Tuesday, June 30, 2009

NCTE on board with Wikis

This blog from NCTE appeared in my blogbox today. It seems appropriate per our conversations in class. And by the way, thanks for the lesson on linking! That was sooooo much easier!

Monday, June 29, 2009

Visibility (PEOPLE Blog)



"They call it climbing and we call it visibility.
They call it coolness and we call it visibility.
They call it way too rowdy, we call it finally free." -LeTigre


"When the spirit of appropriation is reduced to another corporate slogan or commercial strategy, its rhetorical value is minimal as Elbow asking student to utilize collage for coherent meaning...In these kinds of scenarios, appropriation serves only to reinstitutionalize the already accepted form of discourse. Appropriation is not applied in order to make a new rhetorical turn; it is used to keep the same rhetoric already in place." (Rice 58).

Tom, Don and I went out for drinks last week and we got on the topic of "femme." I tried to explain my identity as a queer fat femme and this article assists me further in doing so: femme is the reappropriation of feminine; to take what has been culturally deemed feminine and appropriate expectations or standards for women and queer them to both challenge femininity and reclaim it. Tattooed arms mark my otherwise invisible femme self, just as some fashion choices accentuate womanly tits and ass (as expected) right along with the fat I'm supposed to hide.

You call it coolness, I call it visibility.

"When working with appropriation, it's not enough to simply cut and rearrange words or images. Writers also must remiagine the logic of structure as well..." (Rice 59).


Structure. Lack of order. Clarity. Visibility. Self. Writing. Keyboard. HTML. Code. Cultural code. The Machine. The Self.

Friday, June 26, 2009

PEOPLE Program and Alverno

Just so y'all are aware, I'm using this page for both Alverno English Methods and the Professional Development course at UW-Madison for the PEOPLE program.

I'll try to specify for which audience I'm writing, however, I don't mind if either set of students reads/comments on any of my posts.


Amy

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Forced Fun

FORCED LABOR

ALSO FORCED

FORCED ALL YEAR LONG

FUN STUFF

ONE SENTENCE LONG FUN

In the beginning, my students loved the idea of blogging. In fact, I remember one student saying, as we set them up, "This is the new facebook!" Fast forward about 100 days and it was no longer the new facebook. Rather, it was pain-in-the-ass homework that was forced.

I feel like a cool-hunter who, once they find what's cool, they also kill it.

Is it possible to use what belongs to youth without killing it? Can we, as teachers-- authority figures--ask students to organically write something--something that is not forced?


Wednesday, June 24, 2009

PEOPLE Response 1: Yancey

So I read and wrote a response with pictures and links and it was everything Yancey suggest we embrace as writing teachers.

But I wrote this response in Vista, Word 2007, which sucks big time, and I could not transfer it. I'm still working on it. More to come, hopefully.
-a

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Queerness in our classrooms

Unfortunately, I couldn't find the specific part of Cho's stand up that I wanted in an isolated, cut-down, youtube clip, so, in order to find the part I'm interested in, please "fast forward" to about the 7-minute mark, and watch to about 8:20. Of course you're welcome to view the whole thing, but it's not all relevant to my argument (also, be forewarned that's it's serious adult content!).


"There are so many gays all over the world! But not Korea! But everywhere else."

I've been thinking more about our discussion last week regarding issues of queerness and the classroom, especially when thinking about queerness within multicultural settings. Here's what I've been thinking about (feel free to read on or not; this is just my own thoughts, nothing required):

From my own experience, I've found that many identity-groups will use that specific identity-category as the excuse for hating queers. When I started working at Metro, a school that is 99% African-American, I was told that issues of homosexuality were deeply frowned upon in the Black community and that I should not address them. When talking to one of my best friends from high school, he told me he'd kick his nephew's asses if any of them even thought about being gay. When I asked him why, he responded, "We're Hispanic. Clearly, you don't understand what it means to be Hispanic!" And Margaret Cho's parody of her mother speaks to the same issue.
So, I started thinking about all of these similar experiences and wondered about white people. We all know that white folks are just as homophobic and heterosexist as anyone else, so why is it, when white folks are homophobic, it's not often tied to a racial identity?
I think, and I could very well be mistaken, that this is because whiteness is invisible (I'm specifically talking about mainstream whites--not crazy supremacists). It is because whiteness is invisible that racism functions so well. We don't ever have to think about our privilege; it just is. Therefore, when whites are homophobic, they *may* cling to other identities such as religious, political, or class identities (i.e. "It's against the bible!").

To say we cannot address issues of queerness in our classrooms because we work with a particular group, especially of a specific race, who is not accepting of it, is troubling for several reasons:

1. This assumes that there are no queers who identify within that group (there are, indeed, gay Koreans, etc.).
2. This allows us to remain neutral, thus not an ally, to those queers within that identity group; we are essentially supporting homophobic practices.
3. This stereotypes that group as being closed-minded bigots incapable of forward and/or different thinking.
4. This assumes that the people of this group cannot/should not/are not capable of being challenged.
5. This assumes that there are no allies in this particular group.
6. This may also perpetuate more racist assumptions about that group.
7. This assumes that individuals do not think for themselves.

I am the Gay/Straight Alliance faculty advisor for Rufus King and the majority of our GAY students are of color--exactly what I was told, in my first year of teaching, would not be the case.
To say that being gay is not ok with the Black community, the Latino community, Asian, etc., is obviously a myth that allows homophobia to thrive.
It puts us, as teachers (especially if we are "outsiders"--racially, culturally, etc--to those we teach), in an uncomfortable place because we don't want to be culturally insensitive; however, I've found that it is simply a myth, fueled by homophobia, that XYZ groups are *particularly* homophobic. One's race, religion, sex, or class does not make one homophobic. One's homophobia makes one homophobic.

I firmly believe that it is our duty to recognize the diversity of all of our students, and this includes challenging homophobia when we see it in our schools.

For more resources: http://www.glsen.org/cgi-bin/iowa/all/home/index.html

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Newsweek's Annual List of Top US High Schools

http://www.newsweek.com/id/201160

Rufus King is at 271; the first WI school to appear! Hurray MPS

Monday, June 1, 2009

Welcome LTM 622!

Hello Ladies,
It was a pleasure meeting you all tonight. I think this will be a fun semester!

Let me know if you're having any problems with this whole blogger-thing!

-a