Preview

Racial Differences In The Book 'White Teacher' By Mrs. Paley

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
550 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Racial Differences In The Book 'White Teacher' By Mrs. Paley
Kindergarten plays a key role in a children life. As being someone who hopes to become a teacher; I couldn’t imagine going through the things Mrs. Paley did. In “White Teacher”, it addresses the racial differences in the classroom. I wonder how today teachers would have handle racial issues within the classroom. Mrs.Paley was a Kindergarten teacher who had the pleasure of teaching in an integrated school. Mrs. Paley was the only teacher willing to teach children of different color. Mrs. Paley writes in “White Teacher” her expensive as a teacher who had to teach children of different ethical and culture. I couldn’t see myself teaching in this time period, because of the hate people had on integrating. Mrs. Paley is a perfect example of how someone should have handled this situation. This book teaches a very important lesson on racial differences and on social differences in society in this time period. In this time period, people didn’t like change. People believed that things should stay as there were. For example, having two schools were a good idea to people. …show more content…
Paley is face with the challenge of having to teach black students. Mrs. Paley challenge was to teach a single black student in an all-white class (her name was Alma). Alma, struggle to get alone with the other (white) students. Alma really didn’t listen to Mrs. Paley. Mrs. Paley tied everything she could have possible thing of, but nothing was working. One day Alma got hurt and Mrs. Paley consoled Alma. Mrs. Paley used words that Alma’s mother or any other black mother would have used to help make her child feel better. “Alma baby, my pretty colored baby. Now hush, y’all Hush, Alma honey” (Page 4). Trust came

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In summation to this reflection upon this movie/ documentary and article we should all as teachers try to strive to help our students look at each other equally and treat them with the same respect, and by providing this lesson of no discrimination to our students. This will hopefully inspire a future were anyone regardless of what their skin color or their ethnicity can feel powerful and just as important as the people that surround…

    • 660 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Rosa Parks

    • 2278 Words
    • 10 Pages

    For the beginning of her school year, Rosa attended a local for blacks, Spring Hill Church School. The white children started school earlier in the year than the blacks. The black children began school in October; this allowed the children help their parents with the farm. The white children also got to ride the bus to school, while the black children had to walk to school. Rosa’s tonsils were infected as a child and throughout most of her teenage life, so this caused her to miss a lot of school. During her fifth grade year, she missed so much school that she got held back.…

    • 2278 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Crime Laboratory Analysts

    • 665 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The children were able to feel how it felt to be segregated against. One child said that he felt like he was a dog on a leash. The children learned to not judge people by their color.…

    • 665 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This essay that I’m going to talk about is about Ruby Bridges. She was the first black black child to cross an invisible line and enter an all-white school. She was only six years old when she went to the school in New Orleans on November 12, 1960. On her first day to the school she was escorted by three men that were white. Also on the first day of school there was a group of white people gathered by Franz Elementary school. When Ruby started walking into the school people would say mean things to her and wanted to hurt her. They would say 2,4,6,8, we don’t want to integrate. The white people would also carry signs saying “No blacks aloud in an all-white school.” She stuck through year of injustices and at the end there were more.…

    • 832 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The first thought that comes to mind when talking about racism is the separation of two races based on skin tone. “In 1960, when a six-year-old girl enrolled in a white school in New Orleans, parents withdrew their white children in her class. She was the only child in her classroom for over a year.”(Baughman et. al.). In the 1960s, African Americans were mistreated in the US, mostly in the south. Kathryn Stockett, the author, assumed that society wouldn’t be as understanding in her writing The Help, because many wouldn’t clasp the fact that the nation was discriminating.(Stockett). For her, though, it was convenient to write about the other side of the situation in this era. “I don’t have to think about the dialect. It wasn’t hard for me to get that musicality on the page because I started writing the voice of Demeitre and she sounded exactly the way I wrote her.”(Stockett). Growing up, she had an African American maid,Demeitre, in which she got close with, and being accustomed to her always being around, it later got her to write Aibileen’s parts in the…

    • 248 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    To Kill a Mockingbird is a novel that can give a clear lesson to further the movement for racial equality. Scout is a little girl in the south. She is the main character and protagonist of the novel. She lives with her brother Jem and her father, Atticus. She is very intelligent, thanks to her father and she is a tomboy.…

    • 352 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    savage inequalities

    • 1225 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In 1964, the author, Jonathan Kozol, is a young man who works as a teacher. Like many others at the time, the grade school where he teaches is of inferior quality, segregated, understaffed, and in poor physical condition. Kozol loses his first job as a teacher because he introduces children to some African American poetry that subtly questions the conditions of blacks in America. Years later, after holding many other socially conscious jobs, Kozol misses working with children. He decides to visit schools across America to see what has changed since those early days of reform. What he learns is horrible. Many schools have student bodies that are still separate and unequal. The remainder of the book details his observations over that year and suggests causes for this shocking state of affairs.…

    • 1225 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    This essay I read called Graduation told a story about a young Middle School African American girl named Maya Angelou, who was graduating and was moving on to High School back in 1940. She was from a small town in Arkansas and was extremely excited to be graduating. She had high hopes for the future and right before the graduation ceremony, she felt like she was the birthday girl, the center of attention. She had done well for herself throughout the school year with very good academic grades and no tardiness and no absence. Her mom was proud and couldn't wait to see her daughter graduate, her mom even made her a nice dress. They had a guest speaker at the graduation ceremony his name was Mr. Donleavy. His introduction speech to the graduates had put the black race down while he praised the white kids and said they were going to be doing much better. that speech by Mr. Donleavy had really upset her. It made her feel really low about being black. Right after the speech one of her classmates went up to speak, his name was Henry Reed. He was the valedictorian. He read a poem that gave her hope and brought her back up in good spirits. She once again felt good about the color of her skin. The graduating class was happy and was encouraged by Henry Reed's speech, they felt like the black race was on top again.…

    • 410 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jane Elliott's Experiment

    • 630 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The third grade students were separated into two groups: blue eyes and brown eyes. Both blue group had a day of being superior and another day of being treated similar to African Americans at that time. The children who were once going to school as best friends and in harmony, had…

    • 630 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The author was very successful in proving her point about the racism going on in the world. She first proved a point by telling her story because she is admitting that racism is something, and how she knows that it is. Her purpose was to inform people that racism is something and if someone that is young with a very racist family can overlook those things her family did, then she knows that people now can start to overlook t what happened in the…

    • 1129 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Martin Luther King once declared, “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. “ This widely known quote shows that the color of a person should not limit the from doing anything. The topic of racism is frequently visited in Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, a novel that takes place during the Great Depression. It focuses on the life of Scout Finch, her brother and the neighborhood she has grown up in, Maycomb County. In To Kill a Mockingbird, Lee uses racism in the trial scene to show that some people are treated unjustly due to their status. This theme is used to represent characters in the novel to show how race creates tension between the people of Maycomb. The treatment of Tom Robinson during the trial scene reveals that people of the…

    • 1367 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mizzou Free Speech

    • 538 Words
    • 3 Pages

    He makes the audience sympathize with the African American teacher when she says “I have been called the N word too many times to count.” It was previously mentioned that the author spoke from many different perspectives so he can get an emotional response from more than one type of group. He brings up the “Black Lives Matter” controversy which tends to bring out some sort of emotion in the majority of Americans. Either people are completely supportive of the phrase or people believe that it should be “All Lives Matter.” There are few people truly do not care so this creates an emotion response. The final emotional appeal is when a student says “I don’t want to debate. I want to talk about my pain.” The two most frequent reactions to this is either complete sympathy and maybe even pity or it could be the complete opposite. Some people saw this quote and was off put by the immaturity it displayed. Even though these topics are controversial and there are a wide view of opinions, it still creates some type of emotion among those who keep up with today’s political…

    • 538 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    From a very young age, I have always held a strong sense of what is right and what is wrong. Being able to sense when something throws off my moral compass is something that I pride myself on, which is how I relate deeply with Jean Louise “Scout” Finch, from To Kill a Mockingbird and Go Set a Watchman. In Watchman, Scout is now in her twenties, and trying to wrap her head around the rapidly changing times of the 1950s, when the entire country is on the brink of major social change on the racial front. Traveling from progressive New York City to her childhood home of Maycomb, Alabama, only deepens her confusion on racial issues. Scout is forced to formulate her own opinions when discovering the deepening troubles concerning race in her hometown……

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One Friday Morning

    • 848 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Nancy Lee may be a colored girl, but at times in her new school she forgets that she has different skin color than the rest of the students. Her peers would overlook her race as well, and they saw her as a young and talented individual. This represents foreshadowing that she was not seen as colored although she was. Nancy Lee had painted an award winning piece worthy of a scholarship to an art institute. The painting was of her grandmother sitting on a park bench looking at the American flag on a bright sunny day. Unfortunately, the art institute didn’t realize that Nancy Lee was a colored girl at the time they chose her painting. When it was made known, they decided to give the scholarship to a white student as they felt if Nancy Lee were to attend the Institute it would cause controversy amongst others. The day Nancy was to receive the award, she was told by her principal, Miss O’Shay, that she would not acquire this magnificent prize because of the color of her skin. Miss O’Shay regrettably informed the talented girl that “When the committee learned that you were colored, they changed their plans.” Nancy Lee looked up at her principal and noticed the bright spring day it was outside just like in her painting. At the weekly assembly, Nancy Lee took her seat along with 3000 other students, turned her head, and said the pledge to the flag that is supposed to symbolize freedom and equal rights with “Liberty and justice for all”. She then decided that even though she was not accepting the award, which was rightfully…

    • 848 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Old Story Time..

    • 672 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Mama sells goods at the market for a living. While Mama was at the market she left her son Len at home to study his books in order to not mix up with the ‘black gals’ in the district, whom Mama thought was of no advancement. Upon Mama’s arrival, to her surprise Len was not at home. Mama began her search, it was at this occasion that she outlined clearly to Len while scolding him that “…life is hard when you are black…but with a little education you still have a chance” (Act I Scene I page 11). Len got caught up by Mama at the river with a black girl named Pearl. Mama reprimanded Len for carousing with Pearl whom she thought lacked advancement. Mama described Pearl as Ms. Esmeralda, frowsy-tail, jigger foot, jeysey ears, board head gal. It was after this description of Pearl in this manner that Mama informed Len that she had a girl picked out for him, a nice brown girl with tall hair down to her back. This was Mama’s dominant example of someone of advancement, Margret, Margret, Margret, Reverend Greaves daughter. This was drilled in his head throughout his entire life.…

    • 672 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays