why not just strive to treat everyone the same now and in the future?
Good example of a similar propaganda campaign. How successful was it? Were they able to basically convince the entire world's population that Irish people were subhuman the way it was basically universally accepted that black people were?
If my statement existed in a vacuum, you might really have something there.I answered this question:
"Go digging through your history books for some examples of white people not being considered human."
You wish to lean more, read a book.
If my statement existed in a vacuum, you might really have something there.
He gave up. If you want to continue I'm more than happy to oblige. Heading home for the day now though...hey, are you ever going to get to your point?
He gave up. If you want to continue I'm more than happy to oblige. Heading home for the day now though...
Fine, we'll try it the fast way again.So far as i can tell, instead of making a statement, you are needlessly dragging out everything so as to make it take so long it wont be worth it to show that you are wrong.
So, just try this. List a linear step by step set of what happened, what you believe that means, and the conclusion you draw from it. I will then see if there is anything I disagree with and explain why.
Its a lot more quick than you spending 200 posts about why people use sarcasm.
To me, the crux of this issue is do you have to have had previous life experience in a field to be an effective teacher/instructor for that field?
I would submit our education system is built on the assumption that not only is that not required, it is also not encouraged.
There is currently no provision in the US education system to issue teaching certificates based off work experience. If I ran a successful business for 30 years, I still am not qualified to teach business.
I would guess that 95% of teachers have no practical experience with the subjects they teach. Why should minority studies be different?
So then do you agree that experience as a minority isn't a prerequisite to successfully teach minority studies, just as experience running a business isn't a prerequisite to successfully teach business administration?Teaching certifications are primarily based off of experience and training in teaching along with subject content. It's a teaching certification, not a business knowledge certification. They are two very different things.
I have issues with how we credential teachers, but I also take issue with the idea that because you had a successful business that such a thing would mean it would make you good at teaching anyone business, much less small children business. We've all met the guy who is great at his job and totally incapable of teaching anyone else what he does. This is particularly true in urban school districts.
So then do you agree that experience as a minority isn't a prerequisite to successfully teach minority studies, just as experience running a business isn't a prerequisite to successfully teach business administration?
As you said, its a teaching certification, not a knowledge certification.
I do agree! I said as much earlier in the thread.
'Dem thinking challenged darkies......eh?Maybe if blacks and hispanics would concentrate more on how sucky they [blacks and Hispanics] are in schools instead of worry about the color of the teachers, they [blacks and Hispanics] would not be that sucky so bad.
Agreed, they are different things, but for black Americans slavery became Jim Crow government discrimination. Government discrimination against, say, Jews or Irish was much more limited and therefore much less damaging.AH - but that is a different matter than slavery all together isn't it. One of the problems is, everyone is grouping racism and segregation into the actual concept of slavery... but they are different things. Granted they did run side by side during the ending of slavery in America - but they are still separate things.
That's an excellent plan just as long as we recognize that there is still a huge inequity in starting position between black and white. If you've been standing on my head my whole life and jump off, we don't have the same chance to win the rat race because I first have to dig myself out of the hole you put me in.why not just strive to treat everyone the same now and in the future?
I largely agree, but I think the point of these courses is to build self esteem. It's possible that the lesson learned from a white teacher might be "Jeez, we even need white people to tell us what it means to be black/Hispanic", in which case the course would be self-defeating. Problem is one would have to be familiar with the teacher and the students to judge that, but I can see the protesters' point and acknowledge that it might have some validity even if the teacher is great.To me, the crux of this issue is do you have to have had previous life experience in a field to be an effective teacher/instructor for that field?
I would submit our education system is built on the assumption that not only is that not required, it is also not encouraged.
There is currently no provision in the US education system to issue teaching certificates based off work experience. If I ran a successful business for 30 years, I still am not qualified to teach business.
I would guess that 95% of teachers have no practical experience with the subjects they teach. Why should minority studies be different?
'Dem thinking challenged darkies......eh?
Thank you for your stereotypical "Southerner 4ever!!!" view. How little things change.
Yet again, a forum member espousing generalised and race based supremacist and denigrating bigotry, for the win................
That's true for whites too. It's not all cut and dried though. In my grandson's last school there were a LOT of Asian students, but they never appeared in sports. They are all kicking butt academically and they all took music lessons on a classical instrument, and while there's a lot to be said for that, I also want kids to experience being kids.Maybe if blacks and hispanics would concentrate more on how sucky they are in schools instead of worry about the color of the teachers, they would not be that sucky so bad. You know, like Asian students. I never hear them Asian students ever demand Asian teachers or else...and those Asian students are kicking butts in schools. Talk about sold out/Uncle Tom/not keep it real/not down with the people/not chilling/<fill in the blank nasty labels> those Asian students (sarcastic).
Good, I'm glad to see we can agree on a sane issue on this position.I do agree! I said as much earlier in the thread.
I largely agree, but I think the point of these courses is to build self esteem. It's possible that the lesson learned from a white teacher might be "Jeez, we even need white people to tell us what it means to be black/Hispanic", in which case the course would be self-defeating. Problem is one would have to be familiar with the teacher and the students to judge that, but I can see the protesters' point and acknowledge that it might have some validity even if the teacher is great.
'Dem thinking challenged darkies......eh?
Thank you for your stereotypical "Southerner 4ever!!!" view. How little things change.
Yet again, a forum member espousing generalised and race based supremacist and denigrating bigotry, for the win................
That's true for whites too. It's not all cut and dried though. In my grandson's last school there were a LOT of Asian students, but they never appeared in sports. They are all kicking butt academically and they all took music lessons on a classical instrument, and while there's a lot to be said for that, I also want kids to experience being kids.
'Dem thinking challenged darkies......eh? Thank you for your stereotypical "Southerner 4ever!!!" view. How little things change. Yet again, a forum member espousing generalised and race based supremacist and denigrating bigotry, for the win...............
hat's an excellent plan just as long as we recognize that there is still a huge inequity in starting position between black and white. If you've been standing on my head my whole life and jump off, we don't have the same chance to win the rat race because I first have to dig myself out of the hole you put me in.
I largely agree, but I think the point of these courses is to build self esteem. It's possible that the lesson learned from a white teacher might be "Jeez, we even need white people to tell us what it means to be black/Hispanic", in which case the course would be self-defeating. Problem is one would have to be familiar with the teacher and the students to judge that, but I can see the protesters' point and acknowledge that it might have some validity even if the teacher is great.
"For hundreds of years, your people were told that you weren't good enough for these jobs. That you weren't smart enough to read and write. That you couldn't possibly understand math. Now that you have achieved equality, you want to apply those very same standards to this man? For shame. To assume that he can't understand the history of black people because he isn't black is contrary to the very freedoms that your people fought and died for."
Even you show you are a bit racist here... you do.