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Students Hooked on 'Ebonics' Are Being Groomed for Failure
INSIGHT magazine ^ | June 3, 2002 | Nicholas Stix

Posted on 06/04/2002 9:16:59 AM PDT by Stand Watch Listen

Remember "ebonics?" In December 1996 a national debate erupted about the Oakland, Calif., school-board decision authorizing teachers to use street slang while teaching children standard English. For the last six years, with the connivance of the mainstream media, most Americans have been able to forget ebonics. Unfortunately, however, this foolishness has continued.

Linguistics professors Walt Wolfram and Erik Thomas defend ebonics as the legitimate dialect of a dynamic minority in their new book, The Development of African-American English. New York state regent Adelaide Sanford recently insisted that her support of ebonics had been "misrepresented" and that ebonics is the language of great black poets of the past, such as James Weldon Johnson. In 2001, the Linguistics Society of America (LSA) reiterated its 1997 statement supporting ebonics. And, in 1998, academics Lisa Delpit and Theresa Perry edited an anthology, The Real Ebonics Debate, in which none of the approximately 30 contributions dared to criticize the newly accepted dialect.

"Experts" tell us that ebonics is three things: 1) an African language that is genetically passed on among blacks; 2) a vocabulary that has grown out of the encounter of African slaves with Irish immigrants; and 3) a wholly new dialect created since the 1960s by young blacks to separate themselves from whites.

You might expect someone to have pointed out that the above definitions are mutually incompatible. But no such luck. Despite having a professional interest in rigorous, scholarly debate, most linguistics professors long ago abandoned any pretenses to objectivity. The most common — and correct — understanding by blacks and whites alike is that ebonics is broken English and/or street slang. However, any educator so defining ebonics is sure to be shouted down, or worse. As a result, those who know better have remained silent — as one well-meaning academic once advised me to do.

Although ebonics supporters such as Keith Gilyard publicly have claimed otherwise, children taught using ebonics readers did worse than their peers who were taught with standard English readers. Consider this from an ebonics reader used by professors John and Angela Rickford:

"This here little Sister name Mae was most definitely untogether. I mean, like she didn't act together. She didn't look together. She was just an untogether Sister.

"Her teacher was always sounding on her 'bout daydreaming in class. I mean, like, just 'bout every day the teacher would be getting on her case. But it didn't seem to bother her none. She just kept on keeping on. Like, I guess daydreaming was her groove. And you know what they say: 'Don't knock your Sister's groove.' But a whole lotta people did knock it. But like I say, she just kept on keeping on.

"One day Mae was taking [sic] to herself in the lunch room. She was having this righteous old conversation with herself. She say, 'I wanna be a princess with long golden hair.' Now can you get ready for that? Long golden hair!

"Well, anyway, Mae say, 'If I can't be a princess I'll settle for some long golden hair. If I could just have me some long golden hair everything would be all right with me. Lord, if I could just have me some long golden hair.'"

Ebonics is a pillar of Afrocentrism. It is a movement which, using intimidation, violence and pseudoscholarship, has dumbed down the education of black children beyond recognition, illegally barred whites from teaching black children and deliberately cut poor, black children off from the mainstream of American life.

Afrocentrists maintain that the pigment melanin makes blacks intellectually, morally and culturally superior to whites. They teach black children that ancient black Egyptians flew gliders, that whites who dispute such fairy tales are racists who seek to deny black greatness and that all black educational failure is due to a racist, white conspiracy.

Afrocentrists such as George Washington University professor Robert Williams, who coined the term "ebonics" in 1973, maintain that it is an act of disrespect for a white teacher to correct a black child. Professor Charles Coleman of the City University of New York's (CUNY's) York College has argued that remedial education is harmful to black students.

Progressive white educators who support Afrocentrists insist that it is wrong to correct students' usage and grammar. Unfortunately, this approach leads teachers to give passing grades on writing-proficiency exams. The CUNY remedial students then are permitted to take college-level classes despite possessing only semiliterate reading abilities.

Many middle-class blacks like to sometimes "go ghetto" and use street slang. But these professionals can speak standard English — in many cases, better than I can — and can always go home. The poor and working-class blacks to whom Afrocentric educators have refused to teach standard English, however, have nowhere to go.

Nicholas Stix writes frequently on education issues and has been an instructor in the City University of New York.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: academialist; afrocentricity; educationnews; freetrade; geopolitics; govwatch; nwo
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To: mhking;Lance Romance
Poor Lance made a racist comment on another thread and has been trying very hard to make those that pointed it out (connectthedots and I) look like people who don't know the difference between a racist comment or not. I do. I'm sure mhking does, as well. Lance, give it up. Get over it.
141 posted on 06/04/2002 6:18:09 PM PDT by stands2reason
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To: Phantom Lord
I remember that very well! Don't remember which game show it was. Seems to me one of the contestants on this very same show gave 'Europe' as the name of a foreign country. Remember that?
142 posted on 06/04/2002 6:41:04 PM PDT by abclily
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To: Calvin Locke
I think the debate was on which language was the true primal language of man, whether it was Hebrew or Latin, or other some such language.
143 posted on 06/04/2002 6:53:12 PM PDT by stands2reason
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To: stands2reason
I said it was psych 1. Credit to fulfill "liberal arts" requirement.
Not too mention better part of 25 years ago.
144 posted on 06/04/2002 7:20:10 PM PDT by Calvin Locke
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To: madfly
Nah ebonics amuses me beatch.
145 posted on 06/04/2002 8:33:18 PM PDT by weikel
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To: mhking
I wish my sister could talk to you and read your excellent postings. She won't because she is very liberal and the words "Free Republic" scare the daylights out of her. My dear, highly educated sister tutors athletes in a remedial reading & writing program at a very large midwestern college. She told me the other day that she feels the need to use "ghetto" (her word, not mine) in order to communicate with her students. I asked, why not encourage them to speak properly? She had no reasonable answer to that one. My next comment was that she wasn't doing them favors by allowing poor speech. Isn't a mind a terrible thing to waste on the low expectations of ebonics?
146 posted on 06/04/2002 8:46:06 PM PDT by Rollee
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To: Rollee
I'll let you in on a secret. I posted the long piece I wrote today on my blogger site at http://mhking.blogspot.com/. So if you're afraid to send her here, then send her there - I don't mention FR by name there, but I do save some of my stuff there. I'm trying to collate a lot of my writings with the intent of publishing a book at some point down the line. In addition, I tend to put some of my things on my other site at http://www.ramblings.tk/.

Hope that helps...

147 posted on 06/04/2002 8:54:11 PM PDT by mhking
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To: Rollee
She told me the other day that she feels the need to use "ghetto" (her word, not mine) in order to communicate with her students. I asked, why not encourage them to speak properly? She had no reasonable answer to that one.

Here's a big kick. The kids that do make it to the pros need to know how to talk properly, if for nothing else than to be able to be interviewed on television. ESPN won't touch a kid who can't speak the language, no matter how well he plays...

148 posted on 06/04/2002 8:56:23 PM PDT by mhking
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To: parsifal
Nice work Parsy! "groobedy??" Whuzzat?!?
149 posted on 06/04/2002 9:07:28 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: mhking
Thank you very much, I will direct her to your links. I appreciate the help. I do hate to see how her thinking has been manipulated by all of that liberal bs.
150 posted on 06/04/2002 9:15:39 PM PDT by Rollee
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To: tdadams
That was the essence of my post, too.

-PJ

151 posted on 06/04/2002 9:19:41 PM PDT by Political Junkie Too
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To: Stand Watch Listen;all
A man may take to drink because he feels himself to be a failure, and then fail all the more completely because he drinks. It is rather the same thing that is happening to the English language. It becomes ugly and inaccurate because our thoughts are foolish, but the slovenliness of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts.

-- Orwell, Politics and the English Language.

152 posted on 06/04/2002 10:02:28 PM PDT by Dakmar
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To: Maceman
Highland Scots is another example of a dialect of english i have found to be completely unintelligible to me in some speakers. As far as I am concerned there are romance languages that are more mutually intelligible than highland scots and bbc english are. I understand lowland scots fine, but had no chance with the northern dialect, i literally understood something like 1 in 3 words.
153 posted on 06/04/2002 10:19:11 PM PDT by WoofDog123
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To: mhking
Thanks for the ping.

I don't speak Ebonics myself and never did- I feel it's better to speak standard English and was raised to do just that. I talk the way I write.

At the same time, some Black children come to school speaking some form of Ebonics, usually because it's all they hear around them and no one has yet insisted they speak Standard English. It's generally a good idea for their teachers to at least be able to understand what they're saying while teaching them standard English. That's not the same thing as teaching the children Ebonics or allowing them to only speak it.

154 posted on 06/04/2002 10:57:07 PM PDT by mafree
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To: Calvin Locke
Well, ex-CUUUUUUUUUSE me!!! ;-)
155 posted on 06/04/2002 11:12:10 PM PDT by stands2reason
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To: WhyisaTexasgirlinPA
Perhaps, he didn't have any home trainin.
156 posted on 06/05/2002 4:49:17 AM PDT by Cagey
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To: mhking
The kids that do make it to the pros need to know how to talk properly, if for nothing else than to be able to be interviewed on television. ESPN won't touch a kid who can't speak the language, no matter how well he plays...

LOL. I remember when Shaquile O'Neal first entered the NBA and would be interviewed on TV. You could barely understand a word he said, although not because he spoke ebonics, he just mumbled terribly and could barely form a complete sentence. He also had the annoying habit of looking chronically distracted, looking everywhere but at the interviewer.

Somebody must have gotten on his case enough and sent him to a voice coach, because usually when I see him now, he speaks clearly in full sentences and focuses on the interviewer.

157 posted on 06/05/2002 5:07:37 AM PDT by tdadams
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To: Cagey
Perhaps, he didn't have any home trainin.

And he lives in Tennessee! lol Perhaps no one welcomed him with a casserole when he moved there, so he's pouting....... ;^)

158 posted on 06/05/2002 5:28:40 AM PDT by WhyisaTexasgirlinPA
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To: WhyisaTexasgirlinPA
And he lives in Tennessee! lol Perhaps no one welcomed him with a casserole when he moved there, so he's pouting....... ;^)

My career choice ties me to Nashville, but I generally like the South. The people are very friendly and the quality of life is great. But I do wish the people here could talk normally.

159 posted on 06/05/2002 5:31:22 AM PDT by tdadams
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Comment #160 Removed by Moderator


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