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Monday, March 31, 2008

Talking Points #7

Charles Lawrence: "'One More River to Cross' - Recognizing the Real Injury in Brown: A Prerequisite to Shaping New Remedies"

Premise:

~ Brown vs. Board of Education
~ children
~ America
~ struggle
~ equality
~ segregation
~ desegregation
~ race
~ Blacks
~ 14th amendment
~ school
~ labeling
~ Northern vs. Southern
~ rights
~ separation

Argument:

Lawrence argues that the Brown vs. Board of Education was a failure in the way that segregation still exists in schools today. According to Lawrence, he believes that this trial was just a "band aide on a broken leg".

Evidence:

1. "Out enslaved forbears recognized that the white masters would not easily give up their preferred position, and that the struggle for freedom would not end quickly. There would be no final victory in their lifetimes. Each step forward was just that, a step. There would always be 'one more river to cross'." (53)

2. "If one views the Brown case narrowly, ... , history has proven it a clear failure." (53)

3. "The Court's failure to recognize and articulate the true nature of racial segregation was more the product of an intentional, knowledgable decision than the result of any inability to comprehend. This intentional misunderstanding had its roots in Brown, and has jusicial, political, and social attitudes which are crucial to Blacks today." (54)

4. "The Court's refusal to recognize and articulate the real nature of segregation in Brown and its progeny has fostered an attitude and approach to the elimination of segregation that necessarily be unsuccessful." (58)

5. "... unless we being by being clear about the direction of the far shore, the depth, speed of current, and the physical properties of the water, we will never reach the other side." (65)

Other Stuff:

I found this article extremely difficult to read. I had a lot of trouble staying focused. I feel as if maybe he could have worked it out in a more reader-friendly way. I know this is impossible because he is a lawyer. On the other hand, this reminds me of my political science class. We are talking about civil rights with Martin Luther King and making our way into segregation. One of the books we had to buy was "Brown vs. Board of Education". That is our next book. I am really hoping our class discussion will help me to understand a little bit more about this article and clarify whether or not I am on the right track with my argument.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Talking Points #6

Jeannie Oakes: "Tracking: Why Schools Need to Take Another Route"

Premise:

~ schooling
~ teachers
~ students
~ tracking
~ difference
~ alternatives
~ consequence
~ ability
~ opportunity
~ class
~ low-ability
~ combination
~ curriculum
~ learning
~ capability
~ change

Argument

Oakes argues that children placed in low-ability or high-ability groups in elementary school tend to remain in those groups throughout high school. She believes that the students shouldn't be labelled so early on and that all students should be brought together at one point in time.

Evidence

1. "Typically, low-track high school students have been in low-ability groups and remedial programs since elementary school. The gap between them and more successful students has grown wider - no only in achievement but in attitudes toward school and toward their own ability to succeed. By the time students reach secondary school, track-related achievement and attitude differences are often well established." (181)

2. "Students who are placed in high-ability groups have access to far richer schooling experiences than other students." (178)

3. "If students of all abilities are to benefit from being taught together, classrooms will probably need to be organized far differently, providing a diversity of tasks and interactions with few 'public' comparisons of students' ability." (181)

4. "Students who need more time to learn appear to get less; those who have the most difficulty learning seem to have fewer of the best teachers." (179)

Other Stuff:

I'm not too sure what I think of this article. I liked it because I never realized the idea of tracking before. If I got Oakes' argument correct, then I agree and disagree with it. I agree with the second part of the argument because i think that combining all students is the fair thing to do. I also agree with the first part of the argument but I don't think it is for the best. I agree with how the children are separated and diagnosed at a very young age, but I don't understand why they have to be kept like that throughout their 12-year school career. Children learn and will get better and being placed into a low- or high-ability group is not right because they are way too young to even know how they think or learn. I had a little bit of a hard time finding Oakes' argument but once i got a hold of it, getting the points of evidence wasn't that difficult at all. I'm curious as to what everyone in our class has to say about the idea of "tracking".

Monday, March 17, 2008

Talking Points #5

Joseph Kahne and Joel Westheimer: "In the Service of What? The Politics of Service Learning"


Premise:

~ America's schools
~ service learning
~ education
~ educators
~ volunteer
~ policies
~ values
~ promotion
~ ideological goals
~ political goals
~ social goals
~ activities
~ privilege
~ issues
~ voice
~ experience
~ compassion
~ moral
~ political
~ intellectual
~ orientation
~ culture
~ effort

Argument:

Kahne and Westheimer argue that service learning should be included in every child's life and every school's curriculum not only as a charity, but as a life-altering experience for them.

Evidence:

1. "This experience and others like it, quite common in the literature of service learning, emphasize charity, not change." (7)

2. "Similarly, many contemporary scholars focus on change over charity and argue that the lack of connection between individual rights and communal obligations within our culture has left us with a bankrupt sense of citizenship." (9)

3. "They stress the importance of compassion of those in need, and they encourage children and young adults to find ways to help." (3)

4. "...the underlying goals and the impact of a given service learning activity can embody commitments to both change and charity and can have relevance for any of the three domains." (6)

5. "The idea that educators should foster a volunteer ethic and encourage youths to give something back to their school or community currently receives widespread support." (7)

6. "However, there are numerous ways in which a curriculum focused on giving provides opportunities for students to develop caring relationships, especially when compared to a traditional academic curruculum." (7)

7. "In addition to helping those they serve, such service learning activities seek to promote students' self-esteem, to develop higher-order thinking skills, to make use of multiple abilities, and to provide authentic learning experiences - all goals of current curriculum reform efforts." (2)

Other Stuff:

I didn't like this article at all. I couldn't seem to stay focused while reading this. I think it was a very difficult read. I do agree, though, with the authors and their arguement. I think that everyone should experience service learning at least once in their lifetime. Personally, I absolutly love my service learning project. It is a great way for me to step out of my box, and to step into a new one that i never thought i would encounter. In my opinion, it is an awesome experience.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

:)

i loved class on tuesday !!

i also really enjoyed reading the "most rascist disney characters" off of tiff's page. the one that surprised me the most was sebastian singing about slaves. i never noticed that before and now that i sing the song, i get it haha

Monday, March 3, 2008

Talking Points #4

Christensen: "Unlearning the Myths That Bind Us"

Premise:
~ myth
~ race
~ difference
~ stereotype
~ Disney
~ cartoons
~ character portrayal
~ children
~ television
~ "secret education"
~ change
~ inequality

Argument:

Christensen argues that the media spits out a "secret education which soon becomes the foundation for the way young children believe they should live their lives.

Evidence:

1. "Our society's culture industry colonizes [students'] minds and teaches them how to act, live, and dream. This indoctrination hits young children hard. The 'secret education ... delivered by children's books and movies, instructs young people to accept the world as it is portrayed in these social blueprints." (126)

2. "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 latest fashion rage might be." (128)

3. "As Tinker Bell inspects her tiny body in a mirror only to find that her minute hips are simply too huge, she shows us how to turn the mirror into an enemy... And this scenario is repeated in girls' locker rooms all over the world." (136)

4. "Because we can never look like Cinderella, we begin to hate ourselves. The Barbie syndrome starts as we begin a lifelong search for the perfect body. Crash diets, fat phobias, and an obsession with the materialistic become commonplace. The belief that a product will make us rise above our competition, our friends, turns us into addicts. Our fix is that Calvin Klein push-up bra, Guess jeans, Chanel lipstick, and the latest in suede flats. We don't call it deception; we call it good taste. And soon it feels awkward going to the mailbox without makeup." (136)

Other Stuff:

This is, by a mile, my favorite article so far. I agree totally with Christensen. Until I read this article, I never actually realized how stereotypical and brainwashing the media could be. I never noticed the "secret education" being spat out at children without their knowledge. I can see advertisements being this way, but definitely not Disney movies. I guess I was always just naive. I have been a Disney fanatic ever since I was little, and being old enough to really see what points are coming across in those movies kind of breaks my heart. I never once realized the point that Cinderella makes about the stepmother and stepsisters and how they are always put across as being mean. That whole idea comes from the Cinderella idea. Also, I always loved the Cinderella made with Brandy, Whitney Houston, and Whoopi Goldberg. That movie gets the minority idea across. The beginning of the first line of this whole article is my favorite and it is absolutely how I based my life. "I was nourished on the milk of American culture: I cleaned the dwarves' house and waited for Prince Charming to bring me to life; I played Minnie Mouse to Mickey's flower-bearing adoration..." (126) Me. The end. Growing up in a Disney-crazed home being a "princess", I based my life upon how they live. Reading this article, I came to the realization that I may have needed all my life, and that is to live life the way you are and not as others live theirs (especially how lives are put across in the media/or in my case Disney movies). I always thought that the "Disney" life was the perfect life, but in reality, nothing is really perfect. Finally, I agree 100% with my last point of evidence when Catkin writes about Cinderella and the Barbie syndrome. Being a teenage girl I have lived this first-hand and we do become "addicted" to "the belief that product will make us rise above our competition..." (137)