Posted on 08/04/2005 5:06:34 AM PDT by SJackson
A Brooklyn College professor says Ebonics is superior to the tongue of White Devils
--Assistant Professor of Adolescence Education at Brooklyn College
--Teaches that rap music is an effective tool for teaching English literacy to schoolchildren, and that proper English is language of white "oppressors"
--Required students to view Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 911
Priya Parmar is an Assistant Professor of Adolescence Education at Brooklyn College's School of Education in New York, where she teaches both graduate and undergraduate courses to aspiring teachers.
Of special interest to Parmar, whose doctoral dissertation is titled "KRS-One Going Against the Grain: A Critical Study of Rap Music as a Postmodern Text," is rap music. No mere enthusiast of the genre, Parmar holds that it is an unappreciated tool for imparting English literacy to young children: A 2003 Brooklyn College faculty newsletter reports that Parmar's scholarly writing "focuses on using hip-hop culture as a tool to increase literacy skills" in elementary and secondary schools.[1]
Those critics who question whether rap music, with its on reliance grammar-averse Ebonics slang, is an effective medium for teaching literacy are dismissed by Parmar as craven apologists for bourgeois hegemony. "Rap music causes moral panic in many because of its 'threat' to existing values and ideologies held by the dominant middle class," asserts Parmar.[2] On the strength of no evidence whatsoever, Parmar also claims that "research has shown that Ebonics is a legitimate systematic language."[3] Nor does Parmar doubt that the explicit lyrics and violent subject matter of rap make perfectly appropriate learning aids for young children:
"From my experience in the classroomsand that of my students who are practitioners in the fieldwe've learned that kidseven as young as third gradeare very sophisticated about the homophobic, violent and sexual messages from some mainstream rap artists. If you give students an opportunity to deconstruct the lyrics and then compare them with those of more political and social-consciousness raising artists, such as [rap groups] The Roots and Dead Perez . . . youth are capable of distinguishing between reality and false perceptions and stereotypes perpetuated in commercialized rap."[4]
Rap, Parmar teaches, is more than a means of teaching literacy. It is also a vehicle for social engineering. In addition to teaching children grammar and sentence structure, Parmar maintains, the "critical examination and deconstruction of rap lyrics becomes a method to get students to critically examine such issues as race, class, culture, and identity." Parmar calls this mode of instruction an "an empowering, liberating pedagogy." She notes with approval that one of her former students used rap to "explore economic social and political issues" in a middle school.[5]
Parmar's controversial course at Brooklyn College, "Language Literacy in Secondary Education," typifies the professor's preference for politicized pedagogy. Required of all students who intend to become secondary-school teachers, the course is designed to teach students to draft lesson plans that teach literacy. Parmar's syllabus informs students that the principal focus of these lesson plans must be "social justice."[6]
Another theme animating Parmar's course is her aversion to the proper usage of English. To insist on grammatical English, Parmar believes, is to exhibit an intolerable form of cultural chauvinisma point reinforced by the a preface to the requirements for her course, which adduces the following quotation from the South African writer, Jamul Ndebele: "The need to maintain control over English by its native speakers has given birth to a policy of manipulative open-mindedness in which it is held that English belongs to all who use it provided that it is used correctly. This is the art of giving away the bride while insisting that she still belongs to you."[7] Students are expected to share Parmar's antipathy toward grammatical rule-based English, as she does not countenance dissent: In December of 2005, for instance, several disaffected Brooklyn College students wrote letters to the dean of the School of Education taking issue with Parmar's hostility toward students who dared voice their support for the correct usage of English.
Nor was this the only confrontation between Parmar and her students. Evan Goldwyn, a Brooklyn College student who took Parmar's course, caused a campus storm when he wrote a lengthy critique of the course detailing his objections to Parmar's teaching methods. Topping Goldwyn's list of grievances were Parmar's pronounced bias against English and her alleged bigotry against white students. "She repeatedly referred to English as a language of oppressors and in particular denounced white people as the oppressors," Goldwyn wrote. "When offended students raised their hands to challenge Professor Parmar's assertion, they were ignored. Those students that disagreed with her were altogether denied the opportunity to speak."[8]
Students also charged that Parmar's insistence on bringing politics into the classroom went beyond issues relating to English literacy. For instance, one week before the 2004 presidential election, Parmar turned over her course to a classroom screening of Michael Moore's polemical anti-President Bush documentary, Fahrenheit 911.[9] Students were allegedly required to attend the screening, even if they had already seen the film. "Most troubling of all," Goldwyn wrote, "she has insinuated that people who disagree with her views on issues such as Ebonics or Fahrenheit 911 should not become teachers."[10]
Parmar, according to Goldwyn, has also retaliated against students who disagreed with her political opinions by lowering their grades. After challenging Parmar about her teaching methods, Goldwyn and another student found themselves accused of plagiarism after the semester had ended. The accusations were reportedly based on the final assignment for Parmar's course, which asked students to devise a special lesson plan for "linguistically and culturally diverse students." Following an informal investigation, conducted, at Parmar's instigation, by the dean of the education school, Goldwyn received a D-minus for the course.[11]
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[1] http://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/bc/pubs/fn/fall03/1103.pdf
[2] http://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/bc/pubs/bcmag/spr2004/bcmag.pdf
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid.
[6] http://www.nysun.com/article/14604
[7] Ibid.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Ibid.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Ibid.
Now that I come to think about it, that's probably the plan.
she can using ebonic newspeak. "whitey. hate crime. reparations."
"AS a lark, I once left someone a four page note in 12 point type, the basic message of which was that I would be back in my room in ten minutes."
See today's "Word for the Day." It's "circumlocution."
Ahem....
Word?
Thanks for that nice racist screed. First, by the way, I'm white. Second, I've spent 12 years in the military and served with, below and over many blacks, the vast majority of whom were excellent people, and few were racist in any way. When you get drunk with a man, you get to see what's really inside of him, when you share misery with a man you get to see even more.
I don't know what small percentage your screed is targeting, but it seems you'd like to coat the whole of black people with it and that is plain dumb and wrong. I've had more then a few black friends (as well as indians, iranian, chinese, korean and others) and you are about as far off the mark as it gets.
That captures it perfectly, as does "A ghetto in every mouth." Eugenics, eubonics -- they both lead to the same disastrous thing except the latter is self-imposed.
Oh, and by the way, the professor is a "she" and she's not black but Hindi. Try again.
Ebonics be superior, no what i'm saying.
Um, someone needs to point out to this broad that the native language of black Americans IS English.
Black Americans have been in this country for 400+ years. If English isn't their native language, what the heck is?
Sometimes it's good for people to get things off their chest I guess, even if it sounds bizarre.
Is "disposition" the new code-word for socio-political attitude? A good "disposition" is anti-white, pro-ghetto; A bad "dispositon" is, well, conservative?
Oh yes I've heard the same, except from South Africans who say they wish the British had not given the country to the Dutch.
I guess. It's so sad one can only laugh.
Wait a second.If a teacher called blacks DEVILS he'd be fired in 10 seconds flat.Why is this racist allowed to teach another day ?
Ebonics is the patois(pigeon english) of BLACK oppressors..
If it has nothing to do with minorities, then why don't we hear, hispanics, caucasians, asians, etc using ebonics? An underclass? No such thing. You want to get ahead? Study and work.
Broken educational system? I'll only give you part of that. You can still learn how to speak English in school, you just have to want to.
This Black Einstein should pursue his illuminating brainstorm.
Go to Africa, make ebonics universal and, when they have surpassed the West in philosophy, medicine, technology, trade, space travel and communicatons, we can discuss his insight further...
I went to school with all types.
It is not racist it is from having contact with some of these accademic types in the real world working environment.
I am simply saying that there are people in this world who do not take this type of venom seriously because they do not think it is real.
I do not doubt you for a moment. We are very much in agreement. I should have been clearing about pointing out that I consider those "types" to be a very small group as, at least in my encounters, they have been far between. I assure you they are out there.
Though I must confess, recently I did meet one who was borderline at a recent Bar conference.
take care.
Not only that, but "ebonics" does not trace back to any African roots, but rather to language used by "poor whites" who migrated to the American South from a particular part of rural England and a host of secondary influences. If they wanted to have black rooted language they could speak something like the Gullah of the Carolina lowlands.
Stalin once said, "Education is a Weapon, what matters is against whom you aim it at." This, unfortunetly, is something the left knows well and the right has never bothered to comprehend, which is why the educational deparments and schools are dominated by the left.
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