Joel Spring

Superior Essays
Overall I found this book very interesting. It covered a vast majority of topics and was very eye-opening on a lot of issues. Most of these issues happened in the past, but they clearly have affected education throughout the years and will affect education in the future. Many topics are controversial and it is very important to be educated on these so that as educators we can deal with them as they arise. This book did a wonderful job with addressing a lot of those issues, and made myself question if the world could ever go back to the segregated ways it once was. The spring semester of my freshman year of college I took an American History class. That class was the very first time that I ever learned about how Native Americans were actually treated and about the Japanese Internment camps. We also covered the first African Americans going to white schools and read The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B Du Bois, which Joel Spring brings up in his book. Like many of my fellow classmates I am amazed that those very important injustices were never once brought up through …show more content…
Toward the end of the book when he starts to bring up No Child Left Behind and how deculturized schools are becoming around the United States, I think it is very obvious that Joel Springs does not agree. He shows his bias not by straight up telling his reader, but by showing facts. He explains how No Child Left Behind has deculturalized schools by taking out multicultural curriculum and replacing it with math, science, reading and other things that will be tested. He does not address the benefits of No Child Left Behind like the free tutoring or making sure all children are actually learning. While Springs points may be biased, I think that the points he picks to argue and talk about are much more important and eye-opening than the points he does not

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    It left so many unanswered questions for the reader, which can be quite frustrating as I have heard from other students. I will be going more in depth with this in the next paragraph. Overall, Barbara Haworth-Attard had many outstanding strengths that made the book worthwhile to read, but there are still some areas that she might want to work on for her next writing…

    • 886 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Tom Robinson Trial

    • 802 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Never Kill A Incidence Person During the Great Depression, there was racism going around the United States. Well in a small city called Maycomb, Alabama where I used to live I was a lawyer. I was assigned to defend an African American ( Tom Robinson) who was accused of raping a white young lady ( Mayella Ewell). I took the case and I tried my hardest to not get Tom in prison. Tom knew Mayella because for years he walked by her house to get to work.…

    • 802 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Equality is all we have ever asked for, so why is it difficult to understand and give. In “Still Separate, Still Unequal” written by Jonathan Kozol, describes and addresses the problems with our public schools. Kozol mainly focuses on the racial segregation and the isolation students still face today. He uncovers the inequality the education system puts among their students of color. For example, most of the funding for schools goes primarily to white schools, while giving the minority schools the remains.…

    • 995 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Educ 203 Research Paper

    • 532 Words
    • 3 Pages

    I’m glad I had the opportunity to take EDUC 203 with you. You are an amiable person. Professor McArthur, Thank you! I must admit this class wasn’t what I expected. I definitely felt the harmony in the classroom from day one.…

    • 532 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    It also allowed me to see how history gets cleaned up before it is presented in textbooks. Important key facts and vivid descriptions are usually left out the textbooks usually have distorted U.S. history. There always something inherently bias in textbooks. The most unfortunate error in history textbooks is their exclusion of an honest discussion of the history of racism and inequality in the United States. For example, prior to reading this book I was not…

    • 1230 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The scene opens at an award assembly to honor the few distinguished students of Ballou High School. Unfortunately, the assembly basically made sure "the ‘whiteys' now had faces. The honor students were hazed for months afterwards (Suskind 3). " In addition to showing the adversity Cedric faces from his peers, the opening chapter also portrays Cedric positively. "…

    • 1538 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    I found chapter six, entitled “Schools and the New Jim Crow” by Jody Sokolower from Rethinking Multicultural Education the most intriguing and thought-provoking from this week’s readings. Reading the chapter has also made me more aware, as well as further developed my understanding about the issues surrounding racism and the education system today. In addition, as I was reading the chapter, I was able to connect it to an issue that is prevalent a little closer to home, within our Canadian society. 
 Chapter six focuses on Michelle Alexander and her thoughts on mass incarceration amongst African American children and youth and the effects that it carries in schools. After reading this chapter, I thought about how similar the idea was in comparison to Aboriginal children and youth in Canada.…

    • 802 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Civil Rights Movement: The Right to Educational Equity Race has long been an issue in the United States dating back to colonization. The idea of "race" began to take shape with the rise of a world political economy, the conquest of the Americas, and the rise of the Atlantic slave trade (Winant, H., 2000).…

    • 1450 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Freedom Summer Reflection

    • 734 Words
    • 3 Pages

    While watching the documentary I think of my nieces who are half African American. I could not imagine them growing up and not receiving the same rights that I have been given. Sending little children who one day are the face of our country being sent to poorly funded schools is not fair and every child deserves the same education. The project had also established Freedom Schools. Establishing a solid education system is crucial for children at young ages.…

    • 734 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Out of the other chapters in Bell Hooks’ book, I felt this chapter was the most relevant to me. Hooks talked about the need for educators to engage in their teaching. Some professors and teachers do not engage and show much interest in what they are teaching. Hooks was able to describe the lack of engagement that teachers show without many examples or controversial subject material. I felt the chapter was able to relate to everyone rather than make a politically charged statement and expect people to reform to her ideals.…

    • 795 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The goal of the No Child Left Behind Act was to improve the education system. Studies show that actually the complete opposite happened. The Act didn’t meet its goal at all. According to standardizedtests.procon.org, “US students slipped from being ranked 18th in the world in math in 2000 to 27th in 2012, with a similar decline in science and no change in reading.”…

    • 1106 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    When I asked my Dad what it meant, he immediately freaked out and asked where I heard that word. Upon my telling him where I heard it, he told me never to repeat that word again. I was shocked to realize that southern parents obviously had not taught their kids the same lesson. There being no black kids at a private grade school in the south now makes sense to me after reading The Reivers. In this book, even though slavery had been abolished and everyone was equal, the blacks had the harder, lower paying jobs, much like in today’s society, especially in the south.…

    • 1536 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    ALEXIE: I can see where Yeats is coming from when he says, “Education is not filling a bucket but lighting a fire.” Growing up, I was never given certain educational opportunities that many American students are blessed with. Being a Spokane Indian boy living with his family on the Spokane Indian Reservation in eastern Washington state attending the schools in the reservation school system, a high education wasn’t only uncommon but it was looked down upon. As Indian children, we were expected to fail. We were expected to never reach the level of education that everyone else would reach.…

    • 1669 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Creativity is a thing people tend to see less and less of. Sir Ken Robinson proposes and asks the question “Do Schools Kill Creativity?” at a Tedtalk conference in 2006. Robinson’s main claim suggests that public education systems undermines creativity in education. Robinson supports his main claim with illustrations, examples, evidence, even comical and emotional appeals.…

    • 1098 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Going into the class, I had no idea what to expect, this is now my favorite class. Throughout the semester so far we have talked about race in education, the achievement gap, poverty, and that is just a few topics we have covered so much. Until this class, I didn’t realize how many issues we have in the education system with those topics. I was honestly shocked because going to a catholic school my entire life, poverty and race issues were very little issues in the schools I attended and I want to change that. If it took me my whole life attending school to just realize how big of issues race, the achievement gap, poverty and many other issues are in the education system, then I know that there are millions of other people out there that do not think those issues exist, even teachers them self.…

    • 982 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays