Friday, December 20, 2013

Stereotypes of Poverty


Jermaine M. Harper

Monique Williams

English 1A

22 December 2013
Stereotypes of Poverty
     The Occupy Movement was to shed light on the problems the rich put on the rest of us, inequalities within the economy and income in the United States. The movement began on 17 September 2011 as Occupy Wall Street in in New York City. “Protest groups are groups of people who have united to collectively object to a policy or course of action taken by an authority, such as a federal or state government. U.S. history is replete with examples of protest groups and their efforts” (Woodard 231). Freedom of speech is what keeps the United States a democracy. If not for protest groups as the Occupy Movement many disparaging inequalities in America would be the mundane within society. Resources from Smiley, Tavis, and Cornel West. The Rich and the Rest of Us: A Poverty Manifesto will be used to prove falsely that impoverished peoples are lazy, financially irresponsible and are always on drugs. Poverty is the new Civil rights battle, a battle of the twenty-first century to not ignore. There are many marginalized ethnic groups affected by poverty today. To bring justice and equality to 

every American, which the U.S. Constitution declares; we must fight the war on poverty. If the elite one percent were truly American, they would adhere to the ideologies of the U.S. Constitution. By not associating one’s self with being poor and character flawed judgment now passed on the impoverished so one sees themselves as better and above. The one percent prospers due to the ninety-nine percent’s individualism and passivity.

       People view the impoverished as financially irresponsible. They splurge their money on ridiculous items and do not save for their future.  They should try hard to get a job and do something with their

lives. One cannot save when most jobs pay only minimum wage or people can only find part time

work. In an arduous economy this is all easier said than done. "Everyone has the right to a standard of

living adequate…in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age, or other lack

of livelihood" (S&W 192). No matter the economic societal situation of the United States no one should

have to be impoverished and resort to homelessness. Government services are a must in our society if

their is a massively severe economical down fall their is a safety net that Americans can rely on. A

safety net placed for all Americans and not only of the impoverished.  


All impoverished people are on drugs. They are poor, have no food and no job all because of drug

use. Many people turn to drugs to numb the pain from having no job, no food and therefore are poor.

"If you go out now to get a job, a low-wage job around $8, $9 an hour…all the questions are going to

be whether you like to steal, whether you like to sell cocaine in the break room, things like that. There

is the idea that if you are poor, there's something wrong with you, and you should probably end up

incarcerated" (S&W 78). Grave circumstances and situations happen to people on a daily. Identity theft

puts hundreds of thousands of Americans in poverty every year. People are losing jobs and careers

every month left and right due to de-industrialization in America but nothing is wrong with them and

they will not be incarcerated. We as "true" Americans must do away with characterizations of poverty

stereotypes.


Many impoverished people are characterized by poverty stereotypes. Stereotypes must be

demolished to bring equality to the impoverished. People being active, living examples to change the

lazy poverty stereotypes. Have an individual change provide personal work at your home. Die to

oneself, be a volunteer at a rehabilitation or AA clinic. "The end of poverty in America demands that

we all change how we talk about, think about, feel about, and, more importantly, do something about

it" (S&W 176). We as Americans must lead as an example of perseverance, determination and

gratification. We must be more hospitable and open to having someone in need of financial funds to

help around their home to make ends meet. We must walk a day in the shoes of an addict before

prejudging them and die to oneself. We as human beings must understand situations and circumstances

are very different from one person to the next but at the end of the day we are "all human beings".


No one is better than the next person our situations and circumstances may be different but we are

all on the path in this world for a fulfilling life. Prove falsely that impoverished peoples are lazy, financially irresponsible and are always on drugs. By not associating one’s self with being poor and character flawed judgment now passed on the impoverished so one sees themselves as better and above. The one percent prospers due to the ninety-nine percent’s individualism and passivity. We as humans must be part of the solution to the greater problem. The poor need social security, welfare and

other government assistance which the rich refute against such services because they refuse to see them

as a common good. Currently Mexican Americans and other impoverished minorities are used for

cheap labor. It is a form of capital violence, meaning minorities has no choice but to work in factories

under poor working conditions. The rich know what they are doing they strategies and setup their game

pieces in in order to win prosperity for themselves. A brilliantly designed system to keep the poor

consistently impoverished and from prospering in their lives.          

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Rehabilitation


Rehabilitation

     The current prison system is set up to comfortably house and re-group smaller gangs of what is out in

the streets. Its an environment for gang members to re-amp an re-group to come out and continue gang

violence in the streets. This system does not stop gang activity, it continues on away from the streets and into

the prison system. Gang members are not prevented from engaging and priding themselves in the gang

lifestyle while in the prison system. The system is set to fail in stopping gang violence nor does it push

rehabilitation strong enough to give inmates a true fighting chance to live the gang life. The problem with the

current prison system is that there is no focus on rehabilitation for criminal activity. The criminal activity in

society would be reduced massively if more time was spent on rehabilitating people in our current prison

system. Time spent in prison or jail is for punishment of a crime committed  Individuals must do an equal

amount of hard time for a crime committed  By no means should it be easy time these systems were put in

place to serve out a punishment not to make a second home for criminals to kick back and pass the time.

The time spent in rehab should be more concerned for the inmates emotional, psychological and physical

needs to prepare them to be a more civilized person of society. We are talking about humans here, not

animals and a matter of fact most people in America would treat an animal much better than an ex-convict.

This being the case how much more should we believe that more rehab is the answer; if many people would

give their hearts out to an animal but not a human being with feelings, emotions, a heart and a soul. If you

touch a humans heart you touch their soul and that's where the change begins.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Compassion or Compassionless

Compassion or Compassion-less
            There are ex-convicts and people who do not display self-help. People who do realize they are out cold on the ground but will not start with self, they look to others first. People who want others to do all the work in getting them from off of the ground. These people choose not to demonstrate self-help they want all help at the expense of others. People like this will have excuses, will do the bare minimum if anything and believe that someone should be doing all for them. It’s easier to be complacent and not change. There is no work or energy required to settle and stay where one already is. In giving excuses one can be complacent, will not have to put in work or energy to find them still on the ground and even more hopeless. “Guilt, of course, is feeling bad about one’s actions, but shame is feeling bad about oneself. Failure, embarrassment, weakness, overwhelming worthlessness and feeling disgracefully “less than” -all permeating the marrow of the soul” (Boyle 46). Guilt so deeply ingrained they feel it within their entire being. A person feeling so shameful that even the simplest kind of help is non-deserving. They too need much help they have given up, are tired, hopeless, and depressed. They need an uplifting within their hearts and souls.
            In essence, you are beating a dead horse. You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink. You cannot force anyone to change they must be ready and willing to do so. A person must hit the absolute rock bottom to want to get help. In order for a person to be willing to change they must realize they are out cold on the ground and have no one else but self to help them up. Once this realization has happened they demonstrate self-help. These are the people the ex-convicts we must help.
                                                                                          
            People should help an ex-convict if they are willing to help themselves. Any individual that demonstrates self-help is showing the want to be different, out with the old and in with the new. Change is not easy to do on ones on accord; a helping hand is always an appreciated gesture when willing to change. People can assist in giving rides, in educating or breaking into the true self of an ex-convict. To put oneself in the shoes of the ex-convict, who truly wants change it all may be confusing, scary or just uncommon territory to explore for change to occur. We all have unexplored areas within ourselves that can be extremely terrifying so anyone would value a helping hand. You do all that you can in helping now that an ex-convict wants the help. Many other circumstances may arise to cloud their thinking and change their mind about wanting to change. 

Sunday, September 29, 2013

The Great Chasm


Jermaine M. Harper
Monique Williams
Engl 1A
1 October 2013

The Great Chasm

Our Bay Area schools are showing mixed scores in academic and program tests resulting in low or no grant amounts to be issued by the Government. The articles stated that many of the Bay Area schools did very well and not so well for a few others. The articles mainly focused on the Academic Performance Index (API) which is based on test attendance and scores. Standard Testing and Reporting (STAR) is four tests which are taken every spring for second grade through eleventh.  School Improvement Grant (SIG) is given to the persistently lowest achieving schools to raise the academic level of their lowest achieving students:
Velasco said that she has invested heavily in technology for Bryant, a school that has 256 students from kindergarten to 5th grade, with money the school received from the federal School Improvement Grant(SIG) funds and Mission Promise Neighborhood funding. With SIG funds, she bought 90 iPads for the school and is in the process of converting the 26 computers in the student computer lab to new iMacs” (Mission Loc@l 3).
The Accountability Progress Report (APR) is California’s accountability system of reports on academic performance and progress. This Accountability Report includes the (API), Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP), Program Improvement (PI) and other accountability report information. The (APR) is the overall report that ensures students to perform at their school level or higher.

When comparing the SF Bay Area schools with that of the schools from Chicago and New York, from the book “Savage Inequalities,” there are great differences in the qualities of the schools:
“Morris High could be a wonderful place, a centerpiece of education, theater, music every kind of richness for poor children. The teachers I've met are good and energized. They seem to love the children, and the kids deserve it. The building mocks their goodness” (Kozol 130).
The book “Savage Inequalities” was completed and printed in 1991 so schools looking like prisons, classes being held in a skating-rink, holes in the roof, inadequate supplies or no lunches being supplied to low-income students; was correct when the book was printed twenty-one years ago. Today many of these problems are worked out or are in the process of being worked out. A few of these problems will literally take years to fix considering the problems have continued on for countless years.
When looking at test progress results it’s obvious that Bay Area schools are progressing much more than the schools. This gap is on a much larger scale considering after twenty-one years test progress reports is still an ongoing problem. In the book (SI) students progress was mentioned as low; reading, writing and mathematics were not at grade level or higher:
“Adding these children to the many dropouts who have never learned to read beyond the grade-school level, we may estimate that nearly half the kindergarten children in Chicago’s public schools will exit school as marginal illiterates” (K 71).
These kindergarten children can not access the proper up to date reading material needed to be proficient due to funding. As in my research finding this gap is enormous in Chicago and New York States in comparison to SF Bay Area schools. Even though the Bay Area has some schools not making progress in standardized tests the two entire states of Chicago and New York schools are making minimal progress in these tests. “Additionally, those two districts along with Oakley and Brentwood retain the "Program Improvement" label that's assigned to those that are failing under the federal No Child Left Behind law“ (East Contra Costa 1). Here are two examples of Bay Area schools not able to make progress due to improper preparation on the schools behalf, to see that these children understand and comprehend the acquired material. These students in the states of Chicago and New York are not being well prepared to comprehend and pass these tests. Theses schools within these states are in need of a major Program Improvement (PI) plan.    

I believe that after twenty-one years progress is being made but in respect to the schools and supplies themselves. The schools all have windows, no holes in the roofs, they do not look like prisons and students are provided with free lunch at the schools. Am I saying that not one school is not experiencing major problems still, No. What I am saying is that many of the past problems have and are being taken care of  within the states of Chicago and New York schools. In some since, there is a cloud with a silver lining bring some hope to these poor low achieving schools.








Works Cited 
"East Contra Costa School Districts Show Mixed Results in State Test Scores." ContraCostaTimes.com.      N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Sept. 2013.
Kozol, Jonathan. Savage Inequalities: Children in America's Schools. New York: Broadway Paperbacks, 2012. N. pag. Print.
"Mission Loc@l." Mission Locl. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Sept. 2013.
"Our Mission." California Department of Education. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Sept. 2013.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Not College material!



Poorly funded High schools lack College potential students so they are educated just enough to work at low paying jobs. The given curriculum does not provide the students to think analytically, no guidance and no realistic awareness. “The children in the group seem not just lacking in, useful information that would help them to achieve their dreams, but, in a far more drastic sense, cut off and disconnected from the outside world” (Kozol 86). These students are set up for disaster at a College or in the real world:
“The reporter looks bewildered by this answer. This teen-age girl, he says, “has no clue that $2,000 a year isn’t enough to survive anywhere in America, not even in her world.” This sad young woman, who already has a baby and is pregnant once again, lives in a truly separate universe of clouded hopes and incomplete cognition. “We are creating an entire generation of incompetents” (K 89).
They brought these people up into the city for lowly work in the past and will continue along that path to be educated for such work only. Until the educational gap in the system is completely fixed, students in theses low-income neighborhoods can anticipate to work at Mac Donald’s flipping burgers for a living. 

Friday, September 13, 2013

Confined Educational System


       The Educational system in its own is a government in the way it’s structured the big guys (wigs) Dean, President the Chancellor to the peons, soldiers the Teachers and all the students at the bottom. The educational system is a one way street with what is taught, how students are taught and confined in there thinking. The students are taught to a standard, confined in the education box system and are taught no more from out of that box:
It does not keep the country free. It does not settle the West. It does not educate. The character            inherent in the American people has done all that has been accomplished; and it would have done somewhat more, if the government had not sometimes got in its way (Thoreau 4).
       We the people have stood up and revolted for our educational rights not the governing institution. Therefore students are not abstract in there thinking since they are taught to not explore from out of the educational box.
       As in Thoreau’s time he saw inequality in the government. We can see the same inequality in our educational system things have not changed enough people have no conscience and are heartless to many inequalities within our society. “It is truly enough said, that a corporation has no conscience; but a corporation of conscientious men is a corporation with a conscience” (5). Its selfishness, people and society are way too concerned about their time, wants and needs to concern themselves in another human beings matters.
       Thoreau was a revolutionary towards the government. We today have activist and revolutionaries marching off to war in battle for education. These are conscientious men selfless enough to concern themselves in someone else’s matter and have stepped out of the educational box. “All men recognize the right of revolution; that is, the right to refuse allegiance to and to resist the government, when its tyranny or its inefficiency are great and unendurable” (6). These are the revolutionist’s that will change inequality and shed light on it so us as a society will not stay blind to it.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Aged Education

            To say the least our educational system is very out of date and needs serious reform and innovation. Cognitively our brains attention span is very limited to less than 10 minutes to learn anything. To sit in on a 50 min or 3 hour class our brains will only retain and get into the first 9 min and 59 seconds of the lecture. After that time span our minds begin to drift to what we will do after the class is over, what other work must I get done besides this class? And I’m hungry what will I eat after this class? In the educational system we have been taught well to memorize and recognize what we have learned but to analyze and break down concepts or analytically think we struggle. It’s a taxing process on the brain it is mentally draining to bring one’s mind that deep into thought. The speed at which one learns is different to person to person as well as from male to females because every brain has a different neuron makeup to it. The larger the brain tissue the Cognitive process within our brain is increased one must practice to master deep thinking and obtain knowledge. A class size greatly affects the ability of a student to learn, the smaller the class the more one on one support and a greater chance given to each student to succeed. Education for anyone will come at the right time and the right place of study. If an individual that has no pleasure or passion within their life education is the number one problem.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

The Impediment


The Impediment of Teachers
            Throughout the educational system we need encouraging and positive teachers to produce future social representatives to power and run our nation; and education is the driving force to do that. With disheartened teachers that’s a challenging task for them to implement optimism unto students. Teachers have given up, lost hope for students and even believe it’s just their job, they should not have to care. Without the positivity of teachers push onto students we will have and pessimistic, negative and weak students.
Teachers have given up on students for lack of a support system due to funding cuts on faculty. There is either no or low funding to run a class. “And how can hope be put back into education in situations where it is under threat or close to being banished from the scene?” (Watzlawick 3).  With continued funding cuts year after year it becomes much more challenging to be creative and pass on passion to a student. The students are not capable of change due to inadequate academic supplies. The hope or passion is lost toward students. Teachers are frustrated they themselves have lost hope in the academic system. They can see the students take no interest in the curriculum because the educational system has failed them. The teacher’s time and efforts are not appreciated taking into account the carelessness, hopelessness and absence of the student’s future.
It’s now just a job to some teachers. I do not get paid enough to care and deal with these students’ weighty issues, my check continues to get cut back, some teachers may say. The online article Hope, utopianism and educational renewal touches on why these teachers feel unappreciated; “Certainly teachers in many of our inner-city state comprehensive schools are required to work with the most challenging of pupils, in situations that are often less than ideal, and in circumstances in which they feel their efforts are insufficiently acknowledged and inadequately rewarded” (Watzlawick 2). Some teachers feel that their time and efforts put forth should be financially compensated to show appreciation. A teacher may feel I’m human, I have a family to care for too; with food, clothing, housing and the basic essential needs as well.
If the teachers feels miserable and discouraged that energy or emotions are put onto the students. A teacher given up, losing hope or projecting this is only my job will only hinder students. As stated in The Passion Project article “Feelings are contagious, good or bad. If the teacher feels in his gut that what he is teaching is essential the student will think so too. If the teacher is exploring, so too will the student. If the teacher is learning so too will the student“ (Ontiveros 7). I believe that all engagement starts with the (head), the teacher engaging first with the students, only then will they follow suit.     

Works Cited
                                                                                                  
Ontiveros, Skye. “The Passion Project.” The Passion Project April 13, 2010: 14.

Watzlawick, Paul. “Hope, utopianism and educational renewal.” the encyclopedia of informal education Partial Version (2003): 22. Saturday, 31 August 2013. http://infed.org/mobi/hope-utopianism-and-educational-renewal/.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Me in the pursuit of a better future!




The laboratory science pictures in this blog reflect me in what I’m pursuing for my future and a career. It’s very important to have a future, career and live life as full as one can. In fact I’m very passionate about anyone living or having a bright future why settle for less or nothing, who really wants that? I truly value pushing and going after what you want in life having perseverance. I'm a 33 year old male in transition from corporate American retail jobs to a career in Biological Science. After 13+ years in the retail industry with no true opportunity for a great future I turned back to school for a career to a better future. I chose this route Biological Sciences in pursuit to become a Pathologist seeing that the medical industry is in high demand and very secure. I started my schooling at Everest College where I obtained My Medical Assisting Diploma with Honors. I then continued on here at Chabot College knowing I was very interested in the laboratory side of the medical field. I’m working on my AA degree in Biological Sciences in Microbiology/Biomedical Lab Science option. I plan to transfer onto a CSU to obtain my BS in the option and onto Medical school. I hope to achieve a great understanding in how to communicate and write at a proficient level but also have an understanding in how I can use the tools from this class and integrate it in my future career.