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Fantastic 5

"What they deserve.."

sarahfj's picture

In Noguera's The Trouble with Black Boys, I was struck by this quotes. "...there is surprisingly little objection to the sorting process because students come to believe that their grades, test scores, and behavior have cerated a future of them that they deserve." (p. 118). After reading this section, I realized that my previous conception was that these students retained a belief that it was the school that was to blame for their failure rather than themselves.

America's "Race War"

jkang's picture

One of the readings that especially struck me this weak was "Race War: Policing, Incarceration, and the Containment of Black Youth," by Bakari Kitwana because it embodies an intersection of a lot of my studies in health and education.  I took Anthropology of AIDS last year, and we often talked about how the "war on drugs" proved to be catastrophic in raising incarceration rates and HIV and AIDS transmission rates within the black community.  I was especially struck by the increase of "707 percent" (Kitwana 5268*) within the 10 year period and I can imagine that the rates are only higher now, since that statistic is now twenty years old.  

More than Scores to Achieve Equality

meghan.sanchez's picture

How can the government demand a certain score on a test from all students when closing the achievement gap isn't based on these arbitrary test scores? There are other more pressing factors that relate to this educational achievement gap that these tests will never solve. 

"The United States should not use one hand to blame the schools for inadequately serving disadvantaged children when its social policies have helped create these disadvantages - especially income disadvantages - with the other hand." (City Kids, City Schools, p.225)

What Teachers Need to Know About Poverty

sarahfj's picture

I really enjoyed Sue Books' "What Teachers Need to Know About Poverty." I thought it was a powerful and dynamic summary of the hardships faced by students in low income schools and I appreciated the way she outlined what makes an effective teacher for those students. I particuarly appreciated the line, "Many children who grow up in poverty thrive despite tremendous hardships. This testifies to the amazing strength of their young spirits, but cannot, or ought not, be used as a reason to deny the profound significance of poverty in young lives." (185). I think there is a common assumption that it is the childrens' responsibility to succeed and the American Dream influences this assumption. It posits that, if a person wills success, he or she will achieve it.

Neoliberalism and Education

jrice's picture

"In 2010, State Attorney General Tom Corbett was elected as governor, his political network heavily populated by advocates for private-sector education reform. Backed by a conservative state legislature, Corbett cut about $860 million from public education in his first budget rather than tax the state’s booming natural-gas industry. He also expanded Pennsylvania’s “voucher lite” programs, popular among conservatives, which provide corporations with major tax credits in exchange for donations for private-school tuition.

The relationship between teachers and students - Noguera and Kozol

jrice's picture

There were two quotes that stood out to me in the readings and while not directly related represent opposite parts of a spectrum relating to how teachers interact with and view thier studnets. The first quote is from Noguera's introduction in City Kids, City Schools where he says "teachers who take time to know thier studnets are compelled to engage in an ongoing process of learning and inquiry, because the children they serve are not static or "knowable" in an anthropological sense.

Chemerinsky

sarahfj's picture

In the Chemerinsky reading, I was struck by the influence of choice upon resegregation of schools. According to the reading, "Some school boards adopted so-called 'freedom of choice' plans which allowed students to choose the school where they would enroll and resulted in continuted segregation." This began after the Brown vs. Board of Education 1954 decision, but is still in practice to this day. I have always been a proponent of choice as I myself attended a choice school and benefited greatly from it. However, though it has occured to me that choice may play a role in resegregation, I had not realized that it's origins were directly correlated to white students leaving schools that were being desegregated. I question whether this was the first instance of this practice.