For this critical analysis, the first article I have chosen to evaluate “A Social Capital Framework for Understanding the Socialization of racial minority Children and Youths” by Richard D. Stanton-Salazar. This article surprised me in various ways and gave me mixed emotions. The author details a network-analytic framework to understand the socialization and schooling experiences of working-class racial minority youth. Stanton-Salazar examined the relationships between youth and institutional agents which plays in the greater multicultural context in which working-class minority youth must negotiate. Stanton-Salazar also provides how students developed cultural strategies to overcome the various obstacles and how they manage to develop sustaining and supportive relationships with institutional agents.
Right in the beginning of the article, Stanton-Salazar used a terminology that surprised me. He referred to African American and Latino children as living in “economically disenfranchised urban communities.” I immediately thought, “What is that! ? It’s just a prettier way of sugar coating the terminology of the truth of where children live… in the ghetto!” For some reason, the terminology he used upset me. Why didn’t Stanton-Salazar use vocabulary that the rest of the world is banked to using instead of hiding behind his fancy college degrees? That just bothered me because in reality, there is no nice way of stating the fact and it surely doesn’t help the problem in any way. Moving on, Stanton-Salazar states “contemporary scholars who study minority children and youth have tried to address the lack of attention to racial variations in socialization, bringing light the developmental challenges this group faces… .” If I’m reading the statement correctly, I believe that it’s quite the opposite.
The Review on Raising Achievement of Ethnic Minority Children
This literature review would explore the barriers in raising educational achievements of ethnic minority students. As this is a broad area of concern the literature would examine two main barriers such as social background issues and English as Additional Language (EAL) while briefly looking at other barriers such as… Statistical data collected from the Pupil Level Annual School Census (PLASC) ...
I think that society addresses ethnicity first and foremost. The ethnicity of any minority group is the first to obtain any attention and it descends in a downward spiral from there. Continuing with the reading, Stanton-Salazar quotes another individual, Sennett and Cobb, “the power of institutional agents lies in their ability to give or withhold knowledge” which results in the institutional playing a game of who’s going to be successful in society or fail. People who might withhold information may have something against a student or may think that he / she would benefit from the resource than another student. In reading this statement, it got me thinking about when I was a student in high school. Long story short, I had teachers and counselors hold back information from me that would have been useful to me now.
When I think about it today, I resent those individuals and spite them greatly. In summary, this article, offers a network-analytic framework to understand the socialization and schooling experiences of working-class racial minority youth. Stanton-Salazar examined the relationships between youth and institutional agents which plays in the greater multicultural context in which working-class minority youth must negotiate. Stanton-Salazar provided the conceptual foundations of a framework built around the concepts of social capital and institutional support. He concentrated on in formating his readers of institutions and the ideological forces which he believed made access to social capital and institutional support within schools and other institutional. The settings were problematic for the working-class minority children and adolescents.
The Essay on Between Parents & School To Teach Children
“Some people think that parents should teach children how to be good members of society. Others, however, believe that school is the place to learn this. Discuss both these views and give your own opinion.” It is the opinion of others that children’s proper attitudes and behavior should start at home because that is the place where innocence of one child grows and formed. Family ...
Stanton-Salazar provides some clues as to how some working-class minorities were able to manage their difficult participation in multiple worlds, how they developed cultural strategies for overcoming various obstacles, and how they managed to develop sustaining and supportive relationships with institutional agents. In the end, I grew to be a strong supporter of this article. It stirred up many emotions ranging from frustration and understanding as found to being able to relate to much of what Stanton-Salazar mentioned in the article. The second article I chose to evaluate is “Working and Playing Around in the Classroom” by Doulas Foley.
I chose this article because I found myself having various emotions and a connection to what Foley had to say. Also, because it was an easier read then the previous article. It wasn’t dry and maintained my interest from beginning to end. Foley states the school classrooms were structured by “ability grouped” from ‘advanced’, ‘average’, and ‘practical’ based of the students test scores ten years earlier.
This is a form of tracking students by their ethnicity and / or obviously their test scores. It is also to track ethnicity of the students. I believe there is still some form of tracking on going in schools today which I have personally experienced while in high school. Reading on, Foley informs the reader the teachers in the school “made few attempts at alter the racial and class segregation in classroom and in student activities” and the teachers were making every effort to avoid all ethnic issues. By the teachers refusing to face the fact that there are various ethnicity and backgrounds in this world only enforces the segregation of the students. Continuing on with the reading, young white (Anglo) students carried similar thinking to that of their educators.
Allowing students to think this way is sad to say but is typical because students do pick up on the adults’ way of thinking and attitude. Needless to say, it’s upsetting to see that the white (Anglo) students view their fellow classmates to be savage like, dirty, and dumb people who needs to be corrected by aggressive assimilation. From what I have studied about the white culture from the beginning of time, they always viewed their culture to be dominant, perfect, and living their life in a way they think it should be while assimilating every other ‘savage’ culture. There are no words to express what I feel about American history other then I despise everything it stands for. The author continued on interviewing some teachers.
Student Achievement Education Spending School
Equality in School Finance In The Story of the Education Dollar, Odden, Monk, Nakib and Picus describe some basic facts about education spending in the United States to facilitate an understanding of the level and uses of the federal government's policies on education funding. The purpose of the authors' discussion is to argue that public education facilities need to change their focus on the ...
Again, there are no words to describe my anger and hatred towards the teachers of this school. I was fuming so much that I found myself yelling at the article. I questioned how could the teachers could be openly racist and sleep at night. I would love to meet some of the teachers and give them a good piece of my mind.
I began to pity the students. How could the students ever succeed in life if they ” re predisposition ed to fail by society and having the teacher and their community makes sure that they do so? There was so much about this article that produced many emotions within me, it was nearly unbearable. In summary, this article represents an ethnographic study of a small, economically-depressed, primarily of Mexican Americans in the south part of Texas. Like many communities in the Southwest, North Town has undergone cultural and political change since the late sixties, when the Chicano civil rights movement emerged and challenged the segregated racial order. This article examines the way in which the adolescents of North Town learn traditional American values through participation in sports, membership in formal and informal social groups, dating, and interactions with teachers in the classroom. Using information gathered over fourteen years of field work, Foley illustrates how the rituals involved in the activities which tend to preserve or reproduce class and gender inequalities, even as Mexican Americans slowly transform the racial order.
In the end, there was much that I found very disturbing; especially the way the teachers projected themselves towards the students, how they thought, and went home thinking it was ‘okay’ to treat another human being in such a way.