Spring page 62
“Plessy vs. Ferguson highlights the principle that race is a social and legal construction.”
We can see that the meaning of the term “race” has changed many times throughout our American history: In the case stated above, in the Takao Ozawa vs. United States case (1922) and in the United States vs. Bhagat Singh Thind case (1923). We have been talking in class about how race is what it is defined as today only because of what our society has deemed it to be. Race does not have to do with the color of one’s skin, which is proven by the court’s inability to decide on what they should classify as different races between the different cases listed above. If the courts can’t make a clear and final decision on how to classify races, then can there really be one at all? Stereotyping is what the meaning of the word “race” comes down to. Race has nothing to do with one’s cultures or background, but is many times a label for the color of one’s skin. Spring talks about how the courts even realized that skin color won’t work to classify different races because everyone has a different skin tone. So why is it that the courts were able to make the decisions they did even though “race” cannot be clarified based on the color of one’s skin? How should we teach about the concept of race in our classrooms in relation to how the government defines it (or doesn’t define it).
Spring page 69
“… second-generation forms of segregation can occur in schools with balanced racial populations; for instance, all white students may be placed in one academic track and all African American or Hispanic students in another track.”
I ahave never heard of second-generation segregation before, well the term of it I mean. Unfortunately, even though segregation was supposed to be ended eyars ago, we still see many schools segregatedtoday. I have never really thought about the way that segregation can happen within one particular school that is segregated demographically as a whole. Seeing all these forms of segregation and how it has truly never ended in our school systems, I wonder if it ever will end. When the Court decided to end segregation, many schools were forced to have close to an equal amount of each “race” attending each school. The ones that were successful in doing tat, turned to the second –generation segregation that moved segregation to within the walls of the school. Not only is this segregation between races, but it can be found happening to chidren who have special needs also. The terms segregation and social prejusdice seem to go hand-in-hand when talked about this way. Can our schools ever change from being this way? If our society never changes the prejudices they have towards people, how will our schools ever be able to?
Spring page 255
“In contrast, the U.S. Supreme Court in 1996 let stand the decision by the U.S> Court of Appeals for the Fifth District that school systems were not liable for sexual harassment of students by other students.”
I think I am a little confused by this statement. There are laws stating that harassment is not allowed to happen in schools, even though it is evident that these laws are not followed through with because there are still cases of student suicide caused by bullying. If there are laws against harassment, or bullying, then would sexual harassment be different that regular harassment, causing children not to be protected in those specific cases? If that is true, then I don’t agree with that at all. To me, any form of harassment can be dangerous for a child to experience. Too many children become depressed or end their lives because of what they have to deal with from peers at school. If I am wrong in the way I perceive this information, can anyone please correct me?
Kozol page 217
“In school, you would not sense his feelings of political impatience; he does his best to make his fifth grade class a happy and protective place for children. His wrath emerges when he’s leaving school, or walking in the neighborhood, or when the weekend comes.”
This quote is talking about a teacher named Louis Bedrock who has been working at P.S. 30 (a school in the Bronx) for sixteen years. This quote shows the importance of leaving feelings that should not be brought into the classroom, out of the classroom. It is important for the children to be made aware of what is happening in the community in which they are living in, but for Mr. Broderick to be angry at something that is not happening within his classroom while he is teaching all day would hinder the children’s ability to learn. Children need a compassionate community in order for them to learn and grow to their fullest potential. They need to feel important within the walls of the room despite the segregation that may have put them there. As long as the child is being nurtured in the best way for them within their learning community, then it will help to maximize their learning. Mr. Bedrock is a good example for all teachers to follow in this aspect of teaching and dealing with the struggles of the reality that society is not what it should be. The feelings behind the struggles should be left outside of the classroom so that the main focus can be on the students. What would be a good way to help more teachers remember to do this all of the time for their students?
Kozol page 221
“At every opportunity I have to talk with advocates and educators who share any part of my beliefs about these matters nowadays, I ask the same repeated questions: Where should teachers, superintendents, principals and others who are troubled by the silence of our nation’s leaders on this issue look for recourse and for reinforcement of their discontent?”
Kozol then goes on to state that we need to find the voices to magnify our cries for help and change in the people who have lived in the very problems we are trying to fix. Successful Black people who went to segregated schools and never want to return and White people who went to desegregated schools and experienced success are just two examples of people who we should turn to to help change it. The citizens who are not a part of the government will have the loudest voices against what is happening in today’s school systems, because they have experienced it and continue to experience it every day. A question that I have is how to we get people to use their voices against “the norm” of today’s society? How do we get rid of the fear that many may have to stand up for something that the government is blind to? How do we get the government to hear our cries for change and help when they turn a deaf ear and blind eye for the most part today?
Kozol page 238
“Choosing his words deliberately, Wilkins spoke of what he termed “the small-minded triumphalism” of contemporary political leaders who grew up in “isolated worlds of white male privilege” and have, as a result, “inadequate education for the responsibilities they hold.””
Again, this is what we have talked about in class. So many people are not aware that they are privileged because that is all they grow up knowing. If no one tells them that they are privileged, they are not made aware to think so. What people are not faced with, or are not taught, they just don’t know about. White male privilege is very real and is the truth for almost every white working male. White males get paid more than any other person, etc. If this is not pointed out to them, however, they may never realize this reality. In this unfortunate reality, too many of these “unaware” people are the ones running our government. They are not educated enough in reality to know how to deal with reality. They try and solve problems that do not exist in the way that they think they do because they are not livng the problem every day. NCLB was an example of this. One white, privileged man decided to grade a child’s and teacher’s success solely on a standardized test, and if they don’t pass then the school is considered failing, etc. Unfortunately, that man was not an active part of the education system on a daily basis. He made a law that, although he thought would help, ended up hurting our schools, students and teachers. To make matters worse, RTTT, which was supposed to “fix” NCLB, has only made things worse. How can we make these people who are unfit to govern our education system see what it really needs to survive and flourish?