Stephanie Bradshaw
Blog 3
The Great Unknown (or is it the great ignored?)
I listened to the Harper High School radio programs early
in the week before heading to St. Louis to visit my oldest brother and his
family. What struck me when I was
listening to the two program pieces was the incredible similarity between the
hardships they described dealing with each and every day and what Jonathan
Kozol writes about. Both are inner-city,
predominantly minority, extreme poverty, high crime settings. The students who attend Harper High or live
in the New York “projects” Kozol writes about are trying to survive every
day. They learn skills not taught in schools because they have to in order to
live.
I consider myself to have led a very sheltered,
lower-middle class life growing up in Houston, Texas. We had a house, dad worked two jobs, mom
stayed home with the kids and then worked some evening jobs or school hour jobs
once we were in school. Once we were in
high school, we were expected to get a job if we wanted to have spending money
or gas or insurance money to drive. It
wasn’t until I went to college in Philadelphia that my eyes were opened to the
differences in cultures within our country.
I had to learn very quickly that there were many other religions, many
other ways of life.
I became aware of the income disparities between
different neighborhoods in Philadelphia as I started to live off-campus. There were certain cross streets that I knew
I shouldn’t go beyond if I wanted to stay safe.
I also observed different “tough” neighborhoods riding the city bus to
one of my student teaching placements in an inner-city elementary school. As the bus drove by boarded up houses, I
thought at the time that it was sad that so many places were unlivable. Yet there were still people around the
neighborhood. Now that my eyes have once
again been opened, I realize that these are the types of neighborhoods that
people DO still live in that have to probably face similar hardships the
students of Harper High or in Kozol’s books face.
What shocks me is that it seems so “hidden” from so much
of society. There are so many people
struggling to have food to eat each day or a safe place to raise their kids
away from drugs, gangs, and violence. It
is not just in the big cities that these hardships are faced, however. Even in my own classroom I can identify at
least two students last school year that came to school hungry, dirty, and
usually very tired. Their life at home
was not the same life I grew up with.
Their priorities are not to get all A’s (4s now), behave appropriately
so the teacher and other students will like them, and eventually go to the best
college they can like my priorities were in elementary school. They have so much stress in their everyday
lives that they have to deal with that it precludes their learning. To what extent, I don’t know, but it
definitely has an impact on them.
The question I ask myself now is why has it taken me so
long to become aware of how much of a problem this is in our country? Is it truly something most people just don’t
know about or is it something that is known but ignored? We have humanity groups in our country that
send money, food, health care services, etc. to places in other countries, Africa
for example. That is certainly an
admirable thing to help others, but we have so many people right here in our
own country who could use the same kind of assistance. Harper High has been getting millions of
dollars in help which sounds like it has been beneficial to a certain
extent. Kids are still getting shot and
killed every year though. Now that aid
is going to end before the problems have truly been addressed. We seem content to try putting Band-Aids on
gushing wounds and then say, “We tried.”
There
has to be a better way.
I too have lived a sheltered life. It is really only through the words of others that I understand poverty in this country. I feel as if most politicians are even more removed than I. Perhaps they should spend some REAL time in the impoverished areas of our country before they take on a leadership role?
ReplyDeleteStephanie, your observation about US individuals and groups that send money and other aid to places outside of the US was something that our Danish exchange students commented on when they were here visiting. They were astounded that a country that has such a good reputation for generosity and responding to disasters around the world could ignore its own citizens' needs for livable wages, education, maternity/paternity leave, and health care. When they asked me why, I couldn't give a good answer.
ReplyDeleteI had a similar reaction to the stories. The reality of how bad it can be is sitting heavy on me. I know there are not easy answers, or quick fixes, but it seems like they to use Band-Aids while looking into the deeper social issues that are causing this kind of systemic failure.
ReplyDelete