Monday, October 21, 2013

Compassion


Lana Lopez   Lopez 01
Ms. Williams
English 1A
21 September, 2013


Should we have compassion ?

We live our daily lives forgetting that everyone has their own unfortunate situations and issues. Without compassion for our fellow man/woman we can not move together as a community to strive for a better place to live. It takes great compassion in each other to seek a change instead of ignoring issues that bring down a community or single person. As stated in Tattoos on the Heart by Gregory Boyle, “Compassion isn’t just about feeling the pain of others; it’s about bringing them in toward yourself. If we love what God loves, then, in compassion, margins get erased. ‘Be compassionate as God is compassionate,’ means the dismantling of barriers that exclude” (Boyle 75).
We tend to question if trouble adults deserve a second chance after ill-fated choices
made as young teenagers to become gang affiliated. These trouble teens seek love and
attention they do not receive at home and it is filled by the brother/sisterhood of
gang life. These young teens were ignored and did not receive the love and attention
needed to strive for a successful and healthy life style, therefore they were never given a
 first chance at a stable “normal” life. We need to have compassion for these “teens”

Lopez 02
who are now adults seeking a chance to make a real change for the better.  I believe we should have compassion for these men and woman because they deserve a chance at true happiness and the feeling of being loved. The only way a change will be made is if we take the first step by showing compassion and not passing judgement on our fellow man/woman and giving them a second chance.




Wednesday, October 9, 2013

3 paragraphs


3 paragraphs

When students aren’t provided with materials for a bright future a dark path begins to set in. Students begin to loose hope as young as 12 and become course teenagers who turn into rough edge adults. These adults become addicts and are uneducated, due to not being funded with the materials needed for even a minimal education. If these adults were cared for as students they would have had a better chance of becoming educated adults with a brighter future. Simple materials such as paper, pens and books may not seem like much but they can make all the difference in a young child's basic education which can lead to a better future. 

When wealthy children are provided with materials needed for a quality education  they begin to make assumptions of how lower class children will turn out. For example “ ‘a child’s in school only six hours in a day,’... ‘ You’ve got to deal with what is happening at home. If his father’s in the streets, his mother’s using crack... how is money going to make a difference?’ (Kozol 157).”  Wealthy children begin to build self entitlement and a barrier against the less fortunate children. Wealthy children should be willing to share the benefits they are fortunate enough to have instead of speaking down upon the lower class. By always providing the wealthy with an exceeding amount of funding their will always be a large gap in economic difference between upper and lower class education instead of equal education in the United States.

Sadly due to lack of school resources students with learning disabilities may never be diagnosed. According to Kozol 19 year old Raymond Abbott attended school in Camden and became “ a high school dropout with the reading skills of a child in seventh grade. A learning-disabled student who spend eight years in the Camden public schools, his problems were never diagnosed and he was passed on each year from grade to grade... It’s elementary schools lacked the staff to deal with learning disabilities.... Abbott, now a cocaine addict, heard the news of his belated vindication from a small cell in the Camden County Jail (Kozol 208).” Students like Raymond suffer from learning disabilities and are never taught to deal with them due to lack of resources. If Raymond would have had the help necessary to be a successful student his future may have turned out completely different. If resources aren’t provided for student’s like Raymond then there will be many other needy learning disabled children who unfortunately may suffer this same fate. 

9 paragraphs


Lana Lopez Lopez 01
Ms. Williams
English 1A
07 October, 2013
9 Paragraphs

There are many schools that are fortunate enough to be funded with the necessary materials needed for a higher standard education. Schools such as Rye prep school are provided with classes that prep students for college, for example “The typical student, he says, studies a foreign language for four or five years, beginning in the junior year high school, and a second foreign language (Latin is available) for two years. Of 140 seniors, 92 are now enrolled in AP classes.(Kozol 152).” Students who are fortunate enough to have funding for programs like this are more likely to get into college and have a better future. Funding can make a big difference when it comes to education and the results it has on a child's future. 

There are many schools that are unfortunate and are not provided funding needed for necessary basic education. Students are deprived of teachers and basic classes needed to graduate high school let alone even have hopes to attend college. As Kozol states in Savage Inequalities “At Bowen High School, on the South Side of Chicago, students have two or three “ study halls” a day, in part to save the cost of teachers (Kozol 64).” If students cannot understand materials provided and do not want to ask questions during study hall then the money being “saved” by not providing a teacher is wasted. These students in poorer neighborhoods need more teachers because the loss of the education has a tremendous negative effect on their future.

The school funding does not have an effect on the education of a student the home environment is the factor. No matter how much funding is provided to a school district the home environment in the main factor of how a student will succeed in school. As a group of fortunate students discuss the 3 positions of funding with Kozol a students states “ ‘will probably make no major difference’ since poor children ‘still would lack the motivation’ and ‘ would probably fail in any case because of other problems’(Kozol 153).” There are many different factors that effect a child's education, if they do not have a stable home environment and support they may not have good odds to succeed. Its very hard to judge if an increase of funds would make a major difference in a less fortunate students outcome if they face major problems at home.


There are circumstances where school resources do not matter because the environment a teacher provides makes up for the lack of funds. Teachers like miss Hawkins who go out of their way to make a difference with no help with funding, for example “ The children are at work, surrounded by a clutter of big dictionaries, picture books and gadgets, science games and plants and colorful milk cartons, which the teacher purchased out of her own salary (Kozol 58).” When a student feels cared for and knows someone is hoping they will strive for a better future they build confidence in themselves. In these rare cases funding doesn’t matter its the connection a teacher builds thats makes a child's efforts worth while. 

In circumstances when schools and leaders show little faith in students failure is inevitable. As Kozol sits with the head of counseling at Chicago’s Calumet High School and states “ We have second and third grade readers... We hope to do better, but we wont die if we don’t (Kozol 64).” If a students is given up on due to being behind then how will they ever catch up? Leaders like this should be ashamed, if every effort is made and a student is educated on why things are important then they begin to connect lessons into life lessons. A student in a poorer neighborhood needs more motivation in school and they aren't being provided this in Calumet High School. 

There are unfortunate circumstances where funding would be appreciated but parent values is the real issue. In poor neighborhood’s like Winnetka, Chicago children face the battle of education alone because parents themselves are uneducated. As Kozol discusses unjust circumstance in Winnetka; he reads “The Journal” and points out the major issue at hand and states “ ‘Changing parent values’ is the ideal answer to the search because, if it were possible, it would cost nothing” (Kozol 164).”The major fight of funding in poor neighborhoods and whither it would help could go in circles, but it is a proven fact that if a child has the help needed at home he/she will excel in school. These unfortunate children are fighting a losing battle with no help at home to endeavor for a change a cycle of uneducated parents and children in these poor neighborhoods will continue until someone finally lends a helping hand.

When students are fortunate enough to be provided with proper materials a quality education is what reflects their character tremendously. Students at Rye High School in New York are confident and well spoken Kozol states “ Throughout the discussion... there is a degree of unreality about the whole exchange. The children are lucid and their language is well chosen and their arguments well made...” (Kozol 153). When students are provided with materials for a quality education they have the confidence needed to have debate or discussion, whereas a uneducated student wouldn’t know how to start a debate. A quality education builds more then just a GPA it reflects the confidence a student has in ones self expression. 

When proper materials aren’t provided a child's inner creativity may never be discovered and their dreams may be diminished in the process. Children discover themselves through many different creative processes such as; art, music, sports and even science but in Savage Inequalities Kozol discusses a school like Goudy and how these less fortunate children are never provided these materials. For example, “ there are no science labs, no music or art classes and no playgrounds (Kozol 80).” Children who go to schools like this never get an opportunity to express themselves in a creative way, therefore they lack social skills needed as adults to fulfill their dreams. Children need creative programs to learn self expression , therefore they can turn their dreams into reality.

When materials are supplied in abundance a child may begin to feel that this now     owed to them instead of a luxury. In Savage Inequalities Kozol discusses how wealthy children begin to feel superior and entitled when discussing less fortunate children. For example, “ Using federal taxes for the poor ‘would be like giving charity,’ and ‘ charitable things have never worked... Charity will not instill the poor with self-respect.(Kozol 157).”   These wealthy children do not realize how fortunate they are being funded with supplies and materials, therefore they begin to look down upon the less fortunate and speak poorly of them. This entitlement is not what we want children to become accustom to, wealthy children need to understand the supplies and funds being provided for them are a privilege. 

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

School resources


Lana Lopez Lopez 01
Ms. Williams
English 1A
02, October 2013

School resources

Providing resources unequally within school districts can negatively impact  children's education. Children need many different types of resources to keep up with the new technology that now is standard in the real world. In Savage Inequalities Kozol visits public school 26 in District 10 and states “The school, I am told, has 26 computers for its 1,300 children” (Kozol 107). How are these children that go to school 261 suppose to acquire computer skills when there are 50 students for every one computer. Also public school 24 (Riverdale) in District 10 received computers as Kozol states “ The local board decided to give each elementary school equal number of computers, even though the schools in Riverdale had smaller classes and far fewer students”(Kozol 103). Though the board “equally” distributed computers it should have been done by student population. Due to the fact that the students in school 261 have larger class sizes they already suffer from lack of one on one attention, they should at least be given enough computers to do class activities to learn computer skills like other privileged children do in their district. Resources like computers make a huge impact and can change a child's educational outcome.

A child feels that he or she is cheated when they visit other schools that are kept up and provided with simple things such as: pencils, paper and text books. Children are very perceptive and although they may never acknowledge they feel this way as adults we see the disappointment in their faces.  Children in these districts start to feel betrayed by the education system and loose hope as young as 12 years old. For this part of the district it means no growth in education because this child will grow to be another uneducated parent and the cycle will continue until a change is made. Children need certain resources to feel that they are getting an equal education to give them the drive to strive for change and until this happens the circle will continue.

The types of citizens that are produced from lack of poorly funded public schools
are adults who occupy unskilled or in-demand jobs not careers. Due to these poorly funded schools children give up on going to college and striving for a higher education and settle for jobs such as: “ ‘cosmetology’ (hairdressing, manicures)(Kozol 92).” These children are falling into the gap the government wants them to fall into. Instead of fighting against the grain and making the best out of what they have and or doing fund-raisers and coming up with some type of conclusion of their own these adults just let the government keep them in the unskilled job market. By making a change and creating your own better education it will instill the importance of education to the younger generations.