goodarticlelist.com goodarticlelist.com
  Main :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions :> Submit Article
Search:   
 

Eligibility and Requirements for the GED Test

Developed in 1942, the first GED Tests were designed to help military veterans finish their basic ed ... - Leonard Williams
 

Using the Sun for Power - How It Works

With massive rebate programs and tax credits being issued by state and federal governments, using th ... - Richard Chapo
 

Online Tutoring on the Rise

The biggest advantage of online tuition is that your classroom and instructor are available 24/7. On ... - Ranjith Pavithran
 
 

Landscape Architect Online

An online course in Landscape Architecture is geared toward working adults who want to further their ... - Michael Bustamante
 

Randomizing Class Choices: Breaking Up the Monotony

Much has been said and written lately about providing students with choices. I'm all about any metho ... - Frank Holes Jr.
 

New Monitoring and Appraisal Systems for Higher Scholastic Achievement in Houston Schools

Two new achievement systems have been developed and implemented for the Houston Schools " a school b ... - Patricia Hawke
 

Back to School Time: Will it be Back to Classroom Management and Behavior Problems for Teachers?

It's that time of year again. Back to school time. Back to school doesn't have to mean back to more ... - Ruth Wells
 

The Little Dictionary That Could

For a tome with so much power it is fascinating to learn that the first book to be coined as an Engl ... - Jessica Cander
 
 

Main –› Academics & Learning –› School Districts
 

Using Different Lenses to View the Student of Color/White Achievement Gap

 
Author: Tsahai H. London Sandrock
 

Just imagine that you are invited as a special guest to another country with a completely different culture. You look forward to the experience with joyful anticipation.

You are intelligent and socially adept in your home community. You are brimming with confidence. You are well liked. You now arrive in your host culture. Everything suddenly becomes eerie.

You sense people looking at you strangely. They begin to ask why you are so different in your demeanor. Why, for example, are so loud, even though this is the way you have always spoken. Your diction seems to annoy them. Nothing you do seems to please them.

You begin to lose your confidence. The problem would be easy to diagnose if the locals were the only ones who seem to know how to get along without problems or criticism. But you notice that here and there are invited guests like yourself, some even from your own country getting along without difficulty, blending in the host culture, ambling happily about.

You try with all your might to fit in. You succeed in imitating some behaviors but just do not know how to do so completely. You cannot go back to your country now. You are stuck for several years. Now all you want to do is cope.

You are tired of feeling inept, out of place, and worse yet ignored. You resort to taking matters into your own hands. You become cynical,critical, and distrustful of everyone. You laugh at them. You defy them. You curse them out.

In turn they ban you from social events for days on end. You are now bent upon dropping out of this strange culture even to your own detriment.

Now imagine you are an average student of color in the average American classroom.

Anglo Students in School Culture

Unarguably, Anglo American students, for the most part, go to school with a very definite advantage by virtue of their finding it relatively easy to align their home values with those they find in schools. Similarly, students who already share the values of the school, regardless of race or cultural origin, find it much easier to adapt to the school culture. So a major component of the school success formula has to do with dexterity in adapting to school culture. These are the students who do well.

For these youths, the possibility is quite high that their parents and teachers have similar interpretations of how the school should conduct its business. They would pretty much agree on expectations and roles of students, parents, and teachers They may not share the specifics of school policies. However, they may accept the school's right to decide how discipline should be dispensed or basic philosophy of the relationship between authority figures and students. Parents and schools are in unison. These parents are more likely to reinforce in their children that they should go along with the the school's way of doing things.

Students coming from these home environments are situated in an advantageous position in that they instinctively know how to work with the teacher to get to stated goals of their classes. They know how to play the school game because they get constant game tips from family, friends and the community.

Students of Color in School Culture

On the average, students of color in American schools just do not seem to fit comfortably in the school environment. They somehow find it difficult to align their home values with those of the school. For many of them, key support systems do not frequently share the school's interpretations of what the school culture should be. Too often, at least one area - parents, peers or community - is not philosophically aligned with the school culture.

For the most part, parents and sometimes the community support the school culture. However, in numerous communities peer influence is predominantly counter to school culture. And for many students of color, it is this group that seems to have the most powerful influence on their value system, as it pertains to school. Hence, they lean most heavily on the side of their peers' interpretations, meaning they hold strong values that are counter school. They interpret the cultures - theirs and the school's- as oppositional. They feel obliged to choose sides and much too frequently choose that of their peers.

Could it be that simple? Were schools to teach all students, as a prerequisite, how to embrace school values, would more of them start thinking,acting, becoming more like students? As students learn to embrace the values of the school, they will feel that they belong there. They will be more inclined to take on the full mantle of scholarship to the varying extents of their capabilities.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Pharmacy Technician Online Schools
 
Wireless Home Weather Stations
 
Promote Your Book: 5 Free and Low-cost Ways to Boost Book Sales
 
Ergonomic Positioning Explained: Part Two, Your Spine
 
Randomizing Class Choices: Breaking Up the Monotony
 
The Importance Of School Districts When Considering Your New Home Location
 
Manitoba's Education System
 
Online Tutoring on the Rise
 
Back to School Time: Will it be Back to Classroom Management and Behavior Problems for Teachers?
 
"No Bully" Policy at Philadelphia Schools
 
 
 
Free 3 way links
 

Jobs & Careers

Health & Hygiene

Finance & Banking

Politics & Government

Online & Board Games

Self Enhancement

Academics & Learning

Shopping & Auction

Lifestyle & Fashion

Internet & Computers

Children

Art & Culture

Business & Services

Vehicles & Automotive

News & Media

Realty & Property

Cooking & Drinking

Research & Science

Travel & Accommodation

Medicine & Treatment

Adventure & Sports

Home & Garden

People & Society

Recreation & Entertainment

 
   Main :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.goodarticlelist.com - All Rights Reserved.