T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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720.1 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Wed Mar 06 1991 12:24 | 1 |
| sounds like a useful discussion for MRDATA::PARENTING also
|
720.2 | how about this for a change | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:00 | 3 |
|
Raise them as people first!!
|
720.4 | not as easy as it looks | RUTLND::MORRISON | a teardrop on the cheek of time | Wed Mar 06 1991 14:06 | 69 |
|
Hi Sara!
Interesting topic. I also have a 6 year old son (A.J.). I'm
constantly questioning the way(s) in which I am raising A.J. How will
the things *I* do today effect him later, especially how it will effect
his relationship with girls and later women.
Let me share with you a couple of situations and conversations
that I've had recently with A.J.
I was curious about what sorts of games were being played on
the playground during recess and this is what I found out when I asked
A.J.
A.J.: "the boys and girls have a game, where the boys catch the
girls and put them in jail (the jail is the monkey bars),
and then the girls scream and scream until they get loose"
me: "how do the girls get caught?"
A.J.: "the boys catch them by grabbing their arms and twisting
them"
me: "doesn't this hurt the girls? do you think they want you
to do this?"
A.J.: "Oh, I don't do it. I'm a helper, I help the girls escape."
me: "But if the girls didn't get hurt in the first place, you
wouldn't have to help them, right? Does anyone tell the
the teacher?"
A.J.: "No, I don't think so, can we talk about something else
now... mom"
me: I let the conversation drop... I have no idea if he realized
I wasn't crazy about this game.
Fortunately for A.J. most of his best buddies are girls :). Most of
the kids at his school are already having separate birthday parties, etc.
But his party was mixed (50/50) and he did all the inviting. When his
friends are over, I listen to them play and I'm sooooooo glad when I hear
them (the girls) standing up to his bossiness and they both eventually have to
learn to negotiate and compromise. I try very hard not to interfere with,
things like "don't play too rough", "she probably wouldn't like that", but
sometimes I can't help myself. Sometimes I worry that he isn't spending
enough time with the *guys* (I can't believe I'm admitting this in =wn=),
because of this I've put some effort into promoting sports (skiing, soccer) so
he gets his fair share of that male bonding experience (whatever that is).
I was hoping that at least thru his teen years, he wouldn't be
faced with the sounds and sights of a war (please no rat holes regarding good
vs bad). Now, I get to hear Patriots and Scuds blowing up all over the
living room and I just *love* the pictures of the American planes and boats
blowing up Iraq... Has there ever been a generation that didn't grow up
with a war on their slate? I wonder how it would be different (new topic).
The other night he was watching a rerun of Star Trek and came in to
the kitchen to tell his dad about a scene, when he blurted out "Kaylar (sp?),
remember Dad that woman ...." and I was just tickled that he used the word
*woman* instead of girl or lady, etc.... it's the little things in life!
I have lots more and I could ramble forever ...
cheers,
debi
a mostly read only that just came out of the closet
|
720.5 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | sun flurries | Wed Mar 06 1991 14:22 | 21 |
| Hi Deb! good to hear you again. It's my observation that kids do seem
to seperate by gender around 1st grade, for whatever reason. The kids
in Westford Mass had much the same game.
-d, your reply in .3 bothers me a bit, not for what you said but for an
implication I take from it. Reread it carefully, and then .0 to see
what I mean:
how do we raise our sons to not be "the kind of men we hate" (quote
from Marion Zimmer Bradley, taken out of context) without giving them
the message that boys are bad???
See, that's the main part of what made me uncomfortable with what my
neighbor said about men, in our sons' hearing. It is a common failing
of humans to generalize from the specific, as in "_this_ man treated me
rotten, so _men_ are rotten". I exaggerate for effect here. -d, what
you said in .3 is much much milder and more benign than what I just
said, but a boy listening to these messages could learn something other
than what we intend.
That happens a lot with kids anyway...
|
720.7 | | GEMVAX::ADAMS | | Wed Mar 06 1991 15:31 | 2 |
| How about, set a good example?
|
720.8 | Seldom easy, often impossible | RANGER::MACK | Fight War, Not Wars | Wed Mar 06 1991 19:33 | 1 |
| Pick the right Daddy.
|
720.9 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | THAT MAKES SENSE.....NONSENSE! | Thu Mar 07 1991 00:31 | 18 |
| RE: basenote
I have tried to avoid any negative comments that could
be taken as gender or race specific. It seems to me that my parents
used negative thoughts to "shape" our personality's, so with my kids
(two boys and one girl) I have tried positive thoughts. It hasn't been
perfect but they do seem to look at the "bright" side rather than the
negative.....even though their "old man" is a rather negative person.
I remember one incident with my daughter (Cheri) when
she asked me what I thought she should major in college. Most of her
peer group were thinking along the lines of "school teacher", fashion
designer and others. When I told her that she *could* do anything she
wanted to, her reply was..."But Dad...I'm a girl!". So we try....but
the "peer group" will nail you everytime.
Dave
|
720.10 | | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Thu Mar 07 1991 00:47 | 7 |
| re: Dave and peer groups
The values a child gets from his peer group can vary from friend to
friend and year to year but the values we instill will forever come
bacvk to haunt them whether they be negbative or positive.
Kate
|
720.11 | She was wrong in what she did | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Thu Mar 07 1991 08:49 | 35 |
| I think the angry mother in .0 was very wrong in talking that way in
front of boys OR girls. Kids do hear everything, though it doesn't
seem that way sometimes. Such negative statements and views come
echoing back at later times.
There are vicious men and kind, gentle men. Same for women, by the
way. Kids need to use caution and hear age-appropriate warnings, but
also need a basic trust in people.
The risks of such negative talk in front of a boy include not only
self-hate, but more probably that these negative qualities will surface
in the boy himself. The message she gives him is, "All men are rotten
creeps. You will grow to a man. So you will be a rotten creep too."
It can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. In the boy's mind, "Why not
be a rotten creep? I'm condemned before I even start out so I have
nothing to lose."
This kind of angry, bitter, defeatist talk from the woman showed her
lack of self-confidence. If she felt better about herself, she could
afford to risk trusting men again and would gain a better perspective.
Even if she restrained her commentary to adults-only, her attitudes
would still be apparent to her son. Instead of sitting around b-tching
about men, she should work to heal herself. She should get out into
the world and gain skills, have fun, make money, get stronger. Taking
challenges that make one grow leaves little time and energy for
negativity. One prefers to use spare time for fun or relaxation and to
keep the venting down to a minimum necessary for equilibrium.
To me, being so upset and angry is a place to move up from to a better
place, not where I want to dwell all the time. I take responsibility
for my own reactions and keep moving. Positive or negative, my
attitudes find their echo back from others. I'd rather get positive
responses.
Laura
|
720.12 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Mar 07 1991 08:50 | 21 |
| Just a personal comment as a father. (guess I want to associate myself
with 720.10)
Our daughters are 18 and 21. In our opinion, there have been no factors
since birth that have had anywhere near as important an influence on
our children as my wife and i have had. This influence has been of the
form who we _are_ as people rather than what we say. How we feel rather
than what we think. This influence is rather modest(if someone wants to
say non-existent, ok) now that they are young adults. But we are very,
very proud of them now. They are _good_ and decent people who can't
help but have a positive impact on their world.
They don't quite know yet what they are going to do 'when they grow up'
but whatever it is, it will involve working with kids (including their
own) in a loving, caring, and supportived way.
I can't think of a better 'epitaph' for a parent.
How would it have been had one or both of them been sons? I don't know.
herb
herb
|
720.13 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | sun flurries | Thu Mar 07 1991 09:26 | 41 |
| Laura, I agree with much of what you say in .11.
But please don't be so quick to assume helplessness and negative self
image for my neighbor. She _is_ out in the world, and has skills, and is
an energetic person with a generally positive attitude. But even such
a woman OR man may have anger, and it's legit to express it.
I see it this way. Yes, I'm angry at the men (and women) who have
treated me unfairly. It's ok to express that anger *in an appropriate
way* in front of children. What's not ok is to do this in such a way
that the child takes my anger as directed at himself, because of what
he is, because he's a boy. It's sometimes hard to know when you are
doing that...
Warning for those who may not be interested in reading further:
a bit of a rathole here, an ex of a kid taking a completely unintended
message, but on a different subject entirely:
When my son was 2.5, my folks took their 1st winter away in their RV.
I missed them something awful. One day in Feb the kids were fussing,
and losing patience, *I* pictched a fussy-fit for their benefit :-}.
"Y'know what *I* want??!?!? I WANT MY MOMMY!" the kids were shocked
to silence! there followed a conversation in which I related how much
I missed my mommy, and -->how happy I would be when she came back.<--
For the next 3 weeks, 3 or 4 times a week, my son would rehearse this
entire conversation with me: do you miss your mommy? will you be glad
when she comes home? will you be happy when your mommy comes back? The
same questions, the same answers, like 10 times.
Finally, one night we went through the same riff again, same questions,
same answers, but at the end he looked up at me with a heartbreaking
expression, and said:
"Mommy, are you happy NOW?"
Holy toledo. I NEVER meant to imply that I wasn't!!! Well, you *can't*
lay it on too thickly with a 2.5 yr old, so I spent the next 15 minutes
talking about how yes I love and miss my mom, but I am happy and proud
of him, and our family, and how wonderful he is, etc etc etc.
He NEVER brought it up again.
|
720.14 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Mar 07 1991 09:44 | 15 |
| i'm sure you will treasure that anecdote forever!
By the way, i think that for your son -and any other children- you will
ALWAYS be Mommy -and he Daddy-. That unique relationship (for better
or worse will ALWAYS be there. Certainly is for our daughters.
And the cornerstone of that is that they know that they are the most
important people in the universe to us, that they are special, and are
unconditionally loved.
Our 'kids' STILL curl up on the couch and schnoogle with my wife. I hope
and expect they always will.
Gee, sure wish we had also had the chance to parent a son! Don't see
any difference.
herb
|
720.15 | | GAZERS::NOONAN | pardon me, I really must frivol now | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:10 | 3 |
| schnoogle! I love it! What a great word! heeheeheeheehee
E Grace
|
720.16 | Minor rathole here, anent -.1 -- that makes TWO great words! | RT93::KALIKOW | Ne� NEMAIL::KALIKOWD; still Squishly! | Thu Mar 07 1991 19:59 | 9 |
| Another vote in favor of "schnoogle" -- but let's not forget another
lexical innovation from a recent =wn= note -- "squishly" !!
Methinks they could be used together rather felicitously:
"I go all squishly when I think of E Grace curled up on a couch to
schnoogle with MikeV!"
(-: Hey, it works for me!! :-)
|
720.17 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Les notes, c'est moi. | Fri Mar 08 1991 09:52 | 1 |
| :-) :-)
|
720.18 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Fri Mar 08 1991 09:54 | 6 |
| Dan,
Do you mean that you would like to watch MikeV and E schnoogle????
Oh, no! You voyeur, you :-) :-) :-)
Mary
|
720.19 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Mar 08 1991 10:14 | 14 |
| *schnoogle* brought to us by the same folks who brought us
hutzpah
kibbitz
schmuck
klutz
Do ya know the difference between a
Schla-mozzl and a
Schla-miel?
The schla-mozzl(nerd?) is the person whose lap the Schla-miel(klutz)
spills his soup on when he trips over his untied schoe-lace
|
720.20 | ONE MORE VERSION! | PCOJCT::COHEN | at least I'm enjoyin' the ride | Fri Mar 08 1991 13:53 | 9 |
| RE: -1
SCHMEIL IS THE PERSON THAT GOES AROUND SPILLING SOUP HIS WHOLE LIFE...
THE SCHLMAZEL IS THE ONE THAT IT GETS SPILLED ON...
Just another version!
Jill
|
720.21 | common tastes in TV? | TLE::DBANG::carroll | get used to it! | Fri Mar 08 1991 14:28 | 6 |
| > The schla-mozzl(nerd?) is the person whose lap the Schla-miel(klutz)
> spills his soup on when he trips over his untied schoe-lace
Yeah, I watched "Gabriel's Horn" last night too!
D!
|
720.22 | maybe | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Mar 08 1991 15:21 | 19 |
| Didn't watch it.
fact is the only thing I watched on TV last night was This Old House
<common tastes?>
not sure
Do you ever watch Washington Week in Review? or
Oprah or
Boston Celtics or
Crossfire or
Inside Washington or
New Yankee Workshop or
CNN news or
McGlaughlin Group or
This Week with David Brinkley
|
720.23 | What? | 56860::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Mar 08 1991 16:20 | 3 |
| You didn't watch the "Of Moose and Men" special?
Ann B.
|
720.24 | re .18 voyeur? naah Mary, I just >love< romance! :-) | RT95::KALIKOW | The Squishly Schnoogler | Sat Mar 09 1991 09:38 | 30 |
| I'm all in favor of Physical Schnoogling with my >very own< Cuddle
Person, offline in the Real World, but since this is Notes, the imho
primary exemplars of the art of Virtual Schnoogling in This Very File
are our very own E.G.n. and M.V. Don'cha remember how !!cute!! it was
when they first "became an item" here? Who better to imagine
schnoogling in this space? (-: _vide_ 723.1 and .2, E.g.V,* for an
example of their continuing incorrigibility. :-)
Let's hear it for interpeople ROMANCE!! Of +=EVERY=+ sort!! Yay,
Chocolate Almond Romance! Let's hear it for Frozen Yogurt Love!
Sorbet in a Baked Alaska!! Pepperoni Calzoni with alotta Ricotta! Go
for interlock, whatever way! As long as the world is less lonely, I
for one am all in favor of it!!!
*
E. xempli Gratia Valenzia
And back on the topic, I'm *glad* I only had daughters; I couldn't have
coped with the stress I would have faced in having to tell any putative
sons (at the appropriate time in their development of course -- after
they had matured to the point where they could have understood that
Anatomy Is Destiny) that they, like me, were to be sadly limited,
throughout their lifetimes, through no fault of their own
other than complete physical inadequacy below
waist level, to the capability to
produce only one
variety of
fart.
:-)
|
720.25 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Mon Mar 11 1991 11:52 | 2 |
| Ooooohhhh noooooooo, Dan! You forgot bannana-raspberry :-)
|
720.26 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Tue Mar 12 1991 17:59 | 281 |
| The following reply was posted in another file, and it took me awhile
to find it again to contact the author for permission to cross-post.
While it may seem tangential in content to the initial direction in
this topic, I think that the attitude expressed by the approaches used
make this very relevent to Sara's initial question. This is one of the
best essays I have ever read on educating children.
DougO
================================================================================
Note 153.0 What Do We Say When We Hear "Faggot?" 1 reply
TLE::FORD "Quoth the raven: `Eat my shorts!'" 271 lines 16-NOV-1990 12:41
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
What Do We Say When We Hear "Faggot?"
by Leonore Gordon
[While this article is about a school setting, there are a number of
good ideas that a parent could use in a home with children.]
(Leonore Gordon is a teacher, consultant and writer who is currently
completing her MSW degree. This article and the following lesson
plan are reprinted from a special issue of the Interracial Books for
Children Bulletin V4, 3-4, 1983, on Homophobia and Education, edited
by Ms. Gordon.
The Bulletin is the review journal of the Council on Interracial
Books for Children, 1841 Broadway, New York, NY 10223. A free
catalog of the Council's anti-racist, anti-sexist print and
audio-visual teaching materials is available.)
Alice is eleven. She walks down the school halls with her arm around her
best friend, Susan. During lunch, they sit on the floor holding hands or
combing each other's hair. Lately, Alice has been called "dyke," and
boys have been told not to be her friend.
Brian refuses to take part in a fight on his block. As he makes his way
home, he hears cries of"faggot" and "sissy." Suddenly he begins to run,
realizing that the other children may now attack him.
Carl is gifted musically; he would like to join the elementary school
chorus. Although he hesitates for several weeks, the music teacher
persuades him to join. One morning soon after, he enters the classroom
tense and angry after chorus, muttering that several boys have called
him "gay."
Some children play a "game" called "Smear the Queer," in which one child
suddenly attacks another, knocking him to the ground. The attacker
should "Fag!" and then runs away.
Homophobic name-calling is pervasive. Even first graders are now using
such terms as "faggot" to ridicule others, and such name-calling is
increasingly common in the older grades. Homophobic name-calling is
devastating to young people experiencing homosexual feelings. For
youngsters who are not gay, such name-calling creates or reinforces
hostility towards the gay and lesbian population. And it forces all
children to follow strict sex-role behaviors to avoid ridicule.
Because homosexuality is such a charged issue, teachers rarely confront
children who use homophobic name-calling to humiliate and infuriate
other children. Many teachers do not realize that this sort of
name-calling can be dealt with in much the same way as other kinds of
bigotry and stereotyping.
Teaching children to be critical of oppression is teaching true
morality, and teachers have the right, indeed the obligation, to alert
their students to all forms of oppression. Educating children not to be
homophobic is one way to show the difference between oppressive and
non-oppressive behavior.
Challenging homophobic name-calling by teaching children non-judgemental
facts about homosexuality and by correcting myths is also intrinsically
connected to ant-sexist education values, since homophobia is used to
reinforce rigid sex roles. Furthermore, if adults criticize other forms
of name-calling but ignore anti-gay remarks, children are quick to
conclude that homophobia is acceptable because gay men and lesbians
deserve to be oppressed.
Boys are far more likely to to be the object of homophobic name-calling
than girls, perhaps because sex-roles for boys remain, to some extent,
more rigidly defined. A boy involved in a traditional "female-only"
activity such as sewing or cooking risks out-and-out contempt from his
peers, as well as the possibility of being called a "faggot" or "sissy."
Girls are more able to participate in activities that have traditionally
been for boys, such as sports or shop, without loss of peer approval.
At the late elementary and junior high school levels, physical affection
between girls is far more acceptable than between boys, but a girl will
be called a "dyke" if she does not express, by junior high, a real
interest in pleasing boys or in participating with other girls in
boy-centered discussions. I know a twelve year old who is being labeled
a "dyke" for just these reasons, and she is valiantly trying to maintain
her integrity and individuality while feeling lonely and ostracized by
many of her peers.
As an elementary school teacher, I have made an awareness of oppression
and of the concept of "majority" and "minority" a focus of current
events, history and social studies. Throughout the year we discuss
Native Americans, Puerto Ricans, Blacks, Chicanos, disabled people,
older people and many others. We also discuss women, a generally
powerless majority. (I should add here that the school I teach in is
particularly open to such discussions. It is a New York City private
school for middle to upper-middle income Black, white and Hispanic
families. Many parents have already introduced anti-racist and
anti-sexist issues to their children. However, I have also seen these
issues discussed in public schools at elementary or high school levels.)
If oppression is being discussed, it is impossible to ignore lesbians
and gay men as a group that faces discrimination. Children in the middle
grades have a strong sense of justice, and they can understand the basic
injustice of people being abused because they are different from the
majority. They can also identify with the powerlessness of oppressed
groups because children themselves are often a verbally, and sometimes a
physically abused group.
When initiating a discussion of name-calling, teachers can explain that
there are two kinds of name-calling. One kind of name-calling, unrelated
to any particular group is often scatological or sexual (i.e., the four
letter words.) The other is group-biased; is uses the name of a
group---"nigger," "chink," "polack," etc.---as the insult and implies
that there is something wrong about being a member of that group.
Group-biased name-calling can be handled in a variety of ways. Sometimes
children do not truly understand why a word is offensive. If a teacher
simply takes the time to tell the class that a particular word insults
or demeans a group of people, children will often stop using the word.
(Occasionally, children do not even know what a term means. One New York
City ten-year-old who frequently called others "faggot" told me that the
word meant "female dog." A twelve-year-old said that a lesbian is a
"Spanish Jew.")
Discussions about the meaning of homophobic words can often be quite
consciousness-raising. When I hear a child use the word faggot, I
explain that a faggot, literally, is a stick used for kindling. I also
explain that gay people used to be burned in medieval times simply for
being gay, and they had to wear a bundle of sticks on their shirts to
indicate that they were about to be burned. (At times, gay men were used
as the kindling to burn women accused to witchcraft.) After the
discussion that ensues from the revelation, I make it clear to my
students that the word is not to be used again in my classroom, and it
rarely is.
A structured lesson for elementary school children that I find to be
quite successful appears after this article. Firs we list the slurs
commonly applied to a particular group. Next the children shut their
eyes and pretend they are a member of that group as I should out the
slurs they have just listed. When they open their eyes, they are asked
to write or discuss how it felt to be called those names. Next they
imagine how it feels to be the name-caller. At the end I ask for
"comebacks," replies that would educate the name-caller.
When I list the words "lesbian" and "gay men" there is always a stir of
discomfort, so I ask what those words mean. I am told fairly quickly
that a gay man is one who loves other men, and that a lesbian is a woman
who loves other women. I am also usually told that a gay man is an
"effeminate" man. We discuss the stereotyping inherent in that myth, as
well as the fact that "effeminate" means "behaving like a woman," and
the class begins to realize that "behaving like a woman" is viewed
negatively.
When asked what it really means to be called a "faggot" and why it is
insulting for a boy to be called "gay," students will often respond that
saying a boy is like a girl is the worst insult imaginable. At this
point, girls are likely to sense that something unjust has been touched
upon, and they will often take up their own defense, while
simultaneously having their own consciousness raised.
Children may also come up with the myth that sexual orientation is
related to reproductive ability. Should this happen, a teacher can
mention that some gays and lesbians have been married, and some have
children that they raise after the marriage ends. Some choose to have
children before recognizing that they are lesbian or gay; others have
children when fully aware of their sexual orientation.
Before we go on with the lesson plan, I usually attempt to reach a
consensus on definitions. Here are some that have seemed acceptable:
"Someone who loves someone of the same sex," "Someone who loves someone
of the same sex, but can be close to people of the opposite sex if they
want to" and "Someone who romantically loves someone of the same sex."
We added the word "romantically" in on class after a boy commented in a
confused tone, "But I love my father..." When discussing definitions, it
is important to tell children that gays and lesbians are as different
from one another as are heterosexual men and women. There is no suck
thing as a "typical" lesbian or gay man.
When we continue with the lesson plan and students are asked to imagine
being called names as they walk with a close friend of the same sex,
they describe feeling "different," "dumb," "weird," "afraid," and
"embarrassed." (One very different response was "I'd feel loved, because
the main thing would be walking with someone I loved.") When asked how
they would feel as one of the name-callers, children usually admit that
they "would feel like part of the group."
Suggested responses to homophobic attacks have included, "It's my
choice"; "We like each other, and for your information, we're not
homosexual"; "I'm not ashamed"; "I'm just as different as you are"; "I
don't care" and "So what!"
Children participating in this exercise have been extraordinarily honest
about how it felt to be called names; they have also been honest about
how it felt to be the name-callers. They began to understand both how
painful it is to be called such names, and how much needing to be
accepted and feel important have to do with name calling. They have also
been able to ling the oppression of gays and lesbians with that of other
groups.
Music as a Teaching Tool
I have also used the music of Holly Near to teach about oppression.
Songs are an effective tool in reaching children, and they seem to
retain information presented in this mode quite easily. Near sings about
the oppression of many different groups and her songs help students make
linkages between their struggles. Her songs are always very popular with
my classes, and one year most of my class attended one of her concerts.
When they discovered that she was a lesbian (she made no secret of it),
they began to process the idea that anyone could be a lesbian, even
someone who sang songs they loved. They seemed both intrigued and
excited with this discovery and realized how often they automatically
assume that everyone is heterosexual---an assumption society and
education encourage.
Another way to combat homophobia, particularly among older students, is
to invite a speaker from a gay organization to talk to the class.
Members of various gay speaker groups have been invited to high schools
and colleges to demystify homosexuality. Listening to a gay or lesbian
who is also a living, breathing human being---someone who has parents,
siblings, and looks a little nervous in front of a group---is often a
decisive factor in breaking down homophobic stereotypes.
Homophobic attitudes can also be countered in discussions about sex
roles. Students can be asked, "What does a boy have to do to act like a
girl?" (and vice versa). The stereotypic behaviors that are mentioned
can usually be quickly discounted by asking children to consider their
own home lives. Many children, particularly those with single or
divorced parents have seen their mothers working and their fathers
cleaning the house. Boys are often relieved to argue that a boy can
read, sing or clean up without losing respect. However, these same boys
will worry that other children will continue to believe in sex-role
myths. These fears are often strong enough to keep children in
traditional sex roles even when they become aware of the unjust nature
of these roles.
Another classroom activity is to ask students to look in any standard
dictionary or thesaurus for the definitions of "male" and "female,"
"masculine" and "feminine," "husband" and "wife," etc. The definitions
are often so blatantly offensive and stereotypic that they create a
small sensation when read aloud, challenging children to rethink their
own definitions.
Discussing homophobic concepts is one thing; enduring homophobic
name-calling is an entirely different matter. The pressure to conform is
especially over-whelming within the school/peer structure, and it is
vital that teachers try to instill the courage need to function
independently when one is the object of ridicule.
Similarly, adults often try to change behavior in "effeminate" boys in
the illusion that it will prevent [unreadable -jlf] becoming gay; girls
are often discouraged from "tomboy" activities for the same reason.
These so called "effeminate" boys or "tomboy" girls may or may not be
gay. In any case it is a violation of a child's integrity to try to
change behaviors that come naturally. It is also sexist to insist on
narrow, traditional gender-determinted behaviors. In addition, forcing
someone to inhibit or rechannel natural feelings of same-sex love is no
different that forcing a left handed child to write with the right hand
because left-handedness is "deviant."
I attempt to teach my students to be willing to defend no only their own
rights but the rights of others to live free from oppression as well.
Sometimes this means challenging "the way things are" (as defined by
adults) and thus realizing that all adults are not absolute. This in an
important lesson. Social change can only occur when children acquire the
ability to look critically at existing structures.
We can being to nurture a critical eye at the elementary school level,
as children begin to lose their egocentricity and observe the
surrounding world. Because name-calling is so common among children, and
because it embodies the bigotry learned from adults, it is a good place
for educators to begin.
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720.27 | | NOATAK::BLAZEK | dance on fire as it intends | Tue Mar 12 1991 18:52 | 79 |
|
Stopping Prejudice Before It Starts
By John Rosemond
(Copied from Better Homes and Gardens, July 1990 issue, with permission)
People who see the world through prejudiced eyes often scar the
fragile, developing beliefs of the children around them. Here's
why you need to be concerned about bias, and how you can help your
child grow up free of hurtful attitudes toward others.
LIKE PARENT, LIKE CHILD
Children start noticing differences in skin color, gender, and
physical ability at an early age. They begin to connect certain
attitudes and feelings with those differences by seeing how adults
react to them. Even subtle, unspoken messages given off by adults
can have a profound impact on a child's developing attitudes. For
example, Courtney, aged 4, notices that her parents employ a black
housekeeper and gardener, yet they never invite blacks into their
home on social occasions. Already, her parents' behavior is
beginning to influence Courtney's perceptions of non-whites. Her
parents would be horrified to know this, but would they be willing
to change their ways? Prejudice about race, religion, nationality,
gender, and physical ability harms all children. The damage to
victims is obvious, but those who hold biased attitudes also suffer.
Children who come to believe, for whatever reasons, that they are
superior are also in danger of never developing a completely
positive sense of self. These youngsters are almost always masking
deep feelings of insecurity or inferiority.
A WORLD OF DIFFERENCES
Immunizing a child against becoming biased means teaching her/him
that differences among people are good, that diversity is enriching
to everyone. Parents need to do more than simply tell children that
prejudice is bad. Children need to see this fact reflected in their
parents' behavior. Here's an example of how children can be taught
to deal with prejudice. Five-year-old Charlie's mother stops in the
middle of reading a children's book to him and asks, "Do you notice
anything wrong about the pictures in this book, Charlie?" Charlie
thinks for a moment and answers, "No." His Mother then points out,
"Well, Charlie, all the people in these pictures have white skin.
That's not the way things really are, is it?" Charlie agrees, and
his mother ends up suggesting that they us crayons to shade some of
the people in the drawings so that the book, in Charlie's mother's
words, "will be more like the world we really live in."
POSITIVE ACTIONS
To help your children grow up unbiased, try these suggestions:
- Encourage your children to speak up when they see someone,
especially another child, being treated unfairly.
- When possible, expose your child to after-school activities that
include a mix of children from various races, religions, and
socioeconomic backgrounds. If the choice is available, consider
a well-integrated school.
- When your child makes a prejudicial remark about someone else, ask,
"What do you think that means?" Children often repeat things they
have heard without realizing their implications. Set aside a few
minutes to explain the true meaning of prejudicial language and to
make it clear such language is not appropriate.
- Fill your home with books and magazines, particularly those you
purchase for your kids, that portray a complete picture of society.
- Point out prejudice when it happens and discuss it with your children.
- If you have children in preschool, kindergarten, or grades one
through three, a free brochure called "Teaching Young Children to
Resist Bias - What Parents Can Do" is available by sending a SASE
to: The National Association for the Education of Young Children,
AB/BMG, 1834 Connecticut Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20009.
Actions always speak louder than words. If we want our children to
accept differences in other people, that acceptance must be present in
our own behavior. If we want our children to take an active stance
against prejudice, then they must see us taking a clear stand as well.
Sometimes, taking a stand means taking a risk, but this is one risk
none of us should ignore.
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720.28 | thanks | TRACKS::PARENT | Human in process, please wait | Wed Mar 13 1991 11:37 | 13 |
|
Thank you both Carla and DougO for going through the trouble to post
those articles here. They speak of the things I grew up with. The
articles address the barriers I know. Why is it so difficult let
people be simply who the are? I cheer for the future because children
are asking why more. In my dreams these children will understand
the freedom that comes from being who you are not what others tell
you to become.
Peace,
Allison
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720.29 | | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | therrrrrre's a bathroom on the right | Wed Mar 13 1991 13:46 | 16 |
| re.28
> I cheer for the future because children are asking why more.
Allison,
I certainly agree with most of what you said. But I don't agree with
the statement above. Children have always asked 'why?'
I cheer for _our_ generation, yours and mine, and subsequent because
children are beginning to get _answers_ to the 'whys?'
And, sure enough, the answers are none too comfortable for we/them who
are doing the answering ...
Annie
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720.30 | then vs now | TRACKS::PARENT | Human in process, please wait | Wed Mar 13 1991 14:28 | 14 |
|
Annie,
I agree, I didn't provide sufficient context to be clear. In the past
I never felt is was safe to question.
Children have always asked why, our generation and futures have the
advantage of more information. That exposure give them a chance to
compare the real world to the answers they were given. Kids are
remarkable in pointing out inconsistancy.
Peace,
Allison
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