Thompson, Gail L. Through Ebony Eyes. San Francisco, California.
Jossey-Bass A Wiley Imprint. 2004. Print.
            Through Ebony
Eyes is an in depth analysis of the many factors that play a role in
African Americans and Latino’s education. Gail Thompson explains how the
traditional ways of both the government and school system has created an
environment that makes it difficult for African Americans/Latinos to succeed in
school. He also discusses the ways that educators and interest groups have
attempted to close the gap between students of color and their white
counterparts. Thompson includes in input on where he believes schools and the
government went wrong in addressing students of color in a country that it
designed to address the majority. Thompson’s argument seems very broad because
he doesn’t focus on one issue that affects the academics of people of color in
America. It almost seems as if he is attempting to argue his opinion on all of
the factors that he has come across in his studies. Through Ebony Eyes
is his way to inform educators and anyone who hopes to become an educator on
ways to become more effective when teaching the minority here in America. 
            Thompson’s
argument is broken up into different chapters throughout the book. In each
chapter he addresses a different reason for why African Americans struggle
academically. The author does a great job of connecting all of different
aspects he discusses back to the student, while including how it impacts them
academically. In the introduction he claims to discuss the issues that affect
minorities academically where in actuality he focuses on African Americans and
only include other minorities if they happen to fall into the same boat as
African Americans. The book is structured similar to that of a textbook, which
shows how the author hopes to truly educate the reader in ways to teach
minorities more effectively. He breaks down the different factors into
“theories” and backs them up with personal examples as well as hypotheticals. 
            From reading the
introduction and first chapter I can already tell that this book will be the
driving force behind my research because of how well it has been structured. The
man thing about this book is that it may connect to other things that I pick up
later on in my research. Seeing as the author includes his opinion of a variety
of different topics I may be able to find different authors or researchers that
may disagree with what he states in this book.
·        
“In other words, these students infer that they
have to reject their home culture to succeed academically” (pg. 17)- The Acting
White Theory 
·        
“During previous eras black youth were more
likely to derive values and identity from family, church, and school…. Today,
the influence of these traditional purveyors of Black culture [has] largely
diminished. Now media and entertainment are among the major forces transmitting
culture to this generation of Black America”. (pg. 20) 
“This preoccupation with getting rich quickly stems from at least two
sources. The first being is the high unemployment rate in urban communities. In
many cases, the education system has failed to prepare young blacks for the
workforce or for college” (pg.21)_________________________________________________________________________________
Hale, Janice E. Learning While Black. Baltimore,
Maryland. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 2001 Print. 
            Learning
While Black is a book about the impact that the community and life
outside of school has on African American students that live in an urban
environment. Janice Hale explains how politicians and news reporters, who
discuss education and its impacts on African Americans, lack experience which
makes them less fit for discussing the solution to the problem. She then
includes her solutions to the issues that most educators see in African
American communities. Hale mentions that if the school is not the center of the
program or institution that hopes to reach out to African American students
than they will not be able to reach those students who struggle academically.
She also talks about the relationship between school and family is essential
because students don’t stop learning when they leave school so everyone
involved must be on the same page for the student’s sake.
            Throughout
the book the author uses personal examples as well as things she has learned
throughout her research to strengthen her point. From reading the first chapter
the reader can tell that some of the issues she has addressed may seem obvious
but when she goes in depth about the importance of each issue, the reader will
see an entirely different way at looking at the same issues. That allows the
author to include more solutions and explain why educators are the best sources
for truly understanding what issues African American students face within an
academic environment.
            This
reading is not ultra-useful because Janice Hale uses this book to solve the
issues that affect African American students. My research is purely to find and
analyze the issues that African American students face. However the author
explains how her solution will fix the academic struggles that African American
students face, which means that she will mention and explain the issues she has
come across. 
·       
“The overwhelming majority of African
American children come from single-parent households. African Americans work
longer hours often for less money than whites earn (Toppo 2000); often they are
minimally educated and have substantial constraints on their time.” (pg. 8)
·       
“Parents whisper among themselves, expressing
their frustration with this situation, but is never brought into the dialogue
on school reform” (pg. 9)
·       
“At this writing the state of Michigan
spends $35,000 a year to incarcerate one African American male. For
maximum-security incarceration, the cost to state is about 65,000 a year, and
to the federal state about $75,000. Compare those costs with $8,000 it cost to
enroll an African American male child in a two-year Head Start program.” (pg.
38)
_____________________________________________________________________________
 Irvine, Jacqueline Jordan. Black Students and School
Failures.New York. Greenwood Press. 1990.
            Black
Students and School Failures is a book about the different connection between
African American students performance in school, and their personal lives. The
Author Jacqueline Irvine connects every aspect of an African American, who grew
up in an urban environment to how well they do on a national scale. She also
discusses how the mindset of these students change throughout their school
experience and all of the driving factors that lead them to a horrible
conclusion. This book also includes a lot of stats that relate African
Americans to whites in different categories such as: standardize testing,
graduation rates, poverty, and teen pregnancy. 
            Irvine
does a great job of explaining what schools in poor communities lack and how a
failed school system creates poorly educated students. She then connects that
with the added impression that students get from their environment. This book
breaks down the aspects of educating a student both from the academic point as
well as the cultural point of view. The level of analysis that the author shows
throughout her book prove that she has not only looked at this issue from a
numbers stance but a psychological stance as well. It is as if she has stepped
in to the shoes of the student, teacher, and researcher.
            I
can use this book in multiple ways. For one I can use this information to strengthen
things that I have learned in other parts of my research. Also my main topic
may be altered because I am learning about the issues that cause African
Americans to struggle in school; however this book may lead me to focus on a
more specific area. The author provides detailed examples of how each issue can
cause a snowball effect of failure or misfortune in a student’s life. That will
allow me to use the book in multiple ways depending on where I go with my
research.   
·        
“There is a strong relationship between
black student achievement, teen parenthood, and poverty. Poor black students
usually score lower on standardize measure of achievement and are
overrepresented in the ranks of dropouts and pregnant girls.” (pg. xiv)
·        
“The hidden curriculum is the unstated
but influential knowledge, attitude, norms, rules, rituals, values, and beliefs
that are transmitted to students through structure policies, processes, formal
content, and social relationships of school”. (pg. 5)
·        
“One factor related to the
nonachievement of black students is the disproportionate use of severe
disciplinary practices, which leads to black students exclusion from classes,
their perception of mistreatment, and feelings of alienated and rejection,
which result ultimately in their misbehaving more and/or leaving school”. (pg.
16)
 
THOMPSON:
ReplyDelete"Thompson’s argument seems very broad because he doesn’t focus on one issue that affects the academics of people of color in America. It almost seems as if he is attempting to argue his opinion on all of the factors that he has come across in his studies." <--- That is more of an analysis!!!!
"The MAIN thing"...you put man instead of main in third paragraph.
I don't think you are suppose to put a dash and title for in-citation...you might want to look that up.
IRVINE:
you put page "xiv" instead of an actual number...
HALE:
It was great.
Thompson: Fix the hanging indent in the citation, add a third quote at the end.
ReplyDeleteIrvine: Fix the citations at the end of your quote by putting (Irvine pg#).
Hale: Thought it was good, liked your summary the most in this one.