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Title: Poverty, Racism, and UnConsciousness in the U.S.


1
Poverty, Racism, and (Un)Consciousness in the U.S.
  • by Paul C. Gorski - gorski_at_EdChange.org

2
Introductory StuffWho Said It?
  • We have deluded ourselves into believing the
    myth that capitalism grew and prospered out of
    the Protestant ethic of hard work and sacrifices.
    Capitalism was built on the exploitation of black
    slaves and continues to thrive on the
    exploitation of the poor, both black and white,
    both here and abroad.

3
Introductory StuffWho Said It?
  • we commit ourselves toaddress creatively and
    courageously the complex causes of poverty.

4
Introductory StuffWho We Are
  • Whos in the room?
  • My background and lens

5
Introductory StuffStarting Assumptions
  • Low-income people bear the brunt of almost every
    imaginable social ill in the U.S.
  • All people, regardless of socioeconomic status,
    deserve access to basic human rights
  • Inequities in the U.S. (and globally) mean that
    all people dont have this access

6
Gross Inequities
  • Compared with low-poverty U.S. schools,
    high-poverty U.S. schools have
  • More teachers teaching in areas outside their
    certification subjects
  • More serious teacher turnover problems
  • More teacher vacancies
  • Larger numbers of substitute teachers

7
Gross Inequities (contd)
  • More dirty or inoperative bathrooms
  • More evidence of vermin such as cockroaches and
    rats
  • Insufficient classroom materials
  • Less rigorous curricula
  • Fewer experienced teachers
  • Lower teacher salaries
  • Larger class sizes and
  • Less funding.

8
Gross Inequities
  • Barton, P.E. (2004). Why does the gap persist?
    Educational Leadership 62(3), 8-13.
  • Barton, P.E. (2003). Parsing the achievement gap
    Baselines for tracking progress. Princeton, NJ
    Educational Testing Service.
  • Carey, K. (2005). The funding gap 2004 Many
    states still shortchange low-income and minority
    students. Washington, D.C. The Education Trust.
  • National Commission on Teaching and Americas
    Future (2004). Fifty years after Brown v. Board
    of Education A two-tiered education system.
    Washington, D.C. Author.
  • Rank, M.R. (2004). One nation, underprivileged
    Why American poverty affects us all. New York,
    NY Oxford University Press.

9
Introductory Stuff The Agenda
  • Introductory Stuff (in progress)
  • The Big Picture Ten Chairs
  • Key Information Concepts
  • Where We Go Wrong
  • Tenets of Race-Conscious Anti-Poverty Activism

10
Part II
  • The Big Picture
  • Ten Chairs

11
The Big Picture
  • Point of Reflection
  • What would you describe as your socioeconomic
    status?

12
The Big Picture
  • Point of Reflection
  • Where does the notion of meritocracy come from,
    and has it ever been true?

13
The Big Picture
  • Point of Reflection
  • Is poverty an individual experience or, like
    racism, a systemic condition?
  • And what does this mean for how we tackle poverty
    and racism?

14
Part III
  • Informing Ourselves
  • Key Information Concepts

15
Key Information
  • A majority of low-income people in the U.S. are
    white.
  • However, African Americans, Native Americans,
    Latinas/os, and Asian Americans are much more
    likely to be low-income than white people.

16
Key Information
  • 3. A majority of low-income people live in rural,
    rather than urban, areas.
  • 4. However, a growing number of low-income people
    are moving to suburban areas due to
    gentrification.

17
Key Concepts
  • The Culture of Poverty
  • Deficit Theory
  • The Undeserving Poor
  • The process built on these concepts socializes us
    into complicity.

18
Key ConceptCapitalist Hegemony
  • Defining hegemony
  • History of capitalist hegemony (and defining
    communism and socialism as the enemy)
  • Importance of hegemony to understanding how we
    understand poverty
  • Consumer culture, meritocracy

19
Key ConceptThe Culture of Poverty
  • What is it? (See hidden rules quizzes.)
  • Who made it up?
  • What the research says
  • Why its dangerous

20
Key ConceptThe Deficit Theory
  • Two Components
  • Example Welfare Mothers
  • Why its dangerous
  • Who, or what, needs to be fixed?

21
Key ConceptThe Undeserving Poor
  • Herbert Gans, The War Against the Poor
  • Deterioration of support for policy
  • Welfare Reform

22
Socialized for Complicity
  • Consumer Culture (shopping)
  • Myth of Meritocracy
  • Myth of American Dream
  • Latter two most devastating to People of Color

23
Part VI
  • Where We Go Wrong

24
Where We Go Wrong
  • Confusing the mitigation of poverty with the
    elimination of poverty.
  • - Clothing and housing the poor is necessary, but
    it is not analogous with ending poverty.

25
Where We Go Wrong
  • Trying to address poverty by fixing low-income
    people.
  • - We dont fix racism by fixing People of
    Color, either!

26
Where We Go Wrong
  • Confusing charity with social change movement.
  • - Ending poverty (like racism) requires systemic
    changes to an oppressive systemwe cannot end
    poverty or racism without battling that system.

27
Where We Go Wrong
  • Confusing charity with social change movement.
  • - Ending poverty (like racism) requires systemic
    changes to an oppressive systemwe cannot end
    poverty or racism without battling that system.

28
Where We Go Wrong
  • Believing that education is the great
    equalizer.
  • - White men with a graduate degree earn, on
    average, 80,000 per year. Native American women
    with a graduate degree earn, on average, 42,000
    per year.

29
Where We Go Wrong
  • Assuming it is our job to save low-income
    people or people of color or any other
    disenfranchised group.
  • - One might ask, who, exactly, needs saving?

30
Where We Go Wrong
  • Attempting to understand poverty by studying poor
    people.
  • - Poverty can be understood only by asking why
    poverty exists and to whose benefit poverty
    exists. (Can we understand racism without
    understanding systems of whiteness?)

31
Part VII
  • Tenets of Race-Conscious Anti-Poverty Action

32
Tenets
  • We cannot fight racism or poverty without
    fighting racism and poverty.
  • Racism can be seen historically as economic
    exploitation

33
Tenets
  • Working class and poor white people often are
    socialized to believe that working class and poor
    People of Color, rather than an oppressive
    economic system, are the source of their
    hardships.
  • Focusing only on white privilege wont work. Help
    them see how theyre exploited economically by
    the same power structure and how white privilege
    is their compensation for being the buffer.

34
Tenets
  • We cannot affect social change by employing the
    models that are used to socialize us into
    complicity.
  • We must model a rejection of deficit ideology, of
    consumer culture, of the myth of meritocracy.

35
Tenets
  • Social justice requires us to work with
    disenfranchised communities.
  • Avoid service programs (or any programs) that do
    not happen in collaboration with disenfranchised
    communities.
  • Remember, the key to liberation is for people to
    decide for themselves their path to liberation.

36
Tenets
  • We cannot end oppression through cultural
    programming.
  • Energies and resources set aside for anti-racism
    and anti-poverty initiatives never should be
    spent on celebrating diversity or learning
    about cultures programs.
  • Taco Night is fun, but it has nothing to do with
    racism, except, perhaps, contributing to it.

37
Final Thought
  • Key to Fighting Poverty and Racism
  • Consciousness

38
  • Paul C. Gorski
  • gorski_at_edchange.org
  • http//www.EdChange.org
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