Posted on 03/15/2007 5:40:33 PM PDT by Ouderkirk
(Rochester, N.Y.) Its called Black English Vernacular or more commonly Ebonics.
In a newsletter to staff, Rochester City School District officials say it is okay for students and teachers to speak Ebonics in class.
The newsletter is called Diversity Dialogue. It suggests teachers use BEV to communicate with students. It says teachers can:
Switch into BEV in specific situations or informal discussion.
"Translate common phrases in Standard English into BEV.
Read and retell stories in both BEV and Standard English.
We need to embrace the diversity they bring into our schools, said the districts Chief of Diversity and Leadership, Michele Hancock.
Hancock and Tyra Webb-Johnson, Director of Coaching and Leadership wrote the newsletter. They are both former elementary school principals.
We want (teachers) to have a better understanding of what BEV is so they can incorporate it into their teaching. That way, they're not alienating the students who are speaking the vernacular and degrading them, Webb-Johnson said.
Ebonics was debated nationally in 1996 when the Oakland, California school district proposed using it in the curriculum.
Ebonics is defined as a speech pattern used by some African Americans that does not follow standard grammar.
No matter how you speak, you do need to learn the standard form so you can embrace the larger audience of people, Hancock said. But you can hold on to the richness of your family environment and not feel that is beneath any standard of living.
Hancock says many people, including her own son, who graduated from college, know how to "code switch" between Standard English and Ebonics. She said students must learn to be proficient in Standard English.
Many African Americans are bi-dialectic in their speech patterns. I think it's critical teachers understand those speech patterns so they can effectively, visually show children how they are speaking, but not to denigrate it, but to celebrate it, Hancock said.
13WHAM News showed the newsletter to several black leaders in the community.
Anybody who suggests that these kids will lose their identity because they cannot be, should not be encouraged to speak Ebonics is wrong, said school board member Van White, who is pushing to create an African American studies department in the district. We are not African Americans because of how we speak, but who we are as a people.
I understand there's a need for teachers and students to meet on some common plane, but I'm not sure expressing that as Ebonics as that plane is a way to go, said City Councilman Adam McFadden.
It's acceptable in hip hop culture, but I don't think anyone would suggest the way forward for students already coming to school with severe educational deficiencies is to maintain a deficient language pattern, said former Mayor William Johnson.
Johnson and then-Police Chief Bob Duffy fired a white police officer for writing a memo called Ghetto Lingo, which claimed to translate English phrases into African American vernacular.
Hancock and Webb-Johnson say many white teachers come to them for help communicating with students. The BEV suggestion is not a mandate, they said.
It doesn't hurt the kids. What we're saying to the children is we value what you bring. You have value, said Hancock.
LOL...
Hillary to be guest ebonics speaker.
Get your kids the he<< out of publics schools as fast as you can. This is a prime example of why school vouchers are necessary. What absolute garbage!
I don't feel no ways tired.
Hukd un Ebonikks - it be wurk for me. :D
Wow, I can't wait until they approve Arabic being used in the classroom. Thank God I'm on the tail-end of my life. This country is doomed.
you wan a brink wif at Dig Mac
Lets not correct them lets join them, its easier to give up than to fight! This is what we pore millions of dollars into each year. Does anyone see the schools getting any better, I thought so!
One must AXE, why?
LOL
Thirty years ago we lived in Oakland, CA and put our kids through private schools because the standard joke was that if they attended public schools they would learn to conjugate the verb 'to be' as "I be, you be, he be...." Amazing that this nonsense is still around.
I think Ebonics could be the only shot they have.
What a dump (my apologies to any Rochesterites)!!!
i axed you if u wanna brink wif dat BigMac, o is u gonna eet dat wif nuffin
Asssss da ledder of this-in hear skool I declar tha iss OK fer all dem studens to be larnin dis way a'talk so-as theys can git themsefs a gud job whenin theys git they-selves outen da skool an ifen some company don'an hire them den dose employers dey be discriminatin do-un yous know?
BEFORE:
"O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?
Deny thy father and refuse thy name!
Or, if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love,
And I'll no longer be a Capulet."
AFTER:
"Yo, Romeo, Romeo! Why you gotta be a Romeo?
Dis your momma's baby daddy and don't be having his name!
But if you don't be doing that, you gots to say you is, like, down with me, fo ever,
And I be all, "child, I ain't no motherf*ckin' Capulet no more. Word."
LOL As a once-upon-a-time a long time ago English major, I say ole man that is good work!
Will they provide English/BEV dictionaries for teachers?
Next they can produce a Black Barbie: "English be hard!"
Next they can produce a Black Barbie: "English be hard!"
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