sure that the students stayed obedient and that actual learning got done in the classroom.

Had Finn not been so clear about the "rules and codes of power" like Delpit, those kids might have not been productive the whole year and most likely would have fallen behind the rest of their peers.
 

So there ya have it, my connections post ! Below I've included a link to Finn's website for Literacy With an Attitude, check it out if you'd like ! Thanks for reading this week ! 

Literacy With and Attitude


Sunday, March 23, 2014

Brown vs. Board of Education Argument Post

 I guess my post this week is going to be an Argument/Connections/Reflection piece all in one. But I guess mainly argument and connections. I have a lot of thoughts and points I want to make in my post this week so I'm going to do my best to organize it nicely. So anyways here we go !

In about 7th or 8th grade the case of Brown vs. the Board of Education was taught to us in school. I remember the teacher concluding the lesson by saying "without this case our schools could still have been segregated today!" 
I then remember looking around the classroom at all my peers and seeing nothing but white kids surrounding me. I thought to myself, if we're so integrated then why am I still in a room filled entirely with white people over 50 years after Brown vs. Board took place? 

The article from the New York Times, "Separate and Unequal" really summed up everything that my middle school teacher neglected to mention. The reason I was still surrounded by only white people was because I was in Smithfield. If you remember in my first ever blog post from the Peggy McIntosh reading I included a pie chart of Smithfield High School's diversity....errr... or lack there of. Smithfield has a population made up of over 90% white people. In his New York Times article, Bob Hebert argues that "Schools are no longer legally segregated, but because of residential patterns, housing discrimination, economic disparities and long-held custom, they most emphatically are in reality". 

Hebert goes on to make the point that "If you really want to improve the education of poor children, you have to get them away from learning environments that are smothered by poverty". Which is obviously way easier said than done. 


It seems now a days that most lower class neighborhoods come complete with their own lower class schools. This is in direct agreement with the argument Hebert makes in the New York Times.  Hebert states that this is something that is highly detrimental to a students education and it's something that needs to change. 
 
It appears that the argument Bob Hebert is attempting to make is that even though legally we've desegregated these institutions it doesn't mean that black kids suddenly start to seamlessly blend into the high performing white schools, there's still years and years ahead of us to reach a truly equal education for all students. 

Stepping back from Hebert's article and taking a closer look at the interview with Tim Wise, author of Between Barack and a Hard Place,
it was kind of difficult for me to first decipher what Wise's main argument really was but after listening multiple times it seems to me that Wise concluded that Barack Obama's election as president, has been a really good and bad thing for black people.

 On a positive note, Obama's win has allowed black children everywhere to see someone with the same color skin as themselves lead a nation. This is something that white people have been able to do since the day they're born, which McIntosh stated in the first reading. And the fact that so many white people voted for Obama was encouraging too as a step towards ending racism. But the argument that Tim Wise makes is that white people only seem to be so accepting of Obama because of his educational status. Wise says Obama is able to transcend racial barriers because he is educated, intellectual, intelligent and eloquent when he presents himself. Obama is breaking these stereotypes that many white people had or have about black people, but the problem is, not many black people can be as educated and intelligent as Obama is, AND NEITHER CAN WHITE PEOPLE ! It's almost as if Obama has learned these rules and codes of power that Delpit was talking about but he learned them almost too well. The difference is that we accept mediocrity within whites. In the phone interview Wise says that it's almost as if society has said "In order to be a successful person of color you have to bring it the way Obama brings it." The interviewer responds to this statement by saying "You have to be truly exceptional to break that glass ceiling"

 In the end of the phone interview Tim Wise perfectly sums up what racial equality will finally mean and how we will know when we've reached it : "The proof of racial equity will be the day that people of color can be a mediocre as white people and still get hired." 

Wise connects back to Brown vs. Board of Education by reminding us that "nothing took place quickly" and that we need to keep our eyes on the prize and not be deterred by our slow progress.


Thanks for reading my blog this week ! While I was reading Hebert's article from the New York Times I couldn't help but think of my final paper that I had written for Writing 100 last year. In my paper I too discussed the affects of poverty stricken neighborhoods on children attending the schools in those neighborhoods. However, I argued that more vocational and technical schools could potentially help these schools. The paper is about 8 pages long but it has some facts in it that really relate to what Hebert is arguing in his article so check it out if you'd like ! :

writing 100 paper 4.pdf

Sunday, March 16, 2014

In the Service of What? Extended Comments Blog

So this week for my blog I decided I wanted to do an extended comment. When reading others' blogs this week I noticed myself really connecting with the things that Jaclyn was saying in her blog.

In her blog, Jaclyn says "As I go each week to tutor the kids at school for this class, I feel like there’s something more. Maybe it’s because this is something I want to do for a career but I really feel as if I am making an impact on these kids with this project. I know that this is a requirement for our class, but truly, I enjoy going and helping them and feel accomplished when I leave" 

I couldn't agree more with that statement. For me, going to service learning every Friday is truly enjoyable. I love walking into the classroom and seeing all their faces smiling back at me and their hands frantically waving at me. It's honestly an amazing feeling know that these kids are excited to see you and that they want to work with you.
I find myself feeling the proudest on Friday's as well. Nothing makes me feel better about myself than knowing that my morning was well spent helping these kids. I feel like going to service learning really gives me a purpose. Like I feel like I'm doing something important, and even though I'm only one person, that hour and a half I spent with those kids mattered to them and had a positive influence on them.

Another point that Jaclyn talks about in her blog is in the reading how the middle class children were concerned about going to the lower class school, but were pleasantly surprised to learn that their assumptions were very wrong and stereotypical.

I can honestly admit that I too was extremely weary of going to the elementary school for service learning. However just like the students in the reading I too learned that nothing is as terrifying as your imagination makes it to be, and schools in lower class neighborhoods are not all that frightening. Jaclyn states, "I am finally looking past the “otherness” and have full faith in these students."
This notion of "diminishing otherness" is what allows us to cross boarders and interact with people who are different from us.

I don't think I could have said it better myself. I too find myself "looking past the 'otherness'" and really seeing the potential in all the students who I work with. Just like Jaclyn said, when you tell one of the students "you're so smart!" or "awesome job!" they smile ear to ear and it's truly rewarding to see.

I ended up finding this video on YouTube. It's only 5 minutes and the message it sends is pretty good too :) I think it really connects to this week's post :)




So overall, I enjoyed the reading this week, it made me think a lot about my own service learning experience. And a big thanks to Jaclyn for inspiring my blog post this week !

Thanks for reading !!

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Quotes From Unlearning the Myth that Binds Us

Quotes

Let me start off by first saying how much I loved the reading this week. I was totally interested in everything Christensen had to say throughout the reading. I thought that the whole unit of unearthing stereotypes in cartoons and other popular media was a really awesome project. It seems like it's a truly eye opening experience. I mean it's crazy how early on into our lives that these stereotypes and societal rules get drilled into our heads. While reading Christensen's post there were a few quotes that I really liked and felt I wanted to highlight and share with you all. 

The first quote is from page 128 "Many students don't want to believe that they have been manipulated by children's media or advertising. No one wants to admit that they've been 'handled' by the media. They assure me that they make their own choices and the media has no power over them - as they sit with Fubu, Nike, Timberlands or whatever the lastest fashion rage might be"

I love this quote because it is just way too true. For me I feel like I've always somewhat been aware of the fact that my decision are usually not just solely my decision. For example. There's a reason that I wake up everyday and put on fitted girly clothes and do my makeup and straighten my hair, cause that's what I've been conditioned to do.
Between watching my mother wake up and do her makeup and hair everyday and seeing countless beauty ads in commercials and on billboards, its no surprise that I turned out liking to do my makeup and hair. This desire to look feminine and pretty all stems back to youth where we're first exposed to these things, with characters like Cinderella and Snow White. Which is one of the points that Christensen was trying to make in this reading. The quote from above also reminds me of a book I read a few years back called Invisible Monsters by Chuck Palahniuk. I won't go into the whole story line of the book but at one point the line "“Nothing of me is original. I am the combined effort of everyone I've ever known.”comes up.  That line seems so entirely true for what Christensen is saying about her students on page 128. It seems like Christensen's students just hadn't realized yet at that point that they too "were the combined effort of everyone" But that's what I thought about when I read Christensen's words on page 128.


The next quote that I wanted to share was one from page 134 where Christensen says "But what am I teaching them if the lesson ends there? That we can quietly rebel in privacy the classroom while practice our writing skills, but we don't really have to do anything about the problems that we uncover, nor do we need to create anything to take take the place of what we've expelled. Those are not the lessons I intend to teach. I want to develop their critical consciousness, but I also hope to move them to action"

I picked this quote cause when I first read it I was really pleased with what was being said. This idea that we all need to have this developed critical consciousness. That we need to be aware of when things like media and television shows are practically brainwashing us and shoving their ideals down our throats. This quote also made me think of something else I had seen in the past. 

One of my favorite artists ever is a man named Banksy. Bansky is an enigmatic character. His real name and identity is unknown. This anonymity surrounding Banksy is what allows him to spray paint his opinions all over the sides of buildings with little to no consequences. However he doesn't always use spray paint, such as the case in his piece "The Advertisers".
This work features a long rant about media influence on our society. I connected this image to Christensen's quote and decided to include it in by blog, not only because I love Bansky's work, because I think this picture epitomizes all the points she is making in the paragraph on page 134.  

But overall I really agreed with everything that Christensen had to say in the reading this week. Another link I found that was pretty relatable to this reading was from newsweek.com. It talks about the struggles of rasing a daughter in today's time with a "princess complex" check it out ! 

Newsweek - Cinderella Ate My Daughter


Thanks for reading this week !

Saturday, February 22, 2014

It Gets Better

Hyperlinks

When reading Safe Spaces this week the one thing that kept popping into my mind is the popular "It Gets Better Project".
You may have seen commercials or YouTube videos featuring the campain. 
 


Started in 2010 by Dan Savage, author, journalist and newspaper editor with the help of his husband Terry Miller, the project began with a video of Dan and Terry discussing their belief that life as a gay person does in fact get better. They begin the video discussing their upbringings and how difficult it was going through the catholic school system as a gay youth. Within the first two minutes of the video, Dan Savage says: "Your life can be amazing, but you have to tough this period of it out and you have to live your life so that you're around for it to get amazing"
Dan and Terry's bravery in sharing their story has led to thousands upon thousands of replies from people around the world sharing their own personal stories and passing along comforting thoughts to those struggling with being an LGBT youth. Even President Obama joined in on the growing campaign to share his thoughts: 


The It Gets Better Project now has over 580,000 members on its website: http://www.itgetsbetter.org/ as well as 51,000 subscribers on YouTube, 99,000 Twitter followers and 333,290 likes on Facebook. And these numbers are constantly rising. 

To me, the It Gets Better Project and Safe Spaces are directly correlated. With the intent of preventing suicide of LGBT youth, the gay adults featured in the It Gets Better videos share their stories of life improving after completing the traditional K-12 schooling. At the same time, Safe Spaces aims to share ways in which the K-12 experience can be improved for LGBT youth. Safe Spaces suggests that the more students are introduced to LGBT topics, the less taboo and alienated it becomes. In fact if evey class was identical to some of those featured in Safe Spaces, perhaps there wouldn't even be a need for the It Gets Better Project.  But unfortunately that isn't the case and we don't live in a perfect world. So for now, there is a need for LGBT support groups such as It Gets Better. But who knows, maybe someday there won't be such a stigma associated with being LGBT. For now though, LGBT youths need to remeber...It Gets Better


Below I've included links to all of the It Gets Better Project's social media sites in case you're looking for more information on the campaign: 

YouTube Channel:http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCblryhVf-nnueGdOKZtmLZA
Twitter:https://twitter.com/itgetsbetter
Facebook Page:https://www.facebook.com/itgetsbetterproject


Or you can also visit http://www.whitehouse.gov/itgetsbetter to see more videos from White House officials.

Thanks for reading this week ! 

Sunday, February 16, 2014

“Speak to us en inglés”

Connections


“Speak to us en inglés". This sentence sounds all too familiar to me but instead of inglés I hear “Speak to us en espanol” Every Monday and Wednesday night I know exactly how Richard Rodriguez feels. Like probably every other RIC student I’m required to take at least two semesters of a foreign language. This year I’ve been busy fulfilling this requirement with Spanish 101 and Spanish 102.



After having taken Spanish 101 last semester, I thought returning to Spanish again this semester would be a fairly easy transition. However I was entirely all wrong. “Speak up. Speak to the entire class, not just me!” All these phases that Rodriguez recalls the nuns saying to him in Catholic School seem identical to those of my Spanish professor. Walking into Spanish class is somewhat intimidating. I sit in the back of the class so as not to be detected when class participation begins. Hiding behind my laptop screen I silently pray that my name isn’t called. The thought of potentially not understanding her questions and looking like a fool in front of the class crosses my mind every time her eyes scan the room for her next participant.
               When reading Aria, by Richard or should I say “Ricardo” according to page 35, Rodriguez I couldn’t help but identify with the feelings that Rodriguez describes on the first page when he talks about speaking in class. When I’m in Spanish class I feel alienated, like I have no clue what’s going on. I can only assume that that’s what Rodriguez must have felt like during the beginning of his schooling before he was fully able to comprehend English. Because the reading was so short I found that it was easy to quickly read through the passage without fully taking into account just how much Rodriguez’s life changed that day the nuns came to visit his parents. To me that was like thinking if my Spanish professor came to my house and told my parents I wasn’t participating enough and that I need to start speaking Spanish at home too. I would be mortified. The two hours I spend in class is terrifying enough to try and speak a different language, let alone trying to do it all day, even at home where you’re supposed to feel relaxed and have time with your family. I guess the point I’m trying to get at is that even though English is my first language and I’ve never had a problem with speaking in my regular classes, my experiences in my Spanish classes have given me an insight as to some of the emotions that Rodriguez must have been experiencing throughout his early schooling. I can only imagine how difficult it must have been. 


While on Huffington Post I stumbled upon this article that discusses language in schools, I wonder would Richard Rodriguez would have to say about it: 

Sunday, February 9, 2014

My Thoughts on The Silenced Dialogue






Reading The Silenced Dialogue this week was somewhat difficult. I found myself re reading paragraphs and sentences over and over again trying to fully comprehend the points Delpit was discussing. I struggled at first to really find something that sparked an interest and that I could relate to personally until around page 8. Unfortunately it took me half the reading to finally connect to something but I’m glad I did because honestly I think it helped me to understand Delpit’s argument more. On page 8 Delpit begins to discuss differences in the way that middle-class white children and black children are spoken to at home. Delpit states that “middle-class parents are likely to give the directive to a child…as a question…By contrast, a black mother, in whose house I was recently a guest, would never pose the directive to her son in the form of a question.” I found this statement to be highly interesting. It was crazy to think that just the way you speak to your child and address them is something that varies based on race. And to think that that could set them ahead or behind in school is even more alarming just because it doesn’t seem like it would be that problematic. When I read Delpit’s paragraphs on page 8 about the variation on how white parents versus black parents interact with their children I couldn’t help but think of the numerous “Vines” and Instagram pictures that I had seen with titles like “Black Parents vs. White Parents”. If you’ve ever seen one of these Vines then you’ll know how stereotypical they are. Growing up as a middle class white girl, I have no clue how a black parent in real life actually speaks to his or her child. But it seems that these Vine videos and photos really seem to support Delpit’s argument. Like this one for example:  
See what I mean, totally stereotypical. Although these videos and photos are made with the intention of making people laugh, this speech difference is one of the contributing problems to Delpit's culture of power argument. Differences in speech between people in the culture of power and people outside of the culture of power is something that furthers the gap between the two groups. So even though these may give us a slight laugh from time to time, it's shocking how true they are, even if they are somewhat exaggerated. 
Another social media site where this topic of "Black Parents vs. White Parents" has been brought up is Twitter. Babble.com, a blog and magazine for parenting recently compiled a list of White Parent quotes and Black Parent quotes that were posted to twitter. I feel that this article too is another real world example of what Delpit is talking about on page 8: 
White Parent Quotes Vs. Black Parent Quotes: Stereotypes Battle It Out On Twitter

Hope you enjoyed my post! Thanks for reading !

Sunday, February 2, 2014

"Disapproving of the system won't be enough to change them."

I have to say, between Writing 100 last year and FNED this semester, it's really beginning to come to my attention just how fortunate I am to have been born into a middle class, white family living in suburbia. I mean I've always known about racism, but of course I learned about it just like Peggy McIntosh described it in her and her colleague's experience: "whites are taught to think of their lives as morally neutral, normative, and average, and also ideal, so that when we work to benefit others, this is seen as work that will allow 'them' to be more like 'us'." Just so you guys have a better understanding of the neighborhood I'm from I figured this pie chart would be pretty helpful:
As you can see, if diversity is something you're looking for in your public school system, Smithfield is not the district for you ! 
But this helps to illustrate my point of why I was raised the same way Peggy McIntosh was. When a majority of your students are white, do you really think that the concept of "white privilege" is going to be taught? Of course not. Like McIntosh states on page two, we've "been conditioned into oblivion about its existence." This is a statement that I can whole heartily agree with. When reading McIntosh's list of ways she feels she is privileged I sat there and thought "oh yeah, I am able to do this or that because of my race" or "wow she's right, the faces of our nation typically are white just like me". These are experiences that I would have previously never thought about attributing race to. That's just the way things were.  So I guess the point I'm trying to make here, is that the more I continue on with my education at RIC, the more and more it's brought to my attention just how many problems there still are in the world pertaining to racism and inequality. 

But just like McIntosh says, "having described it, what will I do to lessen or end it?" Honestly right now, I couldn't tell you what I would do. But I feel that as this semester goes on and we embark deeper and deeper into FNED, hopefully I'll find a way to become a part of the solution. 

For now though, while we're on the subject of racism and white privilege I wanted to point out one of the points Peggy McIntosh makes in her list of privileges. On page three, McIntosh's 20th privilege listed is "I can easily buy posters, postcards, picture books, greeting cards, dolls, toys, and children's magazines featuring people of my race" The second I read that statement I thought about a short video I had recently seen posted on Facebook. In the video there are black and white baby dolls being shown to younger children. The reactions that the children have is interesting because in this case, even though a black version of a toy was manufactured, it doesn't mean that the problem is solved. I figured this would be a perfect post to share this video in.