The chapters for this week were interesting, but not really that surprising. Particularly the chapter devoted to African-American boys. I am not in the classroom yet, but I can picture some of the "verbal disparagement and...harsh dressing down of kids" by some teachers that may not be comfortable dealing with diversity or have accepted some of the stereotypes that are presented on television and in movies (page 317). Too often these teachers are commanding respect from their students, but they are unwilling to return the favor. This is not the 1950s. We cannot rule the classroom with Principal's office threats and yardsticks. Instead teachers must be up-front with their students early on and enthusiastically show them respect.
I was kind of thrown off by the following quote on pages 320-321: "in the final analysis the focus is all too often on individual maladaptive behavior and black mothering practices as the problem rather that on the social structure in which this endangerment occurs." If teachers make this sort of argument about why they are having trouble reaching or controlling African-American male students, they are forgetting about what they signed up to do. I am not sure how I will react to teachers that say, "I am not a babysitter, my job is to teach math. If kids don't get it because they are disruptive or they have problems at home, well that is their problem, not mine." That may be what their union contract says they have to do, but if they believe their job is not to work with children, then I think they are in the wrong profession.
The chapter about Asian-Americans as the "model minority" was also riveting. When conservative commentators brag about how Asian-Americans were able to pick themselves up by their bootstraps, and therefore other minorities should be able to do the same, they are desmonstrating their ignorance. In reality, people that carry prejudices appreciate Asian-Americans because they believe Asian-Americans have lived up to the white status quo and have not fought to change parts of society. This while African-Americans and Hispanics continue to be painted as inferior. The truth is that this is not and should not be about skin color. It has more to do with poverty and power. If we can provide the impoverished with real opportunities for advancement, racial stereotypes and prejudices may begin to melt away.
These are tired stereotypes that will hopefully run their course. All students deserve opportunity and it is the responsibility of teachers to provide them with that opportunity. Race should not matter.
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