Sunday, March 4, 2012

Latinos and Caring 3-4-12


Rolon-Dow is in a school with a mix of teachers, some of which have made a connection with students and developed a sense of care with students and some of which have not.  Which is not to say that those who do not have the ‘authentic care’ the girls desire are bad teachers (or good teachers), but the students’ needs are not being met.  So are we saying ‘aesthetic care’ is not enough?  Or aesthetic care is not enough for minority students only?

            Mr. Rosenfield certainly left a lot to be desired in what was demonstrated in this paper of his teaching practice.  Rolon-Dow comments that ‘In his concern with the aesthetic dimensions of teaching and learning, he believed it was best to conduct his classroom as if it existed in isolation from the homes and community of the students.  Interpreting Mr. Rosenfield’s words and actions without examining the racial/ethnic context in which they occurred or his racialized beliefs about that context does not provide enough information to determine why students in his class such as Yanira may have felt uncared for.’  Yet she justifies explaining his care as racist based on the school’s and communities negative racial/ethnic characteristics. (p97)  Was he caring?  Certainly not.  Was it racist?  I don’t think she can make that conclusion.  Particularly if the author wants to conclude that latinos are being racially discriminated against.  All minorities are being uncared for here.  The author's point is that caring and connections is a need that students have beyond the academics in the classroom, and she interviews latino girls to make this point.

          I do agree with the statement that teachers need to become learners in the communities that they teach in and connect with these communities and consequently understand and connect with their students.  ‘Educator’s efforts to critically care by providing a racially conscious pedagogy should also lead to opportunities to use the community as an extension of the classroom.’  (p106) 


3 comments:

  1. Hi Laura,

    I like that you questioned the author, here. I, too, question Rolón-Dow's approach, though for different reasons.

    I do think that Mr. Rosenfeld fell "de facto" into racialized thinking. But, to clarify, his thinking was "unintended," per the author's concession. Rolón-Dow, like all (?) of the assignments except Omi & Winant (the first article) adopt the "structural" definition of racism—i.e., prejudice as embedded in the culture. So, within that, I don't think Mr. Rosenfeld is completely free.

    Regarding the binary of "aesthetic" vs. "authentic" care, I like how you have found a sub-textual question, here.

    The author argues for "authentic" care while (interestingly as you point out) tacitly implying that those teachers who only provide "aesthetic" care are ineffective.

    Great questions!

    Oh! [Sales pitch, here]. Please join me @ rsouthern12.blogspot.com

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  2. Laura,
    I also agree - it is important to find ways to connect with the cultures of your students and in turn the students themselves. There's something about this connection that can add value to their academic experience. Our converstaions and readings may be based around race and gender right now, but to be honest each student is seperate from another, so the challenge is to connect with them all. It may be more difficult to connect with those who's culture differs from one's own, but a teacher's effort and energy needs to be equally disperse to every student.

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  3. This week's reading seems to be ringing the get-to-know-your-students-bell once again. It's corny when we say "I've learned from them as much as they learn from me," but it is (or should be) accurate. I think Rolon-Dow made a caricature of Mr. Rosenfield. I'm beginning to think that he doesn't even exist (how could he?)!

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