HUSKER 37
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This is the most disturbing thing I've read in quite awhile...I feel dirty just re-posting it..It was posted on FaceBook by a cowboy poet that's a friend of my oldest Brother's skydiving buddy (I'll probably never meet in person) that leans toward one of those political parties..(I don't trust Dems or Reps equally)...I have no clue if any of it is true and am mainly interested in people's feedback...
Mods: I'll understand if you want to delete this..It could trigger some mighty hateful posts, but I still have a little faith in these Husker Fans to try to keep it civil...I was brought up to believe everyone is created equal and so far in my very limited experience..seems to be true..
The political slants in this person's essay lead me to discredit the whole thing a little, but I also understand how teachers can become jaded...
http://www.black-and...ted-of-the-day/
Mods: I'll understand if you want to delete this..It could trigger some mighty hateful posts, but I still have a little faith in these Husker Fans to try to keep it civil...I was brought up to believe everyone is created equal and so far in my very limited experience..seems to be true..
The political slants in this person's essay lead me to discredit the whole thing a little, but I also understand how teachers can become jaded...
http://www.black-and...ted-of-the-day/
Essay by a teacher in a black high school*This is a repost from the rants and raves section from the Mobile, Alabama craigslist.*
The truth is usually a tough thing to accept, so I understand if this is flagged. It would be a cowardly thing to do, but I understand it. Some people just ignore unpleasant truths. However, if you think ignoring the problem, or trying to censor the truth, will help our black children improve, you’re dreaming. This is important, so I’m happy to repost – indefinitely if necessary. I find it interesting that NO ONE has had the intellect to refute anything in the essay. They can only attempt to censor it, as if doing so somehow makes it invalid. Weak minds, weak minds.
Until recently I taught at a predominantly black high school in a southeastern state.
The mainstream press gives a hint of what conditions are like in black schools, but only a hint. Expressions journalists use like “chaotic” or “poor learning environment” or “lack of discipline” do not capture what really happens. There is nothing like the day-to-day experience of teaching black children and that is what I will try to convey.
Most whites simply do not know what black people are like in large numbers, and the first encounter can be a shock.
One of the most immediately striking things about my students was that they were loud. They had little conception of ordinary decorum. It was not unusual for five blacks to be screaming at me at once. Instead of calming down and waiting for a lull in the din to make their point — something that occurs to even the dimmest white students — blacks just tried to yell over each other.
It did no good to try to quiet them, and white women were particularly inept at trying. I sat in on one woman’s class as she begged the children to pipe down. They just yelled louder so their voices would carry over hers.
Many of my black students would repeat themselves over and over again — just louder. It was as if they suffered from Tourette syndrome. They seemed to have no conception of waiting for an appropriate time to say something. They would get ideas in their heads and simply had to shout them out. I might be leading a discussion on government and suddenly be interrupted: “We gotta get more Democrats! Clinton, she good!” The student may seem content with that outburst but two minutes later, he would suddenly start yelling again: “Clinton good!”
Anyone who is around young blacks will probably get a constant diet of rap music. Blacks often make up their own jingles, and it was not uncommon for 15 black boys to swagger into a classroom, bouncing their shoulders and jiving back....(((More at the link)))
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