Sometimes you win, sometimes you learn

Month: October 2020

Major Investigation Questions

BoyerScheuer/Ungar (yup. Revisit those dudes.)____Business and Sustainability______ Major Req.s
Career/Tech v. Liberal Learn“This unhealthy separation between the liberal and useful arts, which the curriculum and the faculty too often enforce, tends to leave students poorly served and the college a weak and divided institution.”(Boyer 217). Ungar claimed in his writing that one of the misperceptions about the liberal arts is that it is worthless because it doesn’t get students ready for a specific job. He argues instead that in fact, a liberal education can better prepare students for a wider variety of careers, if for some reason that decide to change their minds later in life.One of the required courses for this major is business management, which would be the more technical side of the major. Another course is Environmental Policy In Comparative Perspective, which shows how the major fits into the broader spectrum of subjects outside of this major. 
History/TraditionAn example of this is given by Boyer when he says that for computer science majors, they should learn how the industrial revolution had an impact on their field, which is extremely relevant because without the industrial revolution, technology would not be where it is today.Ungar says in his article that historically, students with liberal arts degrees were being more often overlooked for jobs, which he disproves by saying that at that time, there was a recession going on, so everyone was struggling to find jobs. There is a required course called “Literature, Nature, and The Environment”, which is focused on how the environment has been discussed and portrayed throughout works of literature.
Social/Economic Implications“If a major is so narrow that it cannot be discussed in terms of its historical and social implications, if the work in the proposed field of study cannot be a broadening experience, then the department is offering mere technical training that belongs in a trade school, not on a college campus, where the goal is liberal learning.(Boyer 223).Ungar claims that saying that only more wealthy families should have their child receive a liberal education is wrong. He says “that is just a form of prejudice and cannot be supported intellectually.” He even brings in his own personal experience with first generation college students. He states that “it is often the people who are newest to certain ideas and approaches who are the most original and inventive in the discussion and application of those ideas.” He argues that this is the entire foundation and ideas that this country was built on. No matter who you are or where you are from, you can achieve anything as long as you strive for what you want to achieve.A microeconomics course is required for this major in order to help the student learn about what effects a business can have on an economy or vice versa.
Ethical/Moral Issues“Specialists must make judgements that are not only technically correct but also include ethical and social considerations. And the values professionals bring to their work are every bit as crucial as the particularities of the work itself.”(Boyer 224). Knowing about diseases is great, but you also need to be able to understand the people who have those diseases and the best way to go about treating them.Scheuer also discusses the importance of graduates being able to discuss the moral and ethical implications of having the career that people have, because recognizing those dilemmas helps them to be better at their job.A course in this curriculum is Environmental Ethics, which explores the implications of various environmental issues and policies.
Formatting Issues

Both Boyer and the major that I chose to research place an importance on ethical implications a field could possibly have. “Specialists must make judgements that are not only technically correct but also include ethical and social considerations. And the values professionals bring to their work are every bit as crucial as the particularities of the work itself.”(Boyer 224). A course that is required for this major is “Environmental Ethics”, which shows that even in business, people need to be able to consider the implications of what they are doing with their business to how it affects those around them. Not only is this necessary, it is the right thing to do in order to become a responsible citizen whose career can and will affect the lives of others. Additionally, businesses who think about the ethics of what they are doing could become even more successful due to that moral code.

Questions:

Put these questions in the beginning of the interview:

What courses did you take in college that influenced your decision to study this particular major?

What was it like getting a major in this field?

What was your experience like in obtaining your degree (s)? How might that be different from today’s standards?

Other Questions:

Do you realistically need more than a bachelor’s degree to be successful in these career paths? (To investigate: how far can I get, do things open up for me after that, what are the limitations to that?)

How would you realistically start a business?

Salary? Can I start out making a living with this, or should I start out with something else and build up to that?

What types of jobs can come from having a degree in this major? Is it a versatile degree? “Manager, Chief Sustainability Officer, Construction Manager”

What internship opportunities or work study jobs that could be related to this major/ help me get more experience in this field?

Are there any clubs or organizations available that can help me become more informed about/ has something to do with my major?

What are the responsibilities of running or maintaining a business? Is there flexibility?

Boyer Reading Questions

Respond (on the blog post) to the following 2 questions:

  1. What is a central tension Boyer discusses in his chapter? Support your response with a quote from Boyer and at least 4 sentences of explanation.

A central tension Boyer discusses in his chapter is that colleges and the professors and administration that work there have opposing views as to what a college education and majors should be. Some say that having highly specialized majors are what is necessary for students to have success after college. The opposing side argues that having a specialized major without any investigation into a broader spectrum sets the students up for being unable to fuse their highly specific knowledge with the greater discipline and how it connects to other aspects of different subjects. This closes off their mind to having very creative responses to problems that could have drawn from knowledge from a wider range of information. “This unhealthy separation between the liberla and useful arts, which the curriculum and the faculty too often enforce, tends to leave students poorly served and the college a weak and divided institution.”(Boyer 217). The fact that there is argument and controversy even within one university takes a toll on the education that students receive there, as depending on what professors they have, they could get conflicting ideas of what they should be learning, and become confused and frustrated as a result.

  1. What is Boyer’s “Enriched Major” idea, and how does he imagine it as a response to a key tension? Support your response with a quote and at least 3 sentences of explanation.

Boyer’s idea of an “enriched major” takes the best aspects from both a liberal and technical education style. This creates a type of education that encapsulates the most important things about a major that one cannot learn on the job, and why that major is important in the first place as well as how that major can relate to other disciplines. It also teaches the implications that their major could have on the world around them. This combination of both sides could resolve some of the high tension around which is better to teach in universities. “Through such a curriculum the student can move from depth to breadth as departments put the specialty in larger context.”(Boyer 223).

Academic Extracurricular #1

I attended the systemic racism zoom lecture and I learned some new information that I had not previously known. The zoom was all about what systemic racism actually was and how people could help to change it by being more aware of it. There was a guest speaker who did this lecture presentation over zoom, and then some students asked him questions at the end. One of the things that stood out to me was that even if someone is not a willing participant in systemic racism, they can still unknowingly contribute through learned biases and attitudes. Additionally, being a passive participant contributes to the standstill and a lack of change. It is only by being an active participant and protesting for change that change can actually occur. Fighting for change is first recognizing that there is an issue, and that it is not just “a few bad apples” that are ruining progress. 

Many people must recognize that something is wrong, and then join each other and do something about that injustice. This new perspective on what others believe is happening in the U.S. is a little bit of a new concept to me. Another thing that I have learned is that although I knew that there was such a thing as people with bad living situations, I didn’t realize that a lot of people of color find that they are in constant fear for their life. Whether it be from the police or where they live, some people can be africa from simply walking home late at night. I hadn’t realized that there was such a large bias in some places in America where police treat people they encounter differently simply based on their skin tone.

Writing Fellow Meeting

During our writing meeting, Olivia and I talked about my goals essay, the positives about it, and things that maybe I could improve. She read my essay one paragraph at a time and said that most of it was actually really well written. Some things that she told me that I could possibly improve was when I talked about wanting to be able to express my creativity. She told me that I could talk about examples of how my classes or extracurricular activities could fulfill that need for creativity, or even talk about the lack of it due to the pandemic. Other than that, she suggested that I explain what cultural citizenship is in more detail to make it easier for the reader if they didn’t know what that meant.

Audio Journal Reflection

After listening to my audio journal entries, I noticed a couple of themes that I discuss in almost all of my videos. One of the most prominent is my struggle with planning things out. It seems that just when I think things are under control, I then have a ton of stuff to do. I often feel and share at least a little bit of stress over almost every entry I do. I also discuss doing a lot of things with my family, since they live close by, so we see each other almost every weekend. Although I know that I should spend some weekends on campus to go to activities and things like that, I also discussed a few times throughout my journals that things are really all that normal. As a result, there aren’t nearly as many activities and events going on, and the things that do happen are pretty restrictive, since all the new pandemic rules need to be followed. I also briefly talk about in some of them the social aspect of how my experience is going. It seems to be much more difficult to form connections with people and make friends, because most classes now only meet once a week, and people aren’t allowed to have more than one person at the dorm at a time. The most social that I am able to be is when I go to the ukulele club meetings, but those only happen every two weeks, so I haven’t been able to really get to know them that well yet. In addition, the first couple of weeks I was prepared, although a little stressed, about getting things done in a timely manner. Even though I am getting better at this, it seems like I don’t ever really catch a break, whether it is a paper due or an assignment coming up. Chemistry is also a subject that I struggle with, and although I can eventually figure it out, it is not really a subject that interests me and as a result, I find it more difficult to get the motivation to actually do the assignments. But overall, I seem to be doing okay adjusting to these new experiences, even though I don’t really have anyone who can say they know what this first year experience is like, because nobody really does.

Embracing Failure Reading Questions

Bain’s chapter includes a variety of examples to illustrate approaches/responses to failure. Which one(s) come close to your own response(s) in the past? Quote/describe that example or those examples from Bain. Explain the text-to-self connection by illustrating your connection with at least one specific example from your life.

Based on the examples that Bain presented in his writing, I have to say that in the past, my relationship with failure has not been all that great. I had been told pretty much all of my life that I was incredibly smart, and although I appreciated the confidence boost, it ended up making me incredibly nervous to do anything that I knew that I wasn’t the best at. “Her father always emphasized that she could do anything she wanted to do, and her teachers said she was one of the brightest students they had ever encountered.”(Bain 101). This was similar to the experience that I had while growing up, in that my teachers and parents told me that I was so smart, I could do anything. One example of when this affected me is when I was a freshman in high school, it was a time where I could have involved myself in creative things like winterguard or art classes from the beginning. But because I was afraid of getting a failing grade that could hurt my chance to get into college, I didn’t take art that year. Luckily, I decided to take AP Art my senior year, and although my senior year was kind of a mess by the end, I was glad that I had decided to take the class. One of the reasons that I decided to take this class was because I had taken ceramics, since taking an art course was required, and my art teacher said that since I had put so much effort into the pieces that I had been creating in that class, she encouraged me to take AP Art the next year. She always encouraged my effort, even when my projects weren’t the strongest, and it was this kind of encouragement that mattered the most to her. Whether my art project was developed enough to be submitted to the College Board was something that could be fixed with time, but instead, it was my effort in making the pieces that she applauded.

We’re at midterms. How might Bain’s ideas help you put your academic work so far into a context for “success” or making the most of college? You might also bring in Duckworth. Be specific by including textual evidence and details about your term.

I think that by reading Bain’s work, I need to work on putting my college life into perspective. Most of high school my biggest fear was not getting into a good school, or simply not being good enough for one. But now that I am in college, I need to step back and recognize that not failing my entire life is not an option if I want to actually have a fulfilling life. What good does it do to refuse to do something that I have always wanted simply because I am afraid of getting it wrong? Although I say this now, these kinds of habits are hard to break, and I recognize that it will probably take a while before I can psych myself up enough to actually dive into something without a fear of failure. I need to reteach myself the meaning of the word “failure”, and dispel the anxiety that I have been taught around that word in my life. “That attitude seeps into every action and interaction, and students pick up the message.”(Bain 110). I know that in some areas of my education, I could tell from other students as well as myself that the word failure was basically condemning that student to fail again in the future. This kind of attitude scares students into believing that if they fail one class, or even just a couple of tests, that they won’t be able to get far in life once they leave school.

Duckworth TED Talk Questions

What is Grit, as Duckworth seems to see it? Use at least 2 passages to help you define it.

As Duckworth sees it, grit can be defined as the determination to persevere and keep trying until you succeed. She defines it as having the will to see your goals through, even when you feel like quitting. It is a perspective on life, “where Grit is living life like it’s a marathon, not a sprint”. This is a really good analogy for incorporating aspects of the concept of grit into your life. When people only live for today or tomorrow, they don’t end up setting goals for the future, and as a result, are unable to make any huge life changes. “We need to measure whether we’ve been successful, and we have to be willing to fail, to be wrong, to start over again with lessons learned.” Having grit means being willing to fail, but get up anyways and try again.

When have YOU exhibited Grit? When have you NOT exhibited Grit? (These are “text to self” connections!)

A time that I exhibited grit was when I was taking AP Art in high school and starting out, my projects didn’t really have a lot of depth or deeper themes that connected them. So I kept improving on and changing my projects until that theme became clear to me and I could follow a better path to where I wanted to go with my art. It also took me a lot of time to figure out what that path was, since my first projects were kind of vague due to the fact that I wasn’t really even sure what theme wanted to portray through my art. A time when I did not exhibit grit was right after I graduated high school, I was determined to keep up my fluency in French after taking it for about six years. But I haven’t really done all that much to keep this skill, but I still have time to build it up and keep it, since it hasn’t been too long.

Duckworth tells us she doesn’t know how to cultivate Grit. OK. Based on what you find in her talk, in what we’ve read this term, and in your own experiences, how do YOU THINK we might cultivate Grit? Explain with reference to the text, the world, and/or yourself.

I think that based on this, grit could be cultivated by people encouraging students and others to fail. Instill in them that failure is an important step in the learning process, contrary to what many American school systems have taught children. These schools teach students that failure is not an option, but in fact, it can be one of the best outcomes in the long run, because you will walk away from that experience with much more knowledge than what you had before. American schools also seem to teach kids that failing means that you are a failure just in general, when in fact, grit is teaching people that “they’re much more likely to persevere when they fail, because they don’t believe that failure is a permanent condition.”

We soon move to our next important project – Majors Exploration. Take some time to think about which major (or majors) seem interesting to you. Nobody is asking you to choose a major right now! Instead, try to identify one major or several. Write at least 3 sentences explaining why you think each possible major interests you. Is it careers? The questions they might ask? The kinds of work they might involve on in? Something else?

I think that I want to explore the business sustainability major because I have always thought that it would be cool to have a business of my own one day. I like the flexibility that it gives you in that you can make a business in practically anything as long as you are knowledgeable about it and are passionate. Also, I enjoy the aspect of creativity that being able to run your own business can form.

Coates Reading Questions #4

“For the men who needed to believe themselves white, the bodies were the key to a social club, and the right to break the bodies was the mark of civilization. ‘The two great divisions of society are not the rich and poor, but white and black,’ said the great South Carolina senator John C. Calhoun. ‘And all the former, the poor as well as the rich, belong to the upper class, and are respected and treated as equals’” (104). How do you think this idea functions to establish race – and not class or wealth – as a key division in the mid-1800s in this country? Draw a relationship between Calhoun’s idea and another part of Coates’ text.

1.) This uses race as the deciding factor as to whether or not a person can be successful in their life. This distinction showed that for white people, regardless of whether they were rich or poor, they could still work hard and get far in life, or be whatever they want to be. They could go wherever they wanted as long as they believed that they could do it. Conversely, if they were black, they were seen as less than, and therefore would never be able to get any farther than where they were presently. This connects to when Coates is explaining to his son through the book that the black race is the “below” on which America was built. “It is truly horrible to understand yourself as the essential below of your country.”(Coates 106).

Freebie I. Help us examine some specific part of Coates’ text by offering a Quotation, providing a 3-4 sentence Comment on it, and asking a Question that flows from the quote and/or comment.

2.) “And I saw that what divided me from the world was not anything intrinsic to us but the actual injury done by people intent on naming us, intent on believing that what they named us matters more than anything we could actually do.”(Coates 120). I chose this quote because I think in saying this, it shows a kind of enlightenment that he has reached through all of these years of research and questioning. At first, he believed that race was what had caused the divide between people. But now he believes that the act of naming others based on skin color automatically is the thing that serves to divide people, rather than skin color itself. Although people have attached stereotypes to each of these categories, and have had a negative result, would it have even been possible to not label people? These descriptors are what people use to describe others, but would these descriptions be considered wrong to use if people decided that race should no longer be used?

Freebie II. Help us examine some specific part of Coates’ text by offering a Quotation, providing a 3-4 sentence Comment on it, and asking a Question that flows from the quote and/or comment.

“The people who must believe they are white can never be your measuring stick. I would not have you descend into your own dream. I would have you be a conscious citizen of this terrible and beautiful world.”(Coates 108). This just shows how concerned for his son that he would rather have him know about the dangers of the world he is living in rather than just burying his head in the sand. He acknowledges that the world is a cruel place, but still insists that his son learns about it in its entirety. As a person, would it be better to be ignorant of the awful things around you in order to protect yourself? Or should you force yourself and those around you to open their eyes, whether they want to or not, for the greater good?

Annotations:

 “It is truly horrible to understand yourself as the essential below of your country.”(Coates 106). This quote shows how Coates seems to understand where he believes his place is in the world, whether it is just or not. It must be an incredibly difficult thing to have to explain this to a child one day in their lives.

“And I saw that what divided me from the world was not anything intrinsic to us but the actual injury done by people intent on naming us, intent on believing that what they named us matters more than anything we could actually do.”(Coates 120). This idea connects to earlier in the book when Coates keeps bringing up the idea that people believe they are white. He is slowly connecting for himself that labels don’t automatically exist or are the natural order, they arise from the desire for humans to create categories.

“And they would rather reach out, in all their sanity, and push my four-year-old son as though he were merely an obstacle in the path of their too-important day.”(Coates 105). Although I do agree that it was incredibly rude for those people to push his son and then act like that towards him, I don’t know if it actually started out as a race issue. It is all up for interpretation, but could those people have started out by simply being rude, and then escalated way farther than they should have?

Coates Reading Questions #3

“I knew that Prince was not killed by a single officer so much as he was murdered by his country and all the fears that have marked it from birth” (Coates 78). Why might Coates see the killing of Prince Jones in this way? Or, how does shifting the focus from the actions of a single officer to the US and a historical fear of Blacks alter the way we see police violence or killing? In responding to the question, draw a text-to-text connection with another part of Coates’ text.

1.) When Coates speaks of this tragic event, he expands on the fact that he has heard so many stories of innocent lives being lost simply because they were black and in the wrong place at the wrong time. He claims that Prince was killed by his country because of the bias that many Americans were raised with was that black people in general would be more likely to commit crime and be more suspicious. This makes police treat people differently solely based on their skin color. His shift that he makes from one single police officer to the country as a whole shows his belief that this incident was not an isolated one, and that the American police system was built around the idea that skin color indicated suspicion. This fear connects back to earlier in the book when he was talking about growing up in Baltimore. “Later, I would hear it in Dad’s voice– ‘Either I can beat him, or the police.’ Maybe that saved me. Maybe it didn’t.”(pg 16). This quote shows how in his childhood, he was raised to always be wary of the police, because they would be out to get him more than out to protect him.

“The galaxy belong to them [Whites on West Broadway], and as terror was communicated to our children, I saw mastery communicated to theirs” (Coates 89). What do you think Coates means by this distinction between communicating terror and communicating mastery? Support your response with evidence from the text.

2.) By saying this, I think that Coates meant that white children were raised to believe that they could do or be anything they wanted, that they could accomplish their dreams. From his experiences in his childhood, he found that instead of telling their kids that they could be anything they wanted to be, they were instead warned that they could be hurt anytime that they left the house. “All my life I’d heard people tell their black boys and black girls to be ‘twice as good,’ which is to say ‘accept half as much.’”(Coates 90). This quote just goes to show the significant disparity between how children of different races are raised. This inequality of how children of different races are raised is one of the many issues that need to be solved if people want to truly reach equality for everyone.

Offer ONE SIGNIFICANT PASSAGE you will be prepared to read and offer as a vehicle for class discussion. Quote the passage and write a few sentences explaining WHY you chose it and WHAT you’d like us to discuss in it.

3.) “I watched you leap and laugh with these children you barely knew, and the wall rose in me… that you submit to a loss of time.”(Coates 92). I chose this passage because I think that this shows an immense amount of personal growth in Coates. It must have taken a lot of self-reflection to be able to recognize that the environment in which his child would be growing up in would not be the same as to what he was raised in. It shows his strength of character to be able to not fall into the tradition he has always known and instead decide to give his child the chance to be different. If more black parents had a safe environment in which to allow their children to also act this way, could this tradition eventually decline in the country? Or would the tradition still be perpetuated by the fear of the parents for their children?

Read “Black and Blue,” an early Ta-Nehisi Coates (link and class handout) newspaper article that reports on Prince Georges County and police brutality. It is nearly 20 years old and written when Coates was just 25. In 2020, what does Coates’ reporting tell you? Why?
4.) Coates’ reporting on the death of Prince Jones tells me that for being so young, he certainly did thorough research into the topic. His research demonstrates that this kind of brutality has been evident for a long time in America, especially in PG County. Additionally, in light of more recent events such as George Floyd, that just goes to show that the problem really hasn’t gotten a whole lot better. Usually when articles become this old, the information in them gets outdated as well as new developments arise. The fact that this article is still relevant to today’s society demonstrates how far the country has to go. “In over 30 years as Commonwealth attorney for Fairfax County, Robert Horan had never charged a police officer with a crime. After investigating Jones’ death, he declined to break with tradition.”(Coates Black and Blue). This quote from his article shows how important this case was to him that he decided to break with this long tradition.

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