I haven't done the extended comments post yet so this week I'm using Jackie's blog to do some extended comments.
Even in her first mini paragraph that says "never fully making a connection to how racism is truly a prominent issue that we still deal with today" is so accurate. We learn about these rights movements in the past and think that because that was so long ago that they must have been resolved. But it's not really the case. I too liked the point Wise makes about how people of color have to be Obama to be "accepted" into our societies definition of an acceptable person.
I'm convinced that Jackie and I are soul sisters because I jumped out of my chair and screamed "YES!!" when Wise talked about how abled bodied people ask other able bodied people about transportation as opposed to a non-able bodied person. Like hello why are we not asking people of color about racism? Don't you think they're probably the experts at that? Not the privileged white people. That's when I was like "I'm going to really enjoy blogging this week".
Jackie's point about how in Herbert's article he talks about integrating those students in poorer schools into schools that are in better environments is really interesting to me. I think it'd be a great idea to have students experience other worlds and probably be more challenged than in their regular school. What would worry me is other students and teachers in an upper school trating the students from a poorer community differently, granted not everyone is bad but wouldn't you be worried that they would probably be bullied?
But all in all I loved Jackie's blog this week she always rights really great things! :)
This link is to a quick new York times article about exactly what Herbert talks about!
Mermaids Lost on Land
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Unlearning the Myths That Bind Us
Oh how this article kills my childhood. Granted it's all totally true it still I will never watch a cartoon the same ever. There are plenty of Disney Princesses that are either of a different race or have goals other than finding a man. Mulan is not only Asian but cross-dresses to save her father and all of China! She defies the normal traditions of being the perfect woman, she even sings about men should want a "girl who's got a brain and always speaks her mind"... Shang is really just a bonus in the end. Belle just wants to read a damn book without Gaston trying to woo her. Tianna is a black women who is trying to open up her own business, she also gets a man as a bonus but that was not the goal of the movie. The movie Frozen is about two sisters watching out for each other, no man needed to save them!
Hyperlinks:
Christensen talks about how we often give children an unrealistic expectation of how life should be through cartoons, books and movies. I really connect with the Disney Princess aspect of this because those movies were my childhood and do often give you this expectation that you should always have perfect hair, be thin and sing like and angel to get the guy.
I watched a video awhile ago that's funny but actually really true too! I warn you though it contains a good amount of vulgar language.
She also has videos on "What Children's shows taught me" and "What movies taught me about Love" which are a more comical spin on the points Christensen makes.
One of Christensen's students talks about the images girls see of women in the media and in cartoons. How all Disney Princesses are beautiful and skinny. Christensen brings up that women were rarely even shown in older cartoons and when they were she says "they look like Jessica Rabbit or Playboy centerfolds". Like hello world there are more women who don't look like that than ones that do. One of the more recent weight outrages was when Cosmopolitan magazine (a magazine that gives women unrealistic sex advice and expectations) posted a picture of one of their models who had large blobs and wasn't stick thin calling her a "plus sized model". Huffington post then wrote Cosmo a letter back about this issue Huffington Post on Cosmo's "Plus Sized" Model
And look! Here's a quick video of how photo-shopped models actually are! I'm not trying to bash models but if you've ever seen pictures of them without makeup, or even celebrities, they do not look as beautiful as they do in images.
Most guys are not like Noah from the Notebook, they are not going to build you a house to win you back but I mean if Ryan Gosling wants to build me a house for us to fall in love in I wouldn't complain.
Here's a list of "7 Unrealistic Expectations Women have of Men" #4 talks about the Prince Charming deal Unrealistic Expectations Women Have of Men
Hyperlinks:
Christensen talks about how we often give children an unrealistic expectation of how life should be through cartoons, books and movies. I really connect with the Disney Princess aspect of this because those movies were my childhood and do often give you this expectation that you should always have perfect hair, be thin and sing like and angel to get the guy.
I watched a video awhile ago that's funny but actually really true too! I warn you though it contains a good amount of vulgar language.
One of Christensen's students talks about the images girls see of women in the media and in cartoons. How all Disney Princesses are beautiful and skinny. Christensen brings up that women were rarely even shown in older cartoons and when they were she says "they look like Jessica Rabbit or Playboy centerfolds". Like hello world there are more women who don't look like that than ones that do. One of the more recent weight outrages was when Cosmopolitan magazine (a magazine that gives women unrealistic sex advice and expectations) posted a picture of one of their models who had large blobs and wasn't stick thin calling her a "plus sized model". Huffington post then wrote Cosmo a letter back about this issue Huffington Post on Cosmo's "Plus Sized" Model
And look! Here's a quick video of how photo-shopped models actually are! I'm not trying to bash models but if you've ever seen pictures of them without makeup, or even celebrities, they do not look as beautiful as they do in images.
My other big thing with this article is how girls are taught that getting a man is the goal in life. Like that that should be the main goal of every girls life starting at like age 16. My goal is really to just get through college and get a job before I'd even think about getting married. Also why is it always said that a women's wedding day is the best day of her life? Like uhm no I could think of plenty of other days in your life that are going to better or just as good as your wedding day. Why do people think that's all women want? Why is it that if we want to be the CEO of a company or the President of the United States women are called power hungry or monsters? Chances are girls that a man is not going to kiss you out of a coma or stab a giant octopus women with his oat to rescue you.
Most guys are not like Noah from the Notebook, they are not going to build you a house to win you back but I mean if Ryan Gosling wants to build me a house for us to fall in love in I wouldn't complain.
Here's a list of "7 Unrealistic Expectations Women have of Men" #4 talks about the Prince Charming deal Unrealistic Expectations Women Have of Men
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Safe Spaces
For this week’s article I chose to do the quotes
option as my blog. My quotes are from the first section because as much as I enjoyed
the entire article I felt the second part about HOW to integrate LGBT topics into
society wasn’t as powerful as the part about WHY we need to integrate them into
society. Actually my quotes are within the first five pages…awk. But out of all
the ones I highlighted they really were my favorite.
Quote 1: “Heterosexism is one of those unexamined
avenues of privilege. Assumptions that everyone is (or should be) heterosexual
shape most classroom interactions, whether academic or social.” (84)
We talked a lot about privilege in class and
SCWAAMP, which really applies to this quote that heterosexual is “the norm” in
classrooms. People just assume that everyone is straight and that is what is
integrated into lessons and to discussion topics. This is essentially the root
of the problem, that everyone takes the assumed straight root and avoids all
other topics.
Quote 2: “Youth who see themselves as wise or
powerful main characters or heroes worthy of celebration and emulation will
feel validated, included, and safe inside their classrooms. LGBT youth rarely
have this experience.” (85)
Students who are white, straight, men are probably
more validated than anyone else, I think. All but one of our presidents was a
white male, and they’re all straight. God forbid we have a gay superhero!
Straight people are shown as the powers of this world. If teachers brought in
people in the world who are powerful and a part of the LGBT community those
students could feel included as a part of this world.
Quote 3: “They teach their students the status quo;
they shrink from challenging dominant social patterns and expectation,
especially in relation to sexual orientation or gender identity.” (85-86)
WHY IS EVERYONE SO SHY WHEN IT COMES CHALLENGING
POWER? Why can’t we ever stray from what is normal? Why is that so damn bad?
Teachers are only teaching things that involve heterosexuality because they do
not want to tap on the glass of their students perfect, unseen panels. If every
teacher integrated something other than straightness into curriculum, and just
normal discussions with students it wouldn’t seem so foreign but we shy away
from that because most people don’t know how to talk about it.
On a side note I thought the little story about the
two male penguins at the zoo who raised an abandoned egg on their own was
adorable. And the fact that the Secretary of Education told PBS to pull the
episode involving two gay moms from its lineup because “Many parents would not
want their young children exposed to the life-styles portrayed in this episode”
(86) actually infuriates the crap out of me. Kids don’t understand what
lesbians are they just see two moms and either ask why they don’t have a dad or
it just goes right over their heads. Exposure to this type of relationship just
reinforces that acceptance in a child’s mind. Some parents are just too thick
headed to even fathom that there are different people is this world. If the
parents refuse to explain this to their kids, and the teachers aren’t, and TV
isn’t allowed to either, who the hell is going to show children that acceptance
and understanding differences is crucial?!
This is a link to an article I read awhile ago where a student tells a teacher they are being bullied and the teacher just told the student to "act less gay". http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-essex-15552623
Monday, February 17, 2014
Aria
I chose the article Aria by Richard Rodriquez for
this week which was a way nicer read the Delpit last week!! Granted I’ve been
at swim Championships all weekend so it took me a while to grasp it through all
the cheers and races. But I still liked it a lot better than the last one J
This week I decided to do the argument point because I think
there was a strong argument that Rodriquez made on the last page of his
article. This author argues that “children lose a degree of ’individuality’ by
becoming assimilated into public society.” (38) Rodriquez talks about how when
he was a boy (or at least I think it’s about him) the nuns at his school told
his Spanish speaking parents that they needed to learn English to help him do
better in school. Rodriquez talks about it made him lose touch with his
heritage and his family. His family began to talk to each other less as they
became more Americanized and as his father struggled to learn the new language
he began to talk and interact less and less with his family. Rodriquez talks
about how it is great to feel like an individual in what he calls the “public
society” or the English speaking society but that you lose sight of your
individuality in your “private” life. At least I think that’s what he’s saying
about how to be accepted into society you have to give up a part of who you are
and where you’re from.
I know in the classroom I'm working in this semester is an ESL classroom which is actually very challenging for me because I only ever retained the colors and months in Spanish so I found a website that has a lot of helpful tips to work with students who speak different languages.
Also sorry this is late I was at a swim competition all weekend and there was zero WiFi (which is dumb because we were at a college) and when I got home at like 1 am last night my computer wasn't working and so I had to take it to Best Buy today and they did all this work on it just to tell me I needed a new charger for it and ugh it was ridiculous! But here it is!!
Sunday, February 9, 2014
Other People's Children: The Silence Dialogue
Oh I found this to be such a difficult read! I think Lisa
Delpit has a really great argument of course but I really only figured out what
her argument was after about the third read through maybe? And this wasn’t even
a short read so you can only imagine how long it took me to process it. Delpit talks a lot about different theories
and addressing them with terminology I was really used to so it became a very
heavy read. Unfortunately I feel that because I struggled so much with it I may
have lost a lot of the context.
What I really latched onto in this text is number five of
the five aspects of power where Delpit states “Those with power are frequently
least aware of – or least willing to acknowledge – its existence. Those with
less power are often most aware of its existence.” This aspect of power relates
back to two of the readings from last week, “White Privilege: unpacking the
Invisible Knapsack” by Peggy McIntosh and the short article titled “Data show
racial bias persists in America” by Salim Muwakkil.
McIntosh in her article lists twenty-six different
privileges she has day that a person would not think about in their day-to-day
lives but they are there. Many of the privileges she talks about are ones a
white person is just used but are ones a black man or women notices every day.
For example when we (white people) go to buy band aids we can buy them in a
skin color that matches ours whereas there probably isn’t such a wide variety
of skin colored band aids for people of color to choose from. Had I ever
noticed that until reading these articles? Not even for a second because it is
a “power” that I hold.
And in the article by Muwakkil, when a black man and a
white man with the same qualifications and experience go out for the same job
the white man is more likely to get called back than the black man. I highly
doubt the white man realized it was because he is white and that’s why he got
the job. But I’m sure the black man knew that because he is black is the reason
he did not get the job. I’m not saying that this is always the case but more
often than none it seems so be. White people go day to day with power they do
not notice and blacks with a lack of power they know is holding them back. And
it isn’t even just blacks in this situation it could be other races or women
too who are more aware of the existence of the invisible powers and privileges
that seem to rule our society.
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Privilege's We Can't Control
I chose the article "White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack" by Peggy McIntosh.
Reflection: Just the other day I was at a store where I had to use my new debit card. My other one had been hacked and I was scammed out of almost all my money and it was a huge ordeal so I had to get another card. I had or thought I had activated the card prior to using it but apparently I hadn't and was so embarrassed when my card was declined but the lady was so nice about it after I explained what had happened and ended up just paying cash. After reading this article and all the privileges McIntosh talks I realized that had a been of a different race the women behind the counter probably would've judged the fact that my card was declined and wouldn't have believed my activation dilemma.
This article really made me think about all the different scenarios I've been in where if I was of a different race I would probably have been treated differently. It's this white privilege that we are unaware about until we actually think about it and look at things from another persons perspective. If I was out to dinner I might get served quicker as a white human as opposed to people of other races and the waitress might be a lot nicer to me. I know that's not always the case and I could be totally wrong but I guess that's because I am white and haven't had to experience people treating me worse because of my skin color.
The website where that picture came from is http://unfaircampaign.org/ and is actually filled with cool stuff!
Reflection: Just the other day I was at a store where I had to use my new debit card. My other one had been hacked and I was scammed out of almost all my money and it was a huge ordeal so I had to get another card. I had or thought I had activated the card prior to using it but apparently I hadn't and was so embarrassed when my card was declined but the lady was so nice about it after I explained what had happened and ended up just paying cash. After reading this article and all the privileges McIntosh talks I realized that had a been of a different race the women behind the counter probably would've judged the fact that my card was declined and wouldn't have believed my activation dilemma.
This article really made me think about all the different scenarios I've been in where if I was of a different race I would probably have been treated differently. It's this white privilege that we are unaware about until we actually think about it and look at things from another persons perspective. If I was out to dinner I might get served quicker as a white human as opposed to people of other races and the waitress might be a lot nicer to me. I know that's not always the case and I could be totally wrong but I guess that's because I am white and haven't had to experience people treating me worse because of my skin color.
The website where that picture came from is http://unfaircampaign.org/ and is actually filled with cool stuff!
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