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Showing posts from October, 2024

Blog Post 6

One of the things that stood out to me in the video is how CRP isn’t just about representation   it’s about making learning relevant. If you think about it, school is the first place where many of us learn about the world. But if the lessons don’t connect with who you are or where you come from, how much do you really get out of it? As someone in college now, I can see how education tends to favor certain perspectives over others. Even in high school, most of what I learned didn’t reflect the experiences of people like me or the diverse communities around me. CRP is a way to fix that it’s not just about teaching diverse content, but about creating classrooms where students feel seen and heard.  In the video, there are examples of teachers who use CRP to make learning more engaging for their students. One teacher, for example, connects math lessons to real-life issues in the community, making it more relevant to the students’ everyday lives. Another teacher encourages disc...

Blog Post 5

 In college, we’re always discussing how education shapes us, but reading "Troublemakers" by Carla Shalaby made me rethink what that actually means, especially for kids who don’t fit into the “good student” mold. Shalaby’s book focuses on four young students labeled as “troublemakers” and shows how schools handle or mishandle kids who don’t conform. As a college student, this book hit home for me because it challenges the ideas of what education is really supposed to be about. The kids Shalaby follows Zora, Lucas, Sean, and Marcus are all seen as disruptive, but what stands out is how the system doesn’t ask why they act out. It’s almost like the label of “troublemaker” is given to them without trying to understand what’s going on. Instead of seeing these kids as whole people with emotions and experiences, they’re seen as problems that need to be fixed or controlled. Reading this made me think back to elementary school, and I could definitely see how this label impacts som...

Blog Post 4

      When it comes to education, many students struggle and fall behind because they are not interested and engaged with the topics they are learning about in their classes. This was the case when it came to Carlos from the Ethnic Studies Research article. He was a kid who was below average in the classroom and just figured that school wasn't his thing. It wasn't until after he got back from the military he figured out otherwise. Carlos found interest in learning about Mexican culture. He ended up going all the way through school, getting a degree in Spanish.       A summary of the past development of the American public education system can be found in the YouTube movie "A Short History of Public Schooling - Excerpt from the film Class Dismissed". It describes how the Prussian educational model, which placed an emphasis on conformity, obedience, and standardized curriculum, had an impact on the current public education system in the United State...

Blog Post 3

      I am a 19-year-old college student who is continuously navigating and learning about all aspects of society, particularly in regards to understanding oppressive and power structures. The "4 I's of Oppression" is an important idea that helped me in peeling back the layers of oppression's functions.  The construction, support, and reinforcement of oppression in society can be better understood by looking at these four categories: internalized, interpersonal, institutionalized, and ideological. This is my opinion on how each functions and influences our lives, particularly in a college environment.       Ideological oppression is the term used to describe the ideas and points of view that create inequality. It's the familiar "-isms"—racism, sexism, classism, ableism, and so on. These are the ideas that some groups are better than others, creating a hierarchy that is throughout  society. Think about the gendered nature of some majors o...