Wednesday, August 29, 2012

When It's Tough to Be White in America


Note the words "an exceptional event."


My daughter carries her mother’s soft brown hair and her father’s Germanic nose. She’s 16, and she lives in a multi-cultural community. To many, multi-cultural means black (with some white people peppered throughout). Same with the term, diversity. The “Silent P,” my city and the high school in question, are actually multi-cultural. I’m talking 30-30-30-10, in terms of ethnicity.

[Note: I find it interesting that in the 10% or so that are labeled “Asian,” we as a society lump Pakistani Sunni Muslims and Filipino Roman Catholics. That’s a pretty wide swath of cultures to throw under one ethnicity.]


This girl of mine, for all of her issues, has faced racism across the board. She has a black “friend” from the neighborhood who won’t acknowledge her in school. She has lost other friends because of her skin color and ethnicity. Yesterday, that seemed to come to a head--on the first day of school.

She has a boyfriend (though I was never directly told of this—HAS THE FATHER APPROVED??). This boy coaches a kids’ soccer team. It seems a key way to get my daughter’s attention is to be good with kids. In fact, she seems happiest when working with small children. This “boyfriend” is a Hispanic (didn’t I just tell you he was coaching soccer? Pay attention!). He’s also on the high school soccer team. I’m told he’s a “nice kid.” I’ll take everyone else’s word for it. For now.

Yesterday was the first day of school for the Silent P. In the morning, this young man attempted a Public Display of Affection (PDA) by trying to KISS my daughter. She dodged said attempt. This caused great consternation and frustration for both of them. He was resentful for the rest of the day. She was frustrated all day, as well. You see, I think she would have kissed him back…had he just made this attempt in the afternoon.

The morning was not a good time to be trying to kiss my daughter. That’s not because of some biological clock of sorts. Rather, it’s because on “A-Day” mornings, she is around her Asian girlfriends. These friends are quite conservative, socially. One was called a “slut” by her father when she was caught watching TV with her then-boyfriend and laying (clothed) with her head on his leg. Another is not allowed to have boys in the house. Period. My daughter and her boyfriend have only been “together” a short time—one day, by some standards. For my daughter to actually kiss a boy she had been dating only one day, she would be labeled a “slut,” as well. At least in her mind. At least in someone’s mind among this set of friends. Such a kiss would have been a point of contention. If word leaks out to a parent of just one of these girls, my daughter’s social circle could contract quickly.

All of these things had to be taken into account in the course of one, maybe two seconds. The boy didn’t understand the context. Hopefully, that has changed or will change. My daughter chose to keep her friends close. “Sisters before misters.” (Wait, isn’t that a black phrase?) Meanwhile, I imagine this poor young man could have been humiliated in front of his culture (Hispanic young males). Hopefully, nobody from his world saw the whole thing. On the other hand, word could get out that my daughter is kind of “cold.”

All in one or two seconds.

I’m convinced that a real conversation about race, ethnicity, and culture in this country will never take place. Generations will eventually assimilate, and that means Caucasian-Americans (!) will make further adjustments, as well.

It’s tough to be a teenager in this America, these days. Homeschooling, moving to the country, choosing specific neighborhoods, and talking about how a place is “a good place to raise kids” can be euphemisms for “the culture is more defined around here.” That’s true no matter which culture dominates, as long as the cultural rules are clear.

But throwing my kids into a place where you face “America” all at once…well, that just makes things difficult on them. (My apologies, you three poor Henley kids—I hope you don’t notice this blog this for a few years, still.) The goal was and is that nothing will bite you in the butt in adulthood that hasn’t hit you already. As a parent, though, it’s tough to watch the growing pains. I forced this life on my kids because I didn’t want them to deal with the ignorance I’ve spent 45 years overcoming. Right now, though, it feels like “ignorance is underrated.”

Song is worth a listen, by the way. So's this song, where Ari Hest NAILS the attitude of a young man who left one specific place to find the "Silent P," complete with kitschy pics and others from the Shawshank Redemption, no less. Glad to see someone else notices the motivational effect of Ari Hest's "Aberdeen."

I hope my kids look at this as a place to return, to call home. In the meantime, we're all stuck here, stuck in "America."

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

A Snippet and Article for Teachers

Some ideas about getting started for all of those who will be doing so very soon. Keep two important things in mind when reading this article and writing rules you must live with for an academic year.

1. Have an official means of amending the rules. If the Constitution has that clause, so should a classroom.

2. The best idea (and quote) from this article is "You're shooting for influence, not control." This is akin to NBA Commissioner David Stern, who once fired a referee for over-reacting to an argument with Tim Howard. In an interview about it, Stern said the purpose of the referees was "game management."

3. Remember when setting rules that the operative activity in the classroom is not teaching; rather, that key activity is learning. The purpose of the rules? Helping students learn.

Otherwise, it's just a power game. Usually, a teacher will lose those.

Who Makes the Rules in a Classroom? Seven Ideas about Rule-making. - Teacher in a Strange Land - Education Week Teacher.

 Something less emotional, maybe a little helpful to teachers (and anyone in charge of anybody else).

Today, I came across two separate articles/posts that made a connection for me. Connection is what I'm about, so I'm going to pass this along to anyone getting ready for a new academic year.
--
On LinkedIn, I subscribe to a group called "Higher Education Teaching and Learning." One of the group's leaders, Dr. Olga Kovbasyuk, wrote a piece entitled "Dialogue as a Means of Change." In a rather high-level article, this interesting gem appeared:
Regrettably, much of higher education today is still more directed towards the training of a professional who is capable of performing certain functions and responsibilities, rather than nurturing a personality who makes the maximum effort to become a full human being. I hold that education should support developing the personality rather than to just help her/him acquire professional attributes; striving to become involves striving for intelligence, self/world-improvement, and professional competency.
Big words, but still on-point.

Consider this when setting rules for your 2nd grade class this coming week. How much of those rules should come from the students, and what should come from the teacher?

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Texas: Where Over Half the Kids Fail



Texas pride is its own animal. In Colorado (among other states), there has been an influx of people from both California and Texas.

When asked, a typical Coloradan is annoyed with the new arrivals. However, their problem seems more acute if the person comes from Texas. Texans can't help themselves, wearing burnt orange or maroon, "whooping," flying the Lone Star flag on their car, sporting bumper stickers that say "NATIVE TEXAN" in the middle of a state they left Texas to find. Can't stop talking about how much better it is where they left. Ridiculous.

When I arrived, however, I was surprised by how well Texas could back up a lot of its claims. It is one thing when a young man from Mitchell, South Dakota (200 miles from my hometown) wins the NBA Rookie of the Year Award. It's another thing when you see that kind of thing happen on your street...or even your block. The sheer number of people in this state, the geographic enormity of it, and the general pro-Texas feel create success. For some.

Less than half, actually.

And by "success," I'm just talking about living in a school zone that isn't a failing one.

Today, Texas is facing the results that come from (a) ignorant bravado; (b) one-party rule similar to that in China; and (c) a general lack of interest in children can bring--failing schools.

A lot of them. 56% of them. Of course, the Texas Education Agency spins it as a 44% success rate. [Note: there is no "Department of Education" around here--it's an agency, like the Central Intelligence Agency. That way, it sounds like guns could get involved. Texans, at least those in power, tend to like things like that. Call it pride. Seems more like "(a) bravado."]

The reason? High standards! Rigor! This FANTASTIC business climate! In this budget cycle, Texas CUT more money from its budget than most states HAVE in their total budget. Taxes remain low! Texas is "open for business (wink)." We have failed proudly this year! This is what God wanted us to do: fail our children by the very standards set by this governor, this legislature, this board of education, this tax code, these voters. Of course, the obvious solution would be to set up for-profit ventures ("Open for Business!") instead of fortifying public schools. There's money to be made somewhere.

Follow the money, find the conservative.

THIS should be the ONLY issue in Texas statewide elections this year. If somehow people start discussing whether Barack Obama is a "seecrit Mozlim," the response should be, "OVER HALF THE SCHOOLS IN THIS STATE ARE FAILING!" If the issue turns to gun control, it should meet with "OVER HALF THE SCHOOLS IN THIS STATE ARE FAILING!" If this is about who is the best choice to control runaway government and high taxes, the answer should be the first one to understand that "OVER HALF THE SCHOOLS IN THIS STATE ARE FAILING!"

If this situation doesn't change the face of Texas politics, it's time for others to take over the Democratic Party (and the Republican Party, for that matter). It could be a third party...or a fourth party. All I know is this: the wing of the Texas Republican Party in power right now is an abject failure at governing.

Why?

OVER HALF THE SCHOOLS IN THIS STATE ARE FAILING!