Posted on 02/25/2017 5:23:14 PM PST by MarvinStinson
I compete with dumb people all day long and love it....
Have they ramped up this nonsense, or is that just my imagination? Racist?! What “language” do they prefer, pray tell?
nothing is more racist than math and science. And books. Chess. Cake-decorating contests.
This is what leftism and progressivism has come to. It is trying to infect every nook and cranny of life in general. NOTHING will be spared. Next, toilet paper will somehow be racist.
Asao B. Inoue
Protected Tweets
Director of the University Writing Program and Writing Center at the University of Washington Tacoma, searcher of antiracist writing assessment.
.
https://twitter.com/AsaoBInoue?protected_redirect=true
Even he is falling for white racism. He should have said, ‘Whhhhite grammar be racis’. ‘
Retarded freaks are everywhere these days but they can be mostly found on “college” campuses.
Apparently he’s a self-hating Whitey. I suspect that he changed his name.
http://directory.tacoma.uw.edu/employee/asao
It seems to me that Bahamians tend to have great grammar.
He be white?
Not even an American.
I agree.
Eliminate humanities departments at state universities.
Ebonics Ver. 2.1b?
White TP?
Naaa, I'm not going to go there....
People who are able to do something well can do that thing for a living, while people who are not able to do anything that well make a living by teaching.
University of Washington, Tacoma
Writing Center
Putting Writing at the Center of Inclusivity
The UW Tacoma Writing Center’s new antiracism and social justice statement aims to confront practices that are systemic throughout academia.
About Writing Center
Following is a statement that Writing Center professional staff, tutors, and the Director worked on extensively. It informs our centers practices and on-going assessment efforts to improve our practices.
STATEMENT ON ANTIRACIST AND SOCIAL JUSTICE WORK IN THE WRITING CENTER
Our Beliefs
The writing center works from several important beliefs that are crucial to helping writers write and succeed in a racist society. The racist conditions of our society are not simply a matter of bias or prejudice that some people hold. In fact, most racism, for instance, is not accomplished through intent. Racism is the normal condition of things. Racism is pervasive. It is in the systems, structures, rules, languages, expectations, and guidelines that make up our classes, school, and society. For example, linguistic and writing research has shown clearly for many decades that there is no inherent standard of English. Language is constantly changing. These two facts make it very difficult to justify placing people in hierarchies or restricting opportunities and privileges because of the way people communicate in particular versions of English.
Because we all live, work, learn, and communicate within such racist systems, the consultants in the writing center assume that a big part of our job is to help students become more critical of these unjust language structures as they affect students writing and the judgment of that writing. In particular, being aware of racism as structural offers students the best chances to develop as writers and succeed on their own terms in an inherently racist society.
Furthermore, by acknowledging and critiquing the systemic racism that forms parts of UWT and the languages and literacies expected in it, students and writing center consultants can cultivate a more socially just future for everyone. Just avoiding racism is not enough because it means we are doing nothing to stop racism at large, and it amounts to allowing racism to continue.
Our Commitment
The writing center consultants and staff promise to listen and look carefully and compassionately for ways that we may unintentionally perpetuate racism or social injustice, actively engaging in antiracist practices. For instance, we promise to:
be sensitive to our language practices (what we say or allow to be said) and other microaggressions that may make some people feel uncomfortable or feel in some way inferior;
openly discuss social justice issues as they pertain to the writing at hand;
emphasize the importance of rhetorical situations over grammatical correctness in the production of texts;
be reflective and critical of the practices we engage in;
provide students ways to be more aware of grammar as a rhetorical set of choices with various consequences;
discuss racism and social justice issues openly in productive ways;
advocate for the things that will make our Center safe, welcoming, productive, proactive;
challenge conventional word choices and writing explanations;
conduct on-going assessments of the work of the writing center, looking specifically for patterns or potential inequalities or oppressive practices that may be occurring in the Center.
We also realize that racism is connected to other forms of social injustice, such as classism, sexism, heteronormative assumptions, etc., in similar ways. We promise further to do our best to compassionately address these issues as they pertain to student writing as well.
The Writing Center at the University of Washington Tacoma is a part of the Teaching and Learning Center located in Snoqualmie 260, and is closely affiliated with the University Writing Program. All students can make an appointment to see a Writing Consultant in person or online. The Center also offers electronic resources for academic writing.
The whole purpose of language is to communicate.
It appears that English is not the first language of the good professor.
Inoue, A. B. (2007). Articulating Sophistic Rhetoric as a Validity Heuristic for Writing Assessment
shot to the head does wonders for these ‘intellectual giants’.
at least you will know who not to waste your time with. they make it easy.
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