Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Activities like this just make me angry. My teen had to do one at school and came home so confused because they kept talking about white privelige and so many of the things didn’t apply to him, even though he’s white. It’s a difficult conversation to have with your kid when he’s made to feel embarrassed that he’s white and further embarrassed that he’s not coming from storybook circumstances.
Sounds like the exercise worked. The point of these things is to make your teen question the status quo. Some discomfort is natural, and it'll help DS to perhaps empathize a little with brown-skinned minority kids who might experience this discomfort on a regular basis. BTW, a good teacher would also introduce things like economics, education, etc., and other factors that go into identity.
No one discloses that. The people that arrange these types of exercises are 100% focused on skin color. No one chooses the circumstances they are born into. It should be possible to teach empathy without degrading self- worth.
Anonymous wrote:That’s the thing - most aware kids now WANT to have overcome diversity because it is not cool to have had it easier. Which kills me because all I have wanted to do is give my kids a better life than I had growing up. You can’t win, it seems, but it does seem unfair to be called out for privilege because your parents worked to give it to you (rather than it being multi-generational).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry that happened. There was a similar response from the kids that were at the back in this video https://youtu.be/4K5fbQ1-zps
Two problems. If done it should be for self reflection and not announced and don't bring race into it. I would be in the front if I were in this video and I'm AA. I'm not saying I'm not pre judged as an AA, but I am privileged.
Exactly. I’m white and I would have been on the back line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It already happened. There's no significant "handling" of it now.
It's so that they think through things like this going forward.
Sometimes you can't make things better for yourself but can make them better for those who come up after you.
I'm the poster who was on food stamps for a long time. My DD got really into animals and nature and I found something similar to a 4H club in our city. It was on the opposite end of the city from where we live, so just to attend the first meeting was two hours roundtrip of commuting. And then the woman running the meeting talks about driving an hour outside of the city to visit baby goats, and an organic farm, etc. I asked about transportation to these - are they in walking distance of train lines or will there be a bus for the group, etc. She said no, all the parents take turns carpooling. I don't have a car. She suggested I could get a car for under $10k. Right. Like I had that kind of money laying around. Like I would spend that kind of money so my daughter could go feed baby goats once a month. DD had to quit. There was just no way to make it work. And I laid out for the leader of the group exactly why she had to quit, just so she'd know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Activities like this just make me angry. My teen had to do one at school and came home so confused because they kept talking about white privelige and so many of the things didn’t apply to him, even though he’s white. It’s a difficult conversation to have with your kid when he’s made to feel embarrassed that he’s white and further embarrassed that he’s not coming from storybook circumstances.
It's a difficult conversation, yes. His discomfort is at being confronted with the privilege he never considered he had, even though he has all of it. It's important to overcome that instinct to internalize and say, "Who? Me? I'm not a bad person! How dare you!" and come to terms with what privilege actually means. Your language -- "he's made to feel embarrassed" is troubling. He isn't a victim. And it's incumbent upon you to reinforce that. He needs to listen more, drop his defenses, and not view a discussion about the zeitgeist as some sort of personal attack. And if he has moments where he feels like his input is not valued or that his station in life is being attacked, consider that a lesson in how other members of other races and ethnicities feel frequently in our society.
So now white people arent even allowed to be embarrassed? They should just completely deny their own emotions and focus on the plight of those less priveliged?
Anonymous wrote:I think the intent of activities like these is really hard to get across unless you have some sort of accompanying exercise that makes the "privileged" actually feel what it's like to NOT be privileged.
Kind of like the Doctors Without Borders exhibit where they had people walk through being a refugee and making hard decisions along the way.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. To be clear, I do think these exercises have their value, and I think privilege is very real. The issue wasn’t so much the concept, but how they went about it and made the scores very “public”
Anyway, DD wasn’t comfortable talking to them in person but emailed the advisor when she got home from school today about why the activity was problematic and how she hopes they’ll reconsider the way they implement such activities in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that every white person became fully and appropriately aware of white privilege. What would the next step be, politically, and as a matter of policy! for ending white privilege?
Ending all legacy admits to all universities, even private ones. Reparations, possibly, even for people who don't "deserve" it (essentially redistributing wealth from white America to black America). A lot more teeth to anti-discrimination law, with zero attention paid to whether or not someone's livelihood or reputation might be damaged if found guilty. Automatic, public, independent investigations of police shootings. A careful combing of all laws, on every government level, to make sure that even though "neutral," they aren't designed to favor those people already in power.
It would feel a lot like losing privileges to most white people, even though the goal would be undoing the automatice assumption that our current value and power systems are the best ones.
Ending legacy? Doesn't affect the vast majority (99%+ ) of white people who don't benefit either. And you ignore that black people are now increasingly benefiting from legacy admits (see the Obama girls as a perfect example).
Reparations? You know, there was a huge war in which hundreds of thousands of men died and the near total destruction of the southern economy. All that wealth based on slave went into slaves and more lands - and all that disappeared overnight. And it also conveniently ignores that the majority of Americans, including the majority of white Americans, do not have ancestors who were here at the time of the civil war. Are you saying that a hispanic or Asian immigrant's taxpayer dollars needs to be used for reparations for something that happened 150 years ago?
A lot more teeth to anti discrimination laws? How? We already have very strict anti discrimination laws. Among the best in the world. How would you make the laws stronger? It's a statement that's easy to say until you hit the reality. Would you legally penalize people for making racist statements? What about freedom of speech? Or what about a black man calling white people cracker? Would that be included too?
Automatic, public, independent investigations of police shootings? We already investigate these matters. How would you change it?
A careful combing of all laws, on every government level, to make sure that even though "neutral," they aren't designed to favor those people already in power? What people in power are you talking about? Who would do these investigations? What people would these "reformed" laws benefit? As with above, it's easy to make this statement but you likely have no knowledge of the reality or what this entails (let alone the abuses it lends itself to). How do you know you aren't subject to your own biases and prejudices that you seek only very specific problems and will bend the situation to make sure you do find the problems you're looking for?
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a part of a club and last night they did something called a privilege rally where they had a list of things like “I have never been a religious minority” “I have never wondered where my next meal will come from” “my parents are still married.” There were 75 items on the list and kids had to check off each item as it applied to them and then tally them up and place their number on a board. All the other kids had numbers in the 60s and 70s, my daughter had a number in the 30s.
She felt extremely isolated, and while I have to imagine some of this is sort of a “no one is staring at you you’re just self conscious” situation she says she felt like everyone was looking at her and she doesn’t want to go back.
Suggestions on how to handle this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that every white person became fully and appropriately aware of white privilege. What would the next step be, politically, and as a matter of policy! for ending white privilege?
Ending all legacy admits to all universities, even private ones. Reparations, possibly, even for people who don't "deserve" it (essentially redistributing wealth from white America to black America). A lot more teeth to anti-discrimination law, with zero attention paid to whether or not someone's livelihood or reputation might be damaged if found guilty. Automatic, public, independent investigations of police shootings. A careful combing of all laws, on every government level, to make sure that even though "neutral," they aren't designed to favor those people already in power.
It would feel a lot like losing privileges to most white people, even though the goal would be undoing the automatice assumption that our current value and power systems are the best ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least it’s just an exercise.... imagine if it was her reality... like every day.
Omg, I know. A close friend grew up in Baltimore's high-rise projects otherwise known as 'Murder Homes'. He is a beautiful, strong, positive person, but reading between the lines of some things he's said make my heart sink. We were talking about gross foods, and I told him about this one time my grandmother boiled a whole cow's tongue for dinner and set it on the table whole. I was so disturbed that cried and left the room until dinner ended. His answer: "Was there anything else to eat?"
This is a tiny sliver of painful experiences he's been through because his skin is brown and America is deeply racist. Since meeting this friend, I dove deep into learning US history by reading Martin Luther King, Jr., Richard White, Frederick Douglas. The deeper I go, the more my heart breaks.
So yeah, maybe the club could've handled the privilege test scores better, but imagine if she had to deal with the things other people live with.
PS. And before someone blames his mother for being poor and having children she couldn't afford, take my word for it that his mother is brilliant and you've no place to judge.
So yeah, maybe the club could've handled the privilege test scores better, but imagine if she had to deal with the things other people live with.