Quote of the Week

"Communication works for those who work at it."
~John Powell

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Who's History Is It?

The purpose of this paper is to outline, define, and convince my reader that there are powerful institutions governing the views of students educated in the United States.  To give background on myself I have to divulge that I am a white female in my mid twenties and graduated from a 95% white high school with a 100% graduation rate.  Why I offer up this information will be clear as I educate you, the reader, as to what inspired this piece of writing.  I have found discrepancies between the education I received from elementary level all the way up through the end of high school, and the higher education I have obtained, leading me to believe that these institutions are programming students in order to support their own selfish purpose.  I am convinced that the sole purpose of these institutions is to keep rich, white men in power and to oppress other races.  I cannot persuade belief into this conclusion until defining who and what is the culprit of these horrendous actions.  To know how this act is accomplished one needs to know what an institution is, have a clear definition of power, prejudice, racism, white privilege, powerlessness and how conditioning has affected people over time.  This will assist in the learning of how these agents play a role in the oppression of people today.  I can’t assume that my reader knows what I know.  I know that I don’t have this luxury because before my studies I was not privilege to this information either.  To introduce this issue to someone like myself, one may find it to be confusing and in a way a little embarrassing as well.  I must state that there is a difference between Puerto Ricans, Mexicans, Hispanics, and Guatemalans, etc.  If a person speaks Spanish, it does not make them a Mexican, Spanish, Hispanic or Latino.  Latino refers to anyone from Latin America despite there differences in the actual Spanish that they speak, the history of their land, their culture, etc.  This is sadly, new information for a lot of people I know because they were never taught to understand or see that there is any difference.  I don’t even want to be generalized by my surrounding states.  I’m from Minnesota, not from Fargo in North Dakota or Iowa despite how my accent sounds to others.  I am a Midwestern girl, but I prefer to be just Minnesotan.  I know it sounds silly but it is my hope that you will understand after reading this paper.  I am not southern, or rich, or just white, I have my heritage and identity and I don’t want it generalized or ignored or labeled anymore than I would expect anyone else to. 
            The institutions I am referring to begin with parents of students, the school board, the institution, in general, known as the education system, and those who determine what is taught and learned in public school classrooms in the United States.  First, I can say with disappointment that students blindly believe what they are being taught in their classrooms and I am not an exception to this.  Students are never told to question their educators.  The last thing students of privilege are going to do is question what they are learning when all you have to care about is after school sports, prom committee, and where to go to college, not whether or not to go to college.  It is not my intention to criticize privileged students for participating in extra curricular activities as opposed to fighting for equal education rights; I am simply attempting to give a visual that would display the differences and/or their lack of struggle in these matters.  Students of color that are struggling with a second language don’t have time to question or debate it because they are fighting to get through it in order to graduate.  What does this say about our education system and who is at fault?  If we don’t learn to question what we learn, what we know, what books we are learning from and who wrote them then in public high schools we are at the mercy of a higher power.  The fact is that this important lesson is never a part of building our leaders of tomorrow because the leaders of today like the system just the way it is.  “Education is a primary route to rewarding employment and economic security.  It is particularly significant for the future prospects of children who are ethnic minorities, born into disadvantaged economic circumstances and/or dealing with language barriers” (Fact Sheet on Latino Youth: Education, 2002).  I didn’t understand the importance of my education because I was able to take it for granted.  Unfortunately, we are not all privileged enough to be that ignorant despite the fact that it has an effect on the future of youth in education.  Before I address the effects of this ignorance it is vital that I introduce a concept that may be an uneasy phrase to swallow for some.
            White privilege is something I never knew existed.  In addition, I didn’t have a name for it, but in my experiences I have seen that male privilege exists as well, so, how ignorant of me to not recognize that, in addition, white privilege also exists.  I bring this up only to acknowledge that I am aware of what privilege is despite my unawareness to my own.  In my research, Peggy McIntosh describes it best as “…an invisible package of unearned assets that I can count on cashing in each day, but about which I was “meant” to remain oblivious.”  This is true, now whether one decides to acknowledge it or not is his or her own decision.  White people in the United States want to believe, despite where they truly rank in a class, economically or otherwise, that they are average.  The tendency is to want to be impartial, middle-of-the-road and un-bias.  To a degree it is common for people to also believe that they are culturally competent, aware, accepting, and accommodating.  Although in reality this is hardly factual.  Howard, in Chapter 1 of his book, We Can’t Teach What We Don’t Know, describes this as “encapsulation” or his unsighted White status.  He also describes the driving forces of it to be the assumption of rightness, the luxury of ignorance, and the legacy of privilege, referring to the power white people have that enables them to be unaware of the historical development and existence of it.  Without a shred of acceptance to the presence of this white privilege, one cannot completely be open to the idea of inequality, racism, discrimination or any of the other scary words that are avoided in our language.  I use the word, “scary” because for the same reason the stories are altered in “our” text books “we” want to remain oblivious to actions that may incriminate “us.”  As a result, change can not occur.  If the problem doesn’t exist because there is no acknowledgement of our own dominance then how can there ever truly be equal rights among the people of this country?
            By not seeing the problem we are able to look the other way to the effects of that problem.  It enables us to not make the connection of cause and affect.  One additional problem that in my interpretation was left out of Howard’s book is the importance of being submerged into an issue.  Without this, a person will struggle to take an un-biased look at it.   You cannot simply state that an issue exists, it needs to be seen.  Working at La Escuelita, an after school program for middle school and high school students at El Colegio Charter School in south Minneapolis has given me the opportunity to witness the struggles of students attending public schools whose primary language is Spanish with having limited to no access to assistance in their learning.  The level of available bilingual teachers and English Language Learning programs is dependent upon money.  The people that have the strongest influence on how much money is spent on what programs are the white parents of white children that attend the school board meetings.  They are ultimately fighting for the future of their children while ignoring the needs of desperate students.  This is an unfortunate fact that began long ago.  
             Segregated schools began in 1919 when the first Mexican school was established.  A fact, I must mention, that was not one I was taught about in high school.  I question the reason behind why it was acknowledged in my history lessons that African Americans were segregated from white schools but there was no mention of that occurring to other students of color.  I hate to speculate in this manner, but my only conclusion is that African Americans have been conditioned and assimilated to the point that they are in an acceptable place in the eyes of rich, white men that hold the powerful positions in this government.  In the book, Barrios Norteños, by Dionicio Nodín Valdés, Sra. Dionisia Cárdenas Coates describes her experience in her St. Paul, Minnesota high school in the 1940’s saying that “even when one tried to imitate the manners of Anglo youth and spoke English like them, ‘you are going to know that you are different.  You aren’t going to understand what makes you different… the schools never taught us what the Mexican American contributed to the society… We were ashamed to be different,’” and in my experience while working with the students of La Escuelita I found that they experience some of the same feelings.  Now, I ask myself, why, since 1940, have we not changed the learning environment so that it is one that accommodates students of color in order to eliminate these debilitating feelings.  After the Second World War, “leaders began to emerge and organize to challenge segregation” (The Elusive Quest for Equality, page 72).  Now, even as we see and acknowledge that the schools aren’t segregated, the problem still remains that students are not treated as equals, because we are not addressing all students’ needs in their learning environment. 
            A wonderful example of how to see this issue was given to me by Luis Ortega, the Executive Director of the Multicultural/Multilingual Department and also one of the founders of La Escuelita.  His example described how if a student is required to jump three feet into the air by the third grade and the student is disabled and cannot do it, then the question arises, do you modify it to help the student or do you just let them fail?  In the 1999 case of Cedar Rapids Community School District v. Garret F., the school district did not want to provide Garret with the one-on-one nursing care he needed and the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the law found that they had to.  If this were applied to education, then we could truly not leave a child behind because it would include all students of all abilities, not just the 20% or more in a single classroom.  In the case of Garret a fight was put forth in his defense. 
            One can say that the parents of these children should attend those meetings and fight for their cause but the reason they aren’t present at those meetings is not because they don’t care or because they are not intelligent people.  It is because they are not aware of how the system works or where to start.  Additionally, it is important to taken into consideration that they may only have one vehicle and are working jobs that do not allow time to get involved.  In that position there is little room to advocate the issue, and therefore little hope for change.  Before a parent makes the decision to support or oppose an issue, all students should be taken into consideration.  Once the struggle through a general education is over a new battle begins. 
            The Minnesota Immigrant Freedom Network describes The Dream Act as defining the problem by beginning in 1996 when “changes were made to a federal immigration law that prevent many of Minnesota’s brightest high school graduates from pursuing dreams of a college education and a better future every year.  These changes required students who don’t have U.S. citizenship to pay out-of-state tuition rates when attending public post-secondary institutions.”  These are tuition rates that not even I can afford.  It goes on to describe further estimating “…that approximately 65,000 undocumented students in the U.S. graduate from high school each year (MN Dream Act/ National Immigration Law Center).  Most immigrant students were brought to this country as young children and have lived here almost their entire lives.  They have no control over their immigration status.”  These barriers combined with so many others suffer our country.  The language used by our media to define these aspiring students makes it all too easy to not speak up on the issue.  The word “illegal,” meaning without visa or documentation dehumanizes people, giving the impression that they are criminals when they are simply in violation of laws.  The wall the government wants to build is fueling hatred and giving people the right to say, “Go home!”  It allows people to see brown skin, not human beings.  Continuing to use this language and take these views keeps power in the hands of narrow minds and selfish bodies. 
            Long before these laws and programs hinder the ability of these students to succeed they are set up for failure by this country through the very education they struggle to obtain.  To see the true culprits one must look far beyond the obvious.  The culprits are the very books provided to our children in their classrooms.  I feel that I have been robbed of a color blind, unbiased United States history lesson.  By robbed, I mean that important parts of the making of our history were carelessly left out which causes students to grow up ignorant of how “American” history came to be and what really built our country.  There are holes in the text books stories which I believe are strategically left out so that “America” can continue to oppress certain races.  There is an abundance of examples that support my assertion. 
            The importance of teaching history is underestimated.  Recently there has been discussion of dropping World History as a subject all together at the high school that I attended.  “The legacy of these voiceless and nameless Spanish-speaking peoples is a long one, and their experiences in North America before 1900 are important and worthy of separate discussion… rather than offering a smattering of ideas across five hundred years, we have chosen to write from our vantage point as twentieth-century United States historians” (Joseph A. Rodríguez and Vicki L. Ruiz, At Loose Ends: Twentieth-Century Latinos in Current United States History Textbooks).  One argument that would be presented in the defense of not teaching these stories tends to be the available time in school to teach them.  I must then argue that without teaching these stories we are conditioning not only students of color but white students to be culturally incompetent.  That is a repercussion of not finding the time, but still the argument would be, where would the time come from?  How many study halls, jewelry classes, fluffy career exploration classes, team sports (which is an elective at the high school I attended), and wild life courses need to be available to students when all they tend to allow is “easy A’s” for students to waste time and unjustly increase their grade point averages?  In addition to these, work-study credit is given to students without a thorough examination of how they will actually be spending their time in these work environments.  The value of a proper history lesson is being disregarded although it would strongly be a more justifiable course.  There is more value in expanding their minds with other course work.  Not to mention, by losing fluffy courses, a school district will have more funds available for English Language Learning classes, seeing as they represent a larger and more rewarding demand in our education system in regards to this nation’s future, much more than jewelry design.  Whether additional time is allowed for the education of the historical significance of Spanish-speaking people in relation to the United States, the un-bias stories need to be told in order to create a multicultural awareness in students attending public institutions of education.  The struggle for students of color I am certain will continue to be a greater one than finding the time in a school day to tell the stories without bias and inaccuracies. 
            Before the stories can even be discussed it is important that I address the segregation that took place and the injustices that have been done by the educators throughout time.  Now, it has occurred throughout time although what I am writing about did not occur so long ago that it did, and is not currently affecting students of today’s parents, grandparents, and aunts and uncles.  A fact that really hit home for me was that “more than 80 percent of the school districts in southern California enrolled Mexicans and Mexican Americans in segregated schools,” during the time of the Great Depression according to historian, Francisco Balderrama.  Another story by Vicki Olivo is of a career counselor, “He was telling Latino kids that they weren’t going to college anyway, so they didn’t need information about certain career options,” she said.  This was a very common tale around the Great Depression era although this story took place about 80 miles south of the Twin Cities, in Minnesota in 1995.  I remember in my service learning course which is a part of the Chicano Studies Department at the University of Minnesota, when my classmates and I shared good and bad experiences of our time spent as tutors in Minneapolis schools.  I will never forget a female classmate of mine and how angry she was when one of the teachers that she worked with told her that the students didn’t belong in school because they were illegal.  I shouldn’t have to, but will mention that not every student of color is without documents.  I wonder if it helped him feel more comfortable being a teacher and not being capable of helping because the students were Latino.  I imagine that the type of person that becomes a teacher does so because he or she wishes to inspire their students, and give them hope for a bright future.  I imagine that that person knows the value of an education and how it is a significant determining factor in the success of one’s life, also effecting how much they contribute to society, how much they provide for their family, therefore determining the level of respect they may end up having for themselves.  So how it is that this teacher doesn’t feel the need to help these “illegal” students?  My only possible answer is that he read the same books I did in school, and never acquired any kind of cultural competence in all of his schooling that said he has enough knowledge and the kind of demeanor that is appropriate and beneficial for students today.  Or, does he believe that they simply do not deserve the same education opportunities as the other students who just happen to be born in this country.   We cannot honestly say that a child has a choice to where he or she is born.   Also, since we cannot, how can we say that it is suitable and lawful to deprive these children of their rights?  It is not determined by the child’s free will or personal human desire to live in this country, so with that how is it justified that these rights will be stripped from aspiring students, or are we simply saying that they do not have rights at all?  Then, what seems to happen is, even when we acknowledge that it is not their fault we as a nation fail to do, at least out of selfishness for our country, is teach them and allow them what we take for granted, an educated mind, the ability to move foreword in life, the option to attend college, to one day have a career and provide for their family, to have a choice of obtaining citizenship or finally choose where they want to live.  In all of this narrow-minded discrimination, we have to realize that there is no real profit in this behavior.  This attitude is harmful to the society we live in.  To be truly fulfilled by our own identity and history is to embrace our differences and how they built each other.  What is right or wrong mistakenly gets separated into good and evil.  This is where evil extracts its power.  It appears to be good because years of conditioning throughout history have told us the same stories over and over that were written by racist, white historians.  The media has a talented hand in this as well.  Book writers seem so worthy and knowledgeable, but since we are not reading for pleasure in classrooms we don’t decide whether we, the students like the stories; we simply believe them and live out our lives believing them to be true.  What an easy target, high school students, for them to serve up pages and pages that hold underlying deceitful messages that all the while serve their egotistical purposes. 
            In the teaching of the story of the Alamo the battle is described as a valiant struggle for independence from Mexico although it neglects to emphasize that Texas belonged to Mexico in the first place.  The stories I remember make it sound like white people were struggling for independence when in reality the rightful struggle began after the 1848 Guadalupe-Hidalgo Treaty that marked the end of the war between the United States and Mexico which had only began after Mexico refused to sell the states of California, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas to the United States.  When the treaty was signed, Mexican land owners were promised that the United States would respect their land ownership by honoring their land grants.  In the end many were denied ownership to their land and were forced to retreat to Mexico.  It is also common for these land owners to be criticized for their lack of care for which nation they belonged to as opposed to the land titles they possessed.  If you worked hard to build a home, develop your land, and raise your family and were promised that your rights would not change, that they would be respected, honored and you would be granted citizenship, would you be inclined to move because the border of a nation moved?  If where I live in Minnesota became Wisconsin and I had the option of moving my entire existence and leaving behind the life I had built and an asset such as land I would not be inclined to pick up and leave no matter the desires of Wisconsinites.  It is not practical to snub ones nose at another for choosing to stay put versus starting their life all over again.  It is the presence of these misrepresentations and biases that oppresses students of color and injures the minds of tomorrow’s leaders.
            By examining the truth in the occurrence of these misrepresentations, it can be deducted that slavery in a manner of speaking still exists.  “One of the ugliest beauties, if I can use that word, about slavery was this: If you steal a human being’s past then you can recreate for that person what you want him to be” (Lewis Diuduid, The Kansas City Star).  Once you take a good look at it, you can see how this can be true, but my challenge to you is to see that it is done in present day and the harm it is causing.  “History textbooks often mirror social and political contexts of the time” (Takashi Yoshida, Columbia University).  Takashi, a student at Columbia University, is, in stating this, preparing to describe how powerful forces exist in her country of Japan that are presently contending over the type of information that textbooks will present the legacy of World War II to their youth.  She describes her concern in her a paper she wrote entitled, “History Textbooks: For whom and for What Purpose?” as a battle towards a more open discussion of the past.  She is aware of the harmful affects of not examining ones past and how the lack of examination of it is detrimental to the future.  It is detrimental in that it makes people invisible in its pages, and discredits them in its history, making it possible to discount these people today. 

            What if your identity were erased from the history books, your people removed, how would you feel while reading “history” when you cannot see yourself in those books?  Howard, author of We Can’t Teach What We Don’t Know, describes education throughout history as using education to rob the Natives of their dignity and identity resulting in psychological alienation.  In not writing about how Mexico and people of that decent helped to build what this country is today and by ignoring their presence now we continue to ignore our short comings as a nation.  This fuels the ignorance that dominates public school classrooms.  White people with all of their middle ground desired attitudes do not want to hear that they did wrong in their past, they don’t want to know that “Americans” lynched thousands of people and pirated the land, stealing property from the rightful land owners.  Who wants to hear that their ancestors and the men that built for them the life that they know were lying murders.  It does not define you when you act like it never happened, right?  So, erase it from the books and hold your head up high, you’re white.  To look at this further we must now define power, prejudice, racism, and look at what oppression is in its sneakiest form. 
            Power is defined as the “ability or capacity to perform or act effectively,” it is the “ability or official capacity to exercise control or authority” and takes the form of “a person, group, or nation having great influence or control over others,” described as having “the might of a nation, political organization, or similar group” according to the online free dictionary.  Looking at society today, power is everywhere, its not only visible in the lost pages of our books but it takes control through the images our books project similar to the way that our media controls the images they project in order to influence their viewers so that they may side with their opinions and attitudes.  “If our stories are discounted, if we are not seen as valuable contributors to the country that we have helped to build then we will be discounted in everyday situations, too” (Lewis Diuguid, The Kansas City Star).  By first acknowledging these indiscretions and then acting on them we may in time take a step in the direction of a nation that can call itself a melting pot.  The analogy of the melting pot makes me think of a stew.  A stew has several ingredients and they do not satisfy a pallet without complimenting each other with their diverse flavors, if the flavor assimilates itself into one bland taste, then how good is it really?  What I am arguing is that this pot will not simmer forever without scorching the flavor of the soup and this country will not thrive without taking pride in its every ingredient, giving each one equal attention.
            Discrimination is only possible with power and with discrimination and power, racism is created.  To truly oppress a race or culture in today’s day sounds radical.  An indigenous woman by the name of Suzanna de León who I had the honor of hearing speak on “Crossing Borders and Border Crossing,” said that racism is not prejudice.  It is with power that enables us to segregate.  I believe her although before that speech I had never felt that I had a good definition for it.  By reading someone else’s history books we become agents of oppression.  You don’t need to hold a person down or put them in chains because after so much conditioning over time they will stop resisting.  In truth, people will never completely stop resisting and that brings me peace in putting this all down on paper.  What affects me so strongly is that I have been told that no one is truly powerless although by examining only small pieces of what people of other races are encountering and experience in their every day struggles I see that lack of hope is the cause of loss of power.  If you add it all up the outcome is more than discouraging, it is crippling.  Powerlessness may not exist because one always has power over their decisions and actions, but they cannot wake up tomorrow, white, privileged and with equal opportunity to receive a fair and unbiased education.  A “Palabrista” or Latina Poet, named Teresa Ortiz recited that “our history is long and it is living…we are here, the future is now.”  I see that as so optimistic since she is talking about the exact history that is chosen to be excluded and banished from the very books that teach us about “Americans” since not all “Americans” are white.  Teresa is an American, a Minnesotan and she is from Mexico.  I hope students in this country can find the inspiration that Teresa has, to write of her pride and history, since it is a part of “ours.”  We share so many pages of history, even though we don’t share enough pages in our books.  I asked myself why when sitting in my first Chicano Studies classes, why I was never privileged to this information.  Not until further researching other sources of oppression and realizing that I have been bread to have a white mind did I really become infuriated.  A white mind is one that is educated to continue the oppression that has deprived our country of multicultural competent individuals.
            I have concern in concluding this paper that white readers will feel as if I am playing the blame game, but I do not mean to force guilt onto people like myself for not knowing, I point the finger at the institutions that began in our past and exist with ill intentions today.  No more than I want a white reader to feel guilt do I want a person of color to hate me because of my ignorance to this.  I have begun to take off my blindfold and exert my personal power to choose to question those in power who determine my education.  I ask that instead of holding this knowledge inside that students of color educate me to my history, and its relationship to your history and how it has given me the privilege while it oppresses you.  I am white and with knowledge I have the power to see a history full of color.  Time has not changed the colors of our skin, but we are not powerless if we acknowledge the effects of the discrepancies in our books, and act in a conscious effort towards stopping the institutions from dominating our views of each other.  Without increasing cultural competence, starting with the textbooks, “American” children of all races, cultures, and backgrounds first open we can not turn the page to a future that is truly capable of proudly stating that, “all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness” (Declaration of Independence).  We will not create leaders for tomorrow without acknowledging our shortcomings because we will have fallen short of the truth in our history and in our pasts.  The real history, that tells us that injustices have been done, racism exists, and that the power surrounding white privilege makes us incapable of developing our own identity and in turn hinders the development of other’s identities including one that truly would depict us as a “free” nation of equal opportunities. 

                                                                       Works Cited
Declaration of Independence. The US Constitution Online. 28 Nov. 2006 <http://www.usconstitution.net/.html>.
Dionicio, Valdes Nodin. Barrios Nortenos: St. Paul and Midwestern Mexican Communities in the Twentieth Century. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2000.
Diuguid, Lewis. “Voices: Stories and How They Connect to the 1954 Brown decision and Diversity.” The Kansas City Star 28 Oct. 2004. 15 Nov. 2006 <http://www.nameorg.org/>.
“Fact Sheet on Latino Youth: Education.” The Institute for Health Policy Studies Nov. 2002.
Howard, Gary R. We Can’t Teach What We Don’t Know: White Teachers Multicultural Schools. Williston, Vermont, USA: Teachers College Press, 1999.
Leon, Suzanna De. “Crossing Borders and Border Crossing.” Service Learning. University of Minnesota-Folwell Hall. Fall 2006.
McIntosh, Peggy. “White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack.” White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming To See Correspondences through Work in Woman’s Studies (Winter 1990).
“The Mexican Cession.” Land and Freedom.  16 Nov. 2006 <http://www.landandfreedom.org//.htm>.
Moreno, Jose F. “150 Years of Chicano/Education.” The Elusive Quest For Equality 1999. 21 Dec. 2006 <http://eric.ed.gov//‌Home.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=RecordDetails&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=ED449926&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=eric_accno&objectId=0900000b80135288>.
Olivo, Vicki. “A Primer of Discrimination in Education.” MN Dept. of Human Rights News Letter 2003. 21 Dec. 2006 <http://www.humanrights.state.mn.us//_over.html>.
Ortega, Luis. “Multicultural/.” Service Learning. Nicholson Hall. Fall 2006.
Ortiz, Teresa. “Palabristas.” Folklore of Greater Mexico. University of Minnesota, Burton Hall. Fall 2006.
“Power.” Free Online Dictionary. 2006.  30 Nov. 2006 <http://www.freeonlinedictionary.com/////>.
“Promoting Equal Access to Higher Education For All.” The Minnesota Dream Act.
Rodriguez, Joseph A., and Vicki L. Ruiz. “At Loose Ends: Twentieth-Century Latinos in Current United States Textbooks.” The Journal of American History 86.4 (Mar. 2000). 14 Nov. 2006 <http://www.historycooperative.org>.
Ruiz, Vicki L. “South by Southwest: Mexican Americans and Segregated Schooling, 1900-1950.” OAH Magazine of History Winter 2001. 10 Nov. 2006 <http://www.oah.org//‌magazine//.html>.
Yoshida, Takashi. “ History Textbooks: For Whom and for What Purpose?” Viewpoints. Association For Asian Studies.  12 Nov. 2006 <http://www.aasianst.org/ws.htm>.

Insight into an Intercultural Communication Perspective

With the purpose of gaining a more thorough understanding of the intricacies of intercultural communication, and in an effort to apply Intercultural Communications course knowledge to a real life instance I will interview my Ecuadorian-American uncle, Giovanni Veliz.  I chose Giovanni because I do not know about his past, but I am aware that he speaks English and Spanish, and he or his family are from Ecuador originally.  While inquiring into utilizing him as my interview subject, I uncovered some of the following details:  Giovanni is a 45 year old heterosexual male; he graduated from John J. College in New York in 1992 with a BS in Criminal Justice; and then graduated from St. Thomas in MN in 2005 with a Master of Art in Police Leadership Education and Administration.  Giovanni is a successful Sergeant of Investigations for the Minneapolis, MN police department who recently passed his Lieutenants exam and lives in a beautiful home in Maple Grove, MN with my Aunt Dawn King Veliz.
What I do not know is whether he was born in the United States or born in Ecuador and at what age he came to the United States if he was not born here.  Additionally, I am not aware of what may have motivated his family to move here and I am unaware of the challenges he may have faced in communication being a minority where the dominant culture is white.   
My reason for interviewing him was inspired by what I see as one of the greatest barriers of intercultural communication- fear.  It is because of my own fear of asking the questions I have always wanted to ask him about his life that I do not know the answers to my questions about Giovanni.  I think this is a perfect example of why we never end up understanding or gaining more sensitivity to other cultures; 
According to Mahboub Hashem, mass communication professor at the American University of Sharjah (AUS), people socialise with similar others because they share common elements with fewer unknowns. If you don’t know the person, you might not feel comfortable so self-disclosure doesn’t take place, which is vital for successful communication. (Cultural Diversity Encourages Interaction, 2010)
It is because we are too afraid, embarrassed or uncomfortable that we opt out of asking the questions we long to ask even when we have the desire to understand one another.  When I asked him to do the interview, he was more than willing to share his stories, and it was that easy-lesson learned. 
With this in mind I asked Giovanni questions about his background to gain understanding about his frame of reference, questions about growing up in a culture different from his own to learn about his identity as he sees it and how his perceptions were shaped, questions about his struggles with learning another language and how this barrier affected his interaction and communication during his transition into a new culture, and finally, I asked him specific questions about communication with regard to intercultural barriers, stereotyping and experiences with prejudice, and questions about the role the media plays in shaping our understanding of our own culture, from his minority perspective.
Frame Of Reference
Giovanni shared with me some background on being born and raised for part of his life in Ecuador, and he shared about his move to the United States.  Giovanni Veliz was born in Guayaquil, Ecuador with four siblings.  He moved to the United States at the age of 15 in 1986 with his younger brother and joined his mother and brother already living in the United States.  Due to his family’s financial hardship the siblings were separated and moved in with their uncles.  Clothes, food, education and shelter were the most important things for his family at this time.
The country of Ecuador in terms of geography is divided into three areas; coast, mountains, and jungle.  The government was democratic in Ecuador.  The mode of transportation its residents used were buses and taxis.  The economic system had three primary levels; wealthy, middle class and poor.  They have public and private schools systems like we do in the U.S.  The most prominent aspect of Giovanni’s life was that he grew up in Ecuador middle class, but even as middle class he and his family experienced financial struggles at times.  His family valued better financial security and educational opportunity.  It was because of this that they took on the challenge of moving their family to the United States.
Growing Up In a New Culture
I asked Giovanni how far back in time he could remember and he recalls his first childhood memory being as far back as the age of four. Giovanni remembers as far back as when he was four years old.  He recalled spending summers with his family on the beautiful beaches of Salinas, Ecuador and his uncle taking him and his brothers on a motorboat. 
The experience of being an immigrant brings back more memories of language barrier issues than anything for Giovanni it seems.  He recalls that the language barrier hindered communication with the dominant culture.  He also said that even though most people in New York City, the first U.S. city he lived in, were multi-lingual and often spoke Spanish, this was more of a liability because it prevented him from practicing speaking English.
After I inquired about the most vivid experiences Giovanni could recall after first arriving in the United States, he remembered the hunger, cold and poverty. 
Giovanni (2010) recalled the following:  I did not have enough money to buy food and endured a great deal of hunger.  I did not have money to buy winter clothes; therefore I did not wear winter clothes and my hands, ears, forehead, feet and lips were always cold and frozen. (C. Tuenge, personal communication, August 27, 2010)
I asked Giovanni, “In the United States today, what is different about your life in terms of language, religion, family customs, diet, recreation, and work, as compared to childhood?”  He said, in terms of language, he speaks English and Spanish approximately 50% of the time, his religion and family customs are limited and he does not attend church as often as he did in Ecuador.  He follows a healthier diet her in the U.S. and no long eats Ecuadorian food.  Recreation here in the U.S. includes working out at a gym whereas in Ecuador he played soccer outdoors every day.  
Language
Giovanni’s native language is Spanish and he did not speak, read or write English when he arrived in the United States.  The differences, Giovanni said, between the Spanish and English languages are that the sentence structure and verbs in the English language are more complicated.  The English adjectives are in the reverse order from Spanish and that proved to be difficult for him while writing sentences.  He attended a suburban school in New York City where only 3% of the students were bilingual and thus, he was in the minority.  Therefore he was forced to speak, write and read English.  His first year in high school was difficult; however, it was not long before he began to understand, read and write English.  He did not have many friends and did not practice speaking or talking to other individuals.  Learning the English language seems to have been the major stepping-stone in Giovanni’s transition into his new culture. 
A California Senator back in 1981, S.I. Kayawaka, was quoted as saying “Language is a powerful tool.  A common language can unify, separate languages can fracture and fragment a society” (Jandt, 2010, p. 153).  A common language, such as English, may be able to bring a country of diverse cultures together, but it forces all, but native English speakers to struggle.  Native English speakers in the U.S. take for granted the fact that they are at an advantage when the dominant language is their own.  It is amazing to me how incredibly inconvenienced English speakers appear when presented with some who has trouble with the English language.  How can you not be sympathetic to those struggling to learn a second, or third, language when the majority of English speakers speak only one in a world where we claim to be the leader, in a world with thousands of languages?
Communication
When I asked Giovanni about barriers to effective communication he encountered he told me the following:
I was not able to communicate my ideas due to the language barrier.  I could not communicate my ideas, feelings, needs or wishes.  I felt like an outsider and individual without a country.  I began to leave behind my cultural identity, norms, ancestry and began to assimilate into the ‘American way of life.’ (C. Tuenge, personal communication, August 27, 2010) 
To hear this answer hurt me.  When you have never had to risk everything for opportunity, when you have never had to feel like an outsider, and when you have never had to worry about not being able to communicate your basic needs to others you do not realize how difficult this can make life, how frightening it can be, how diminishing it can feel, and how lonely one can get without an identity or anyone to identify with.
The first time I read Peggy McIntosh’s study on white privilege was four years ago while studying Spanish and Chicano Studies at the University of Minnesota, and I found it eye opening. 
F. E. Jandt (2010) quotes McIntosh as saying the following:
As a white person, I have realized I had been taught about racism as something which puts others at a disadvantage, but had been taught not to see one of its corollary aspects, white privilege, which puts me at an advantage. (p. 31) 
I, too, was oblivious to my unearned advantages due to my skin color.  I did not see the damaging effects of racism because I was taught that slavery was over, I had the idea that we live in a country where we have “equal opportunity,” and I was living under the assumption that the world looked the same to everyone else as it did to me.  I did not understand how oppressive it might be to live under the suspicion, disregard, and cruel assumptions and labels of others due to your skin color.  What I do know is that it is hard not to internalize these images our society hangs over people of color and it is not surprising to me that some live with such obvious resentment, anger and frustration toward white people’s ignorance of their advantages. 
I have been, however, aware in my life of my disadvantages due to my gender and this is why I sympathize with the struggles of people of other cultures.  As a woman, I have been underestimated, stereotyped and suspected of being in management positions for reasons other than that I had earned that position.  This helps me make the connection between the feelings people of other cultures experience every day and the gender inequality issues I struggle with only every so often.  I cannot imagine how heavy the weight of one’s race can weigh on their life, their optimism, their motivation, their hopes, and so many other things I take for granted, like interacting with people who see me before my skin color.  The easy way out would be to take the attitude that what does not kill you makes you stronger or to turn away from the issue by asserting that all people can make it in this country because of “equal opportunity.”  When we allow ourselves to speak to people like Giovanni and learn about other cultures we realize that even though we have come a long way in this country, we do have a long ways to go.  One of those major issues that need to be dealt with is stereotyping.   
Stereotypes
I asked Giovanni, if he was willing to share a story about experiences related to stereotyping, racism or prejudice he has experienced in his life.  Giovanni described to me an experience he had related to stereotyping as an immigrant in this country.  He told me about how new arrivals are perceived and labeled as undocumented immigrants; therefore companies give immigrants the toughest and most dangerous jobs with minimal rewards and benefits that they should be legally entitled to.  This did not shock me, but the presence of this type of injustice is not something I have experienced or known of in my life.  It makes me sad and angry that simply because someone has darker skin and an accent that they are immediately labeled as an “illegal immigrant.” When people say “illegal” or “undocumented,” there are other characteristics associated with those terms.  Those characteristics range from laziness to drugs, and violence.  The term “illegal” is damaging because it implies that these human beings, these individuals and families, are criminals.  It is dehumanizing and allows stereotypes and racism to continue to flourish in this country of “equal opportunity.”    
He also explained how being a recent immigrant impeded his opportunities for housing.  He shared that renting and finding apartments was a difficult task and how it was more likely than not that immigrant tenants are given filthy, unhealthy and expensive apartments.  This tells me that our country takes advantage of the weak or perceived weak for their own benefit.  We do not welcome the struggles of others; their struggles become our strengths and are used for our own selfish benefits.  This is unjust and speaks volumes of our culture.  I cannot help but be disappointed in hearing these stories.  Unless we learn and understand the struggles of others we will never eliminate these injustices.  We only fuel them turning a blind eye and believing powerful media influences.
Media Influence
The biggest impact the media had on Giovanni was on his view and opinion about males and females in the United States.  The Latin American news media portrayed American males and females as individuals who enjoy drinking and partying a lot.  The female gender is portrayed as being promiscuous and that they like to reveal their bodies by wearing skimpy clothing.  One specific example he could recall of this was in U.S. commercials aired in Ecuador that “showed males and females kissing, hugging, etc. which was considered taboo in Ecuador for young individuals” (C. Tuenge, personal communication, August 27, 2010).  I imagine that as a teenager in Ecuador Giovanni may have been viewing primarily commercial ads but even those speak volumes of a culture.  The standard by which we display our people in advertising is a reflection of what you see here, not everywhere, but you can find it and you can find people who value the life depicted in the ads.  It is disappointing to think about how careless we seem to be with how we show U.S.’s Americans in commercials.  That is sometimes all other countries will see of us.  When we only show the glamorous, carefree party life, we certainly appear to be as arrogant and oblivious as some people hold us to be.
Giovanni says the most significant difference in his day-to-day life now than in this past is that today, in the U.S. he has a nice home, a good job where he works full-time, 40 hours a week, Monday through Friday, and his work and transportation provides security for him and his family today.  This answer, although not what I was expecting, was very basic and to the point.  That is what we do in the United States, we work.  Had he continued to live in Ecuador, he may have remained middle class or even struggled in poverty, but he would have kept true to the shared values in Ecuador.  He probably would attend church regularly, and exercised in the company of friends on a soccer field rather than in a fitness center.  Giovanni expressed this difference so simply that I almost missed what huge differences there are compared to had he lived his life in Ecuador.
Through this interview, I have conquered some of my fear in asking people of other cultures questions about their memories and experiences living in the United States, however, it is hard to know how personal of a question it is because for some it is very personal.  After completing my line of questions I found that I had more and more questions and it is hard to know when you have asked too many.  I have developed more knowledge of another culture, improved my communication skills with regard to interviewing and intercultural communication, and what I find myself learning over and over again as I speak to people who have immigrated to the U.S. from other countries is that the only thing to fear is not being as brave as they were to take their life into their own hands and risk it all to make a better life for their children.  It is something to admire, not to shy away from.  
What I have learned about my own culture is that some of us would rather remain oblivious to the struggles of people who are of another nationality, color, race or religion.  Some of us would rather take advantage of someone struggling to make it in our country than to lend them a hand or equal opportunity we speak so often about.  There are also those of us who choose to learn and understand and work on our fears so that our children can bring up a country where we welcome people, not immigrants or any of the other labels that seem to damage human beings who come from other countries to the U.S.
What can be learned when studying the life of another is compassion, acceptance, and what can be unlearned is the fear of the unknown.  When we allow ourselves to communicate with someone of another culture we allow ourselves to let go of the fears that bind us to our own culture and this spins the wheel of change.  We are all spokes on the wheel of our culture and it is up to individuals to change the direction of that culture.  We created it, collectively, and together through communication we can develop our culture into one that allows for other cultures to live harmoniously within it. 
An anonymous author from the Sunday Observer (2010) shares the following in an article entitled Towards Intercultural Communication:
There is indeed a close and mutually nurturing relationship between culture and communication. It is clear that we cannot understand culture without reference to communication, and analogously we cannot understand communication without reference to culture. Culture, according to some scholars, is a code we share, and learning and sharing, one need hardly add, require communication. And communication, in turn, presupposes codes and symbols and common semiotic fields which must be learned and shared.
If we can learn to share the codes of our cultures through communication we may learn that human life in all cultures has value and should be respected.  To learn and understand each other though, we must make an effort to do so.  It is only by luck that we are exposed to other cultures in work environments, or by introduction through family.  We should not rely on luck to change; we should consciously make an effort to learn and understand others out of respect for ourselves and our own culture rather than live in the illusion of our superiority.
            This interview experience, through my discussion with Giovanni, has been an awakening and a reminder of things I learned years ago, right and wrong.  I learned about the perspective of someone who came from Ecuador and the development of his frame of reference, which was built on his experience growing up in Ecuador and then moving to New York City for better economic opportunities and better education opportunities for his family and he shared some of the struggles he experienced along the way.  Communication barriers, stereotypes and other dominant cultural influences shape the world immigrants live in and as we learn to understand these struggles, we may be able to see the person first before the color of their skin and assume nothing before welcoming them in to our lives.  For me, welcoming Giovanni was as easy as the smile on my aunt’s face at their wedding and at Christmas time, but we are not all as fortunate to have an intercultural relationship handed to them like I have.  Thanks to this course and this assignment I was able to reinvent my relationship with Giovanni and share in his story and even learn a little bit about myself and my own barriers to intercultural communication.  The first step to intercultural communication, learning and understanding of other cultures, is asking the questions we have always wanted to ask and not being afraid to do so.  This behavior can lead to the kind of compassion that has the power to unite global citizens.







References
Cultural diversity encourages interaction. (2010, July 24). Gulf News.  Retrieved August 27,
            2010, from ProQuest Newsstand. (Document ID: 2090369181).
Jandt, F. (2009). An Introduction to intercultural communication. Sage Publications, Inc.
The Writing Lab, The OWL at Purdue, & Purdue University. (2010). Owl purdue online writing
lab. Retrieved from http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/02/
Towards intercultural Communication. (2010, June 27). The Sunday Observer.  Retrieved
 August 28, 2010, from ProQuest Newsstand. (Document ID: 2067876791).

Monday, November 1, 2010

Good Bloggin': A Review of 5 Blogs

The following blog, http://www.twistimage.com/blog/, by Mitch Joel, has a wisely used heading and design.  It is clear, organized well and not cluttered.  The color choices are attractive and make for easy reading.  It is not difficult to navigate this particular blog.  Joel’s purpose is clearly stated in the header and his blog posts are consistent with the topics listed in his heading.  The footer has a clear purpose although not creatively used as advised by recent blog trend experts. 
I also enjoyed the following blog at: http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/.  This blog by Grammar Girl is for the purpose of offering advice on improving your writing.  Although the blog includes other tips, the primary audience is those interested in improving their writing techniques so it remains pretty consistent.  The colors, organization and layout are attractive.
Media Matters for America is a blog found at the following link:  http://mediamatters.org/blog/.  It is laid out much like an online newspaper and its articles read similar to a newspaper as well.  Although I am not a fan of staring at a white screen for a long period of time the site is clean and organized.  The header and footer are well-utilized for the purpose of this blog site. 
The “Strategic Public Relations” blog by Kevin Dugen at http://prblog.typepad.com/ is interesting to look at.  It, at first glance, may seem busy but once reading the featured blog articles you realize that the large photos and graphics are related to the articles.  The articles are well-written and not too complex as far as the word choice, although the writer does appear to assume that his audience has a decent knowledge of the subjects discussed.  He does tend to go on rants about certain topics which shows passion, but it can make for less enjoyable reading.
“Communication Overtones,” at http://overtonecomm.blogspot.com/, is written by Kami Watson Huyse, a PR professional.  I enjoy this blog because she obviously has passion for what she writes.  I especially enjoyed her reason behind her blog title because it is unique, creative and personal.  The design of the blog page is clean although the color combination is not my favorite (greys and browns do not appeal to me).  It is a well-researched blog with a few great minds working behind it.  I appreciate the effort put in to this one.

What's In A Blog?

Although there aren’t many rules that blogs live by, the fact of the matter is, when and if you want someone to read your blog there are some guidelines and recommendations made by blogging experts that should be followed.  A blog should have a purpose.  For example, the purpose of a blog can be to inform, persuade, influence, advise or entertain.  It should be directed at an audience so that it remains consistent with its messages.  This takes starting with a goal and having focus. 
The design of a blog ranges from top to bottom, side to side and bar to bar.  From the heading to the footer, the side bar to the comments, organization, color scheme and style all play a significant role in a blogs readability, appeal and impact.  Color, font, font size, and layout will affect what stands out to the reader and what doesn’t.  Attention to such details will manage the focus and highlight what is important within a blog.
The content of a blog should be well-researched, well-organized, be without grammatical errors, and express the voice and unique style of the writer.  Blogging can be fun and when it comes to what you say or how you style, from my experience, less is more to start.  If you design and write with a purpose and are conscious of the design elements involved you can save yourself a great deal of re-design time further down the road.  Each piece of a blog should matter and if you remember this the end result is often more pleasing to the eye.