In
class on Thursday we did an egg drop along with the youth in action
students. I remember that the first time
I ever did this was in high school and we did it to help us learn about
Physics. This time I am so glad that it was not to learn about Physics, but learning
about the different classes in our society, such as the poor/working class and
the middle/rich class.
For this activity we were given
materials by the youth in action students and my groups materials consisted of
paper, rubber bands, condoms, balloons, and paper bags. With these materials we had to create
something that would protect our egg from breaking when dropped. My group decided to put the egg in a cup
covering it with a condom and other soft materials that we had and blowing up
the condom to put the cup with the egg in it.
When the youth in action group came over to us and took away some of our
materials, we didn’t let that discourage us because we were more than half way
done and we thought our egg would sustain the fall. To our dismay it didn’t sustain the fall and
the egg broke. After thinking about how
the materials were taken away and how the groups that were inside working on
their egg had more materials than the groups outside (my group) it kind of felt
like we were set up to fail before we even started.
Connecting this all back to Ullucci, I can see how most children don't know what they have until they see what someone else has. I can see how a lot of people/children might
think that they are being set up to fail in life with the lack of resources
that might be given to them, but I feel like we all have the ability to really persevere
over adversity. I am sure that there are
people out in our communities that have come from nothing, but because they
want to make their life better they have overcame them. I think that for everyone there is room for
improvement both within an individual and the institutions around them.
I feel as if it is wrong that some
communities get resources and others don’t.
Today not everyone is going to have what someone else has and it’s
really sad. I wish that all communities had the same resources because then
individuals would feel more prepared for the world a head of them. We see schools in different towns in Rhode
Island that always have new textbooks and other schools that barely have enough
textbooks for everyone or there are schools that have the newest
technology. Just because some schools
have more that doesn’t make their students any smarter or better off than
a student whose school has less, they are just learning in a different way. People
who are poor feel like there is no way out and that feeling of there being no
way out is passed down from them to their kids and so on. When people feel like there is no way out,
that is when our institutions need to step in and change. They need to change
in some way when it comes to there being more jobs, more school materials, and
higher salaries for workers. This would
make communities feel like they are being backed up and someone is rooting for
them to succeed.
There is a quote that I have always
loved and I feel like it really pertains to everything we have learned about. It states, “Be the change you want to see in
the world.” Everyone has a special
purpose that they bring to the world and every word that they say or don’t say
matters. The world is a big place, but
everything that is done either by you, me, or someone else is important.
Here is an article that gives some good tips on essential skills that can be used for overcoming adversity: Essential skills


"When people feel like there is no way out, that is when our institutions need to step in and change. They need to change in some way when it comes to there being more jobs, more school materials, and higher salaries for workers". I couldn't agree more with this. I feel that when people feel like there is no way out it is because they have succumbed to victim blaming. Which is why it is the system that needs to change in order for the individual to succeed in these communities that do not offer what they should. I also love your quote, "There are so many people out there who will tell you that you can't. what you've got to do is turn around and say watch me!" :D
ReplyDeleteWould you support the idea that all taxes utilized for education go into a general fund and are then dispersed to the communities equally? I've been grappling with this idea for the past few months/years because it seems like such an amazing idea on the surface. But then it begs the question, "What about the people who are paying much larger taxes on their homes? Would this be fair to them?" I wonder how it would work, would all the schools be good schools or would our system drop into a blanket of mediocrity. I would truly like to see the numbers of how much money that middle class schools receive and then calculate that number in comparison to how much each school could receive if schools were funded equally. That would be a great experiment to understand exactly what this effect would be on schools. I'm glad that you brought up that point, it is something worth debating and discussing.
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