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A Reader Proposes Educating WSJ
About The Citizen Child Flaw
A Latin American Student Reports Passing His
Midterm; We Comment.
From: “Manuel
Cufre”
Hello, I'm a Latin American immigrant living in NYC.
I'm 18 years old and close to getting my high school
diploma. I actually did most part of my education in my
Latin American Third World country; I've been living in
the USA for 2 years only.
My school is public, but it’s not certainly the
typical public school. It’s more inclined towards arts,
and the people that study there are mostly decent,
non-violent - you could say respectful.
At this time of the year, schools give a midterm
test. I had to take mine a week ago. These tests are
mostly composed of
excerpts from different Regents Exams given
throughout the years.
I have to admit that I am not the best student you
could meet, I've always (even in my country) found
school material boring and unhelpful, and preferred to
educate myself. When I went to take my American History
test, I was not very confident of my chances of passing,
simply because I had been absent for that class, except
only for two days. (Unfortunately, I fell asleep those
two times).
When I first saw the test, I was sure there was no
way I could pass it! There were lots of multiple choice
questions and then an essay.
Well, when I started, I noticed that actually there
was not much knowledge needed to answer the questions.
They were just a bunch of multiple choices, mostly about
the basis of democracy and the principles of the
American Declaration of Independence. Just using logic,
I tried to "guess" the answers.
Then, when I finished that step, I went to the last
one, which was the essay. I'll quote to you the topic.
"Theme: Equality”
In United States history,
the rights of "life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness", as stated in the Declaration of
Independence, have often been denied to certain groups
of Americans.
Then the essay asked you to write about one group of
oppressed Americans and what/who helped them to set free
from this oppression.
I didn't like this topic. I personally think that, in
a school of mostly non-white kids, constantly raising
the topic of racism and discrimination (as we do) just
keeps people finding excuses for failure, instead of
trying to improve themselves. And also, of course,
feeling hostility towards the "main oppressor" - whites.
(No distinction between them).
Anyways, I wrote the essay and then forgot about
school for Thanksgiving.
Today, I went back to school to find out that I got
an 85% in my American History test, that I just got
three multiple choices wrong, and my essay was perfect
except for the fact that I didn't mention two
events/individuals who helped set the oppressed
minorities free from discrimination etc. etc.
[See scoring
rubric.]
It wasn't the same with the other students who DID
had good attendance and supposedly studied the subject.
Most kids got low grades. And the teacher, who holds
very strong liberal ideals and constantly makes
everybody notice how GUILTY she feels for being white,
started desperately justifying them, trying to make them
feel that, regardless of their poor performance, they
were still very intelligent and capable - thus
eliminating any possibility of the kids realizing that
they need to improve.
I want to make clear that I am not writing this
letter in order to demonstrate how intelligent I am for
doing better than a bunch of non-white New Yorker kids
on a very easy test, no way!
The fact is that this American History test is
something that anybody in a well-educated country should
be able to pass easily, as I did.
But New York City public schools in my experience are
designed for non-white kids (the large majority) to
graduate without any effort! Most teachers I have
encountered are very worried about being politically
correct. They don't want to discriminate against school
kids. Failing some and passing others would mean that
there are indeed superiors and inferiors. We can’t have
that!
The point is that standards in New York City public
school are so low. This is what it is like to go to a
pretty decent NYC public school. I'm sure it would be
shocking (even for me) to experience a BAD NYC public
school.
(Sorry for any spelling horror, Third Worlders like
me don't have enough money to study other languages, we
have to learn however we can!)
[VDARE.COM Note:
We fixed some spelling, which we always do in
letters, and for that matter in submissions by
professional writers, but actually the English that
Señor Cufre apologizes for is no worse than that of many
native speakers. The lack of studiousness he reports is
also paralleled by many native-born Americans,
especially if they are in possession, as he is, of an
electronic drum kit.
His is an interesting
letter for many reasons. One of them is that American
history as taught in high school now appears to be a
matter of deduction rather than induction, of ideology
(or dogma) rather than facts. No doubt this is the
inevitable consequence of reconstructing America as a “Proposition
Nation.”]
December 05, 2002