Monday, October 21, 2013

Bay Area Gang Problems: Should we have compassion for a community callus?

Eva Tovar Gil
Professor Monique Williams
English 1A
October 21, 2013

Many gang members have eventually died inside due to the fact that no compassion is offered towards them. Gang members are individuals who others view as hazards for society and deny to show or offer compassion towards them. However, these group of individuals are no different from the rest of us and depend from others sympathy to stay together and alive. As mentioned in Tattoos on the Heart by Gregory Boyle "Author and psychiatrist James Gilligan writes that the self cannot survive without love, and the self, starved of love, dies." (Boyle 46) Compassion makes an individual feel good it makes him feel as if somebody or anybody cares for him; that he matters. Many people from callous communities chase after a hopeless damaging path because there's no advice contributed against their harming actions. Often advice is received by one's own parents or other relative who just want the best for one. Yet, too frequent there's no way to have hold of this person for certain reasons. Many parents spend their time making money to support their families and have no time to put towards advising their children. Alike any other teenager kids become rebellious and do what pleases his desires. Many children, teenagers and even adults at many times wonder around the harmful environments in seek for something that fulfills their desire and get involved with trouble, until it becomes a habit doing it. Alike drugs, in which many get into, getting into trouble also becomes an addiction and it gets hard to get rid of. Many of the individuals who become addicted to entity need support from others get of the enslaved habits. They require for someone to let them know that they matter and their life has a value. That their state of being alive isn't just of benefit for them but for others as well. Having compassion towards these falling people can attain them some advice and lead them through a good path. A path that they themselves will enjoy later on in life, not a path they will regret of. In spite of the fact that falling forms process of the lifting, it takes someone to have compassion and to be there to guide him towards the higher roadway. Although, if no benevolence of such type is put towards these group of individuals,  gang members are the productivity for this absence of compassion.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Book One andTwo: Eva Wilde



Book Three: EVA WILDE AND THE RACE TO FREEDOM.

http://jenmariewilde.com/for-everyone-asking-about-book-three/

English 1A: The 3 Last Paragraphs

Colors and recreations can affect the mood of children negatively if they do have hold of them. Many children are attracted to bright colors. Studies have shown that "color can affect mood." states Mark Twain in Colour and Children. At early age the kids in elementary schools in Anacostia take notice of the dullness their schools project. These kids think of ways of bettering their schools by adding color to "the classrooms. [Being more specific] Blue and white." (Kozol 218) they are terrified by the sadness their schools show, which they shouldn't because it is not their role and it's unhealthy for a kid to worry of such circumstances at early age. The color blue, according to David Johnson's article, is "Peaceful, tranquil blue causes the body to produce calming chemicals...". The kids show concern for their schools, which makes understandable why these little children look for ways to find calm. At other schools, Gourdy Elementary in Chicago for instance, the buildings are "nonetheless depressing." (Kozol 77) They lack playgrounds, swings and jungle gyms and if they were to benefit from it they'd possibly not "cry out for something more... "( Kozol 78). Poor public schools, due to lack of funding, tend to be the least cared of, they lack supplies but worse of all they lack the interest of a child; the buildings lack vivid environments for the children. Playgrounds might not be essential to a school's staff but for kids they are to the kids. Whether kids go "home light- or heavy-hearted [it all] depends on what happened during play time." "recess is the emotional core of [the children's] school day" (Bernstein,  David); mentioned in The Power of Playground. Playgrounds make the children feel joyous and content. Yet, when these are taken away or not present or at reach, kids feel the sad, blue, inactive, the opposite. The absence of colors and jungle gyms, which are typically not obtained at the poor schools, tend to bring down a child's emotions.
When there's zero or poor supplies to provide in schools the students feel less motivated and to a smaller extent inspired. I, personally, experienced my soccer-mates' little enthusiasm in continuing in the team because we were offered crumbs. Our school's sport teams had no equipment especially for soccer, which was the sport that I had involved with, and the little it did was not under no condition to be used. The ladders had knots that held them together, the uniforms' numbers weren't completely taped, the soccer balls were literally falling in pieces, the field was technically a pond, in the winter, which most of the time dragged us down and held us from running. The school had a turf field but it was saved either for football, track or varsity soccer while we were excluded; they were the school's priority. During practice, under the rain, I often saw the disappointment on my mates, nothing would come out of their verbally, but you wouldn't need for them to out-pour their thoughts, their faces would state everything their minds did. We weren't going anywhere far with what we had that was a fact. So, as we continued with the everyday practice their motivation would start to drastically disappear. Alike a plague, I started to sicken as well. I lost interest because it seemed like we weren't given at most the basic. I lost motivation in getting enrolled in the sports that held that specific school. Several other girls, almost most of the team, we can say, lost their motivation too and quit. When there's nothing being offered when there’s a no desire to of trade in. The point of giving up everything for nothing in return sounds somewhat unfair to many of us, so we tend to get discouraged. Therefore, an absence of inducement is created when encourage (or material) itself it's not proposed.

Contribution of materials influence the consciousness a child, when they're not contributed it makes the individual feel less appreciated. "Her eyes are bright with anger. [And asks] 'Why are we treated like this?' " (Kozol 186) is a question that echoes the conscious of a teenager and many more who experience the same recognition of worth. The useless books, collapsing buildings and other matters make these individuals unappreciated and treated unfairly. Compare to what the rich receive in the suburbs these poor people have nothing. The poor notice that their competitors are treated superior to them when they all belong to the same kingdom. They notice that there's a dual system that works district schools and local districts by segregating them, although segregation for them is not a beneficial. As much as the rich and system try to blindfold the truth they notice, and coactively reality makes the poor feel less, and although they shouldn't, the feeling can't be avoided. Un-appreciation can be avoided when there’s nothing offered.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

English 1A: The 9 Paragraphs

Eva Tovar Gil
English 1A
Professor Monique Williams
October 6, 2013

To what where given can either break us up or build us up, materials are absolutely necessary for the better achieving of a child. The skills an individual gains through what is given can be conclude where he might end up later in life. “well-known private school… alumni gifts, the colleges that they attend [to], [where] 99 percent of the children graduating, a superb curriculum…” (Kozol 176) due to the skills they acquired through the provision of pleasant school materials, which children from poor schools, that lack these supplies, are not prepared and don’t “even have a chance” “ to compete with”. In Pyne Point High School in Camden, NJ students still use "Olympian [typewriting] machines," (Kozol 167). Children don't have access to recently updated computers which keeps them from improving their clerical skills. In addition, they are at a high disadvantage from obtaining the most common job within their surroundings. "If you learn on these typewriters, you will find it easier to move on to computers... ” (Kozol 168) says these students' teacher. Yet, an office job does not only consist in typing but knowing how to use a computer including many other factors. Every individual seeks for a different world. Carlos, a high school student, who once had dropped out of school, found achievement in theater. According to his teacher if it wouldn't be because of theater God knows where he would be at that time of his life; "Now, if we didn't have the theater program, you would have to ask if Carlos would have stayed in school." (Kozol 123) Many students depend on theatrical futures and are at high ability to achieve it, they have what it takes, however their only impediment is what could harm them the most, a theater in which they can unfold and practice their gifted skills. At Woodrow Wilson High in Camden “the average reading level of the students of the school is just below sixth grade.” (Kozol 195) Basic-skills classes also take place in the school’s basement where the students are taught “the ’Work-A-Text’ on 12 computers”. The “Work-A-Text Study Program” according to Kozol has “no literature─ in fact, there are no books.” Students are limited to expand and better their writing skills due to this lack of computers and deficiency of literature practice. Eventually, students are held behind and kept from improving their skills and are therefore at a huge disadvantage from competing against the suburban kids. The higher a student achieves and gains in education, and other academic associations, the more likely he or she is to find more opportunities, when talking of job matters. Yet, again, with such a high deficiency in the urban schools, these students are less likely to move forward in life. They are most obliged to end where they began. Meanwhile the rich suburbs take Apple 2 computers and “higher-order skills” (195) for granted, refraining the fact that they have gained a “verbal competence” that will benefit them in their future; a verbal competence that the children from the urban children will hardly ever acquire. “To a certain degree, the skillfulness and cleverness that they display seem to derive precisely from this sense of unreality.” now imagine what the children from the poor public school could do with such a skill, they would anon take advantage of it. Their life experience would thunder their words similar to those of Socrates, whom often spoke with cleverness. Yet, sadly these kids aren’t offered much which is why their ghetto language will continuously often be heard in incorrect or incomplete declarations, alike “There go one!”, and will resonate within our minds and conscious. The materials provided within the education of a student can ascertain where the child will eventually land, whether it is for better or for worst for him.

The lack of materials and shortage of supplies can indeed affect the performance of the students. The provided material can influence the outcomes of a student. “Lack of facilities have an adverse effect on the performance of students in the less endowed schools…” states a KNUST professor in Lack of facilities affect students’ performance. Distractions are some of the misfortunes that many of the schools that, due to deficiency of required space, have to go through as an everyday life. Over-crowded classrooms are provided to students at several of Washington’s poor districts. Kozol, itself, experienced crowding when in 1964 he was settled, with his fourth graders, in a shared-auditorium in which three other classes where arranged as well, those subjects included rehearsing and choir. The lack of classrooms in schools leads the staff members to make arrangements that are scarcely at their reach and therefore are left with no other choice but to assign more students to already full classes. Over-crowding students into large classrooms often leads to low performances. Students tent to lose their concentration and the capability to intake the material in lecturing decreases. Often when there’s too much noise within a classroom it is difficult, even for the instructor, to put full focus and to fluently follow lecturing with ease. In high school when I was currently enrolled in algebra, the classroom in which I was in was often used by other teachers to send their misbehaving-students. Supposedly, Mr. Lopez, my once professor, was well-known for "punishing" students, but if you were one of his official students you’d come realize it wasn’t true; in fact he was one of the nicest teachers. He never quite achieved to manage a misbehaving class and would frequently get distracted and often found enjoying a conversation with the students who were “punishably” sent to his classroom. Yet again, compared to Boston’s, Washington’s, etc. over-crowded and distracting classrooms, we had nothing to complain about. Our distractions were willful while theirs obligatory. “It is a betrayal of the best things that we value when poor children are obliged to sing these songs in storerooms and coat closets.” (193) states Kozol as he makes a statement observation of children being squeezed into spaciousness.  Students in Woodrow Wilson High are tightly packed into "extremely old and too small... " (195) desks. It is an obstacle trying to pay full attention when one is certainly feeling uncomfortable. Distractions as such only obstruct the students' well-being and better performance and only access the inability to focus. Not being enough, other schools run short in physical educational materials. In East Orange, little children have to wait approximately fifteen minutes to have a hold of a jump rope. Meanwhile, in at Irvington High School "To shoot one basketball... "students have to wait about twenty minutes. It is a shame to hear such circumstances in which these schools are, meaning that jump ropes can be obtained at dollar stores, and yet there aren't enough for each child. Less jump ropes, basketballs and other physical education materials means more weight gain. In addition, more weight-gain means more fat stored into the children's brain which eventually causes brain shrinkage. According to a study, when brain shrinkage is acquired with it comes poor memory, attention, language and processing speed skills. Often people say, that there's no such thing as impossibility, but I deny to believe that these individuals have tried grasping some knowledge out of a book which several pages that have gone missing, any assistance or without any help at all. Students in the urban schools have experienced these absences. "We have to read Charles Dickens... Pages are missing." (186) points out a student, missing the observation that this can harm her achievement in class. With so many missing pages children cannot gather the material needed for their assignments that will, in matter of time, hunt back. Moreover there is little to expect from incomplete books, since too much information cannot be obtained. Yet, books and classrooms are not the only essentials in scarce, furthermore, schools also combat the shrinkage of scientific supplements within the labs. Some "children hold eyedroppers" (Kozol 168) while performing assigned experiments instead of utilizing pipettes. Yet, the problem isnot the eyedroppers being used rather that the results they are receiving are not the desired ones from the experiment. The students are to describe the phenomena going on the experiment nevertheless, with the supplies they have in hand, they will not accomplish it; cocktail glasses where not designed for creating ripples. Required equipment is indispensable in order to be in possession pleasant achievement alike those of the suburban kids.

Motivation also depends on the equipment provided to the students and schools’ staff. Additionally shortage of materials can surrender individuals break up their enthusiasm to continue with education. “This school ain’t shit.” (Kozol 223) doubting that many more individuals do not feel this way, points out a of student at Spingarn High School, one the several poor urban schools located in Washington, D.C., which held a steaming-hot-humid temperature not mentioning that every window appeared to be “nailed shut”. However the student’s teacher did not intent to argue against his point of view, in fact agreed with the visible and torturing reality as she replied, “I have to teach you here. We both know what it is.” (223). Incarceration seems what it feels like when there’s no air conditioning and other resources. Disappointment and little motivation are the feelings which surround the rooms of the poor public schools that do not benefit from the materials the rich take for granted. Many students, from the urban regions, feel ashamed of what’s being offered to them, and what we expect from somebody who’s ashamed is to eventually give up or at least avoid what’s being offered. “This school ain’t shit.” could, to many, be just a cheap shot, but within this message comes an outpouring of rage, of anger that others might not be able to see, reason why they don’t have the necessity to do so, because they are not at deficiency of what keeps a student motivated. They rage because they are aware that all this is due to racial and discriminant segregation, yet nobody offer them a good, understanding and clear reason of why this is being done. “Way it is, I feel ashamed.” (Kozol 218) replies a little girl after when she’s asked “Why [would she buy] blue curtains?” for her teacher’s classroom. Shame of what is that's being held at her school, nothing is what the school holds. “Curtains” is all she asks for to keep the place a little vivid, a little vivid to bring those who convivient in the building alive a little cheered up, motivated. There is little motivation from elementary schools that cannot afford to set up a playground for the children. Playgrounds are what bring the fun out of children, without them the fun disapears and the brightness of their tiny souls vanishes away. Indeed, little children are young enough to not be aware of recism but not ignorant to know that not having a playground for their shool is unfair and out of sense. Disregarding the fact that even teachers fall asleep in the classrooms reason why they are not motivated enough to keep a class going on. In science classes for instructor there's little to continue with if there are no materials so then they tend to fall asleep which leaves the students with no salvation and even less motivation. The scope of the absence of equipment can get to overpower an individual's inspiration to as low as the dust could get.

Menace and malign is just about one of the groups that fruit in the poor urban cities, tolling the diminishing of educational equipment. In Waiting for Superman "Experts tent to blame falling schools on falling neighborhoods, but is the contrary." Falling neighborhoods are determined on falling schools. Prostitution, drug dealing, violence, and other substances enter forcefully the cities in which poor public schools invade. Anacostia "it's like being in a battle zone." (Kozol 226); according to a mother living in the region. Pregnancies among high and junior scholars does not become an abnormal topic. However, pregnancies aren't at high rate just because girls want to be rebellious alike "rock-stars", rather due to the little expectations, hopes and much hate towards the school system that provides them with inadequate appliances; same reason why school drop outs eventually surplus. Individuals have nothing to look forward to in school which is why most students end up dropping out, including that at last find themselves cruising the streets in search for trouble or already in jail. Job opportunities are found at their most scarce level. Among other, prices in these urban cities are too high that most of the population affiliates can hardly afford a daily meal and so the search for the cheapest and easiest way to obtain it. Women set a price to their bodies while on the other hand men rob or sell drugs. So then, a cycle is created among them and so they tend to find themselves stuck in the same place. Helicopters soar up the sky staying on vigilance for drug dealers. Malign individuals surrounding children share with them the streets, sunshine and moonlight as an everyday life. Little children see drug addicts kneeling down and crawling at night in search for rocks accidently left behind. Prostitution over-crowds the cities too overwhelming that they are arranged to be shipped to other states. Cities alike, Camden, hold more whorehouses, pornographic theaters, gambling establishments and liquor stores than decent restaurants altogether. Violence and the barbarities being performed at the atmosphere creates low property value, indicating that the low bargains attract the low income families and troublemakers. So, once again, there's a cycle that, unless school pregnancies and drop-outs get shortened or even better discontinued, will not get discontinue.

Unhealthy citizens are at more productivity attempt vengeance to school poor availability. However much the performance of a student should matter its health matters the most although the schools do not assure this. As if it wasn’t enough with schools already running short on money, “there’s a lack of health care and the ugly poverty on every side.” (Kozol 185) Roof-less ceilings as in the case of Humphrey County High School in Mississippi, can be hazardous for the health of the students. The uses a hole in the roof as "The only air conditioning" (159) not considering the contradictory outcomes of students and a heavy flu catch. It is understandable that schools lack the funding to make building repairs and that in order to take action upon them it would take a great amount of the school's finance, something that cannot be afforded. And although the schools' priority is the students' wellbeing, poor schools can provide them with well assembled buildings but rather holes zipping water through in raining days. But the children health does not only depend on holes in the ceiling. Wild mushrooms grow besides water barrels, that are intentionally set up to prevent water from spilling, at Morris High; "Big fat ugly things with hairs," (Kozol 127), poisonous creatures surrounding the presence of the students. "Excess moisture can cause mold to grow." and so can mold grow mushrooms. "Mold, bacteria, cockroaches, and dust mites have been linked to... cause children... allergies or asthma [or] to develop either condition." (Quinn, Pat) But families can afford for their children to gain more unhealthy issues. School campuses at East St. Louis already pack up great amounts of sewage, chemicals, and other trash. "The streets are underwater... " (Kozol ) positioning the schools at no difference. Sewage flowing the kitchen of the schools leaving the staff at no other choice but to dismiss the school home. Schools will have to eventually be getting destroyed; materials and objects don't last forever. The problem, however, is that all these factor due to low funding, which aren't being addressed, are not just affecting schools but along with it are damaging the members' health as well particularly the delicate ones, the students.

During the increase of their experience students becoming quite aware of their surroundings. Facts of existence face these poor public school attendants twenty-four-seven that it becomes difficult to avoid and make see them as ordinary pattern of their social life. Kids in urban cities "know enough" (Kozol 648). These youngsters for much young they might seem are at their high capability to know what occurs within their living loop. They are alert that the lemons they receive have, as of that moment, danced too many symphonic songs. That they are becoming too worn out and that the acid fluids have already been squeezed. Students ask Kozol whether he knows if they are "citizens of East St. Louis or America?" genuinely meaning whether they deserve what being proposed to them. Not only the students but including the teachers are conscious of what the system is providing the poor schools with; "I'm not sure I'd recognize what they are doing. [But] We are utterly cut off. "(Kozol 36) Children see the fact that they lack too many supplies within their schools, many of that which are most essential. From crayons to roofing is what the kids settled in the poor schools miss. Many have lost faith on their selves that they don't believe their capability to attending to a college. So do the teachers forget on having little faith on their students, they often and consciously doubt to the most certain points that their apprentices can compete against superb students from the rich suburbs, or to even make it through their sophomore year. Students make comparisons of the things that are included and offered at their schools from that to other schools and come to realize the humongous differentiation. They compare the books they're given for their subjects to those granted to rich kids and take notice of the year differentiation and ask themselves whether the rich are too achievable and advanced or they are just too much of a failure. Still they don’t fall for that. These kids are smart enough and continue asking "why?" until they reality decides to face them and crack-opens the truth that the suburban students take much more than a book at their level for granted.
Schools supplies and materials are essential for a desired performance in every matter, however, obstacles should impediment bestow and excess to the obsessed and those who worship money. "Many of our children suffer from too much." (Kozol 215) accords a Great Neck parent. Cherry Hill has above ten offerings P.E., contains a greenhouse, "18 biology electives" (Kozol198) and has enough finances to offer its certain groups of students with trips. Very much alike to the luxuries at Millerburn where AP courses and sports like ice hockey, which technically requires an ice surface, are all offered to the students. The suburban schools have everything a school needs to perform admirable lectures for their students. Yet, several parents still complain that it is unfair the quality of education their children are receiving at the very wealthy suburbs including the statement that their schools to that of the urban cities are at no great difference from one another's education; "it isn't just New York.  We have problems on Long Island too." (Kozol 214) Just let me restate this, "Sarah Lawrence" a campus that according to my research is neither an elementary school nor a high school but a college, a private and one of the most expensive schools in the nation, not just any wealthy ordinary suburban school, yet this man dares himself to say that it is unfair. The quantity or value these individuals receive seems to not fulfill their expectations. Their mindset appear to be more than cling to selfishness, as no individual agrees to cooperate to give up little of their taxes, as much as they're not willing to give up certain amounts of their staff members, to up-bring and meet the necessities of the others. Many agree that "Money is not the answer... " (Kozol 206) yet we take a glance at their educational properties and we see these illustrate the contrary. So "What [else] could they possibly want,... they don't [already] have?" (Kozol 186) The rich may worship money, however such existence of fact, does not signify that they are least or most depended on materials. Of course materials matter, yet there's a limit of how of much and what type of materials matter.
Perhaps, all in all, even if materials do come in consideration for a better success the mindset is the core material. If anything, luxuries are a hazard. A child can "give up in the face of failure, where the other children may be motivated by the failure... " (Krackovsky, Marina) The effort effect. Children from foreign countries at their homelands achieve more than the children in America, yet, many of these countries differ from each other at a great distance. Several countries offer their apprentices updated technology like Tokyo, Japan. Whereas many other countries, alike Kenya, still offer pencil paper lectures to their students. Although the students that attend to modern schools may be under possession of up to date technology, this does not assert for them to be any better than students how don't have access to such appliances. Indeed, they are different countries, but their capability of learning is still at an equal level or even better. I find myself quite aware of such happenings reason why I've studied in two different countries, not mentioning that the schools I've attended throughout fifteen years distinct their lecturing methods. In Mexico I attended only one school, in a little town, for about five to almost six years. Teachers at the school used blackboards and chalk for the lectures. Meanwhile the students took notes with pencil on paper notebooks, nothing less nothing more. Everyday every kid would show up to class with immense enthusiasm and a great desire to gain more knowledge on the subject. We had little, many most times couldn't even afford their lunch but we were happy, there's no question on that. We had the best anyone could ever have; a family to love and who would be there for support and a knowledge that nobody could rip off. At the early age of six we didn't knew what computers where, but heck did we knew how to multiply and write in cursive, or at most attempt to. We'd perform P.E. exercises outside in the air on dirt floors even on rainy days. "Air conditioning?", well we knew of fans. Yet, never complaint of the little we had and we all achieved outstanding grades compared to those kids from the city. You'll be amazed to see that in Mexico is the entire contrary. The rich kids get to go to the schools in the city, meanwhile the not so poor mixed with the poor attend to the schools located in the small towns. Either way, it was motivation and mindset that rose our school to become one of the highest racked. So, after all, the desire for becoming enlightened and the realization of the scarce options of higher future and education within our small world induced us to get above our level. Therefore, I, from where I've stood, believe materials don't matter as much as how an individual should be inclined to achieve better because "If you want it, you must will it, and if you will it, it will be yours." Materials are only a delusion, the difference might be visibly present for many but in reality there there's nothing there, not much changes when their hold of them. They aren't going to make any miracles to accomplish more for a person.


Apprentices from urban public schools averagely frequent run short on necessary supplies in comparison to their competitors, the rich, who take too much for granted. Poor children lack the access to materials that are essential for their education. "Children in [cities alike] New York may [and do] suffer from too little." (Kozol 215) reason enough to give these children the priority of supplement matter. Such poor groups of children are provided with the worst of all. Kids in the poor New York are given books that seem useless to read because they're missing several pages. It is senseless to read incomplete material, there's zero benefit. There would be not much to chat, debate or argue if information or evidence is ripped out. Without fine books to read possibilities that children will get motivated to read are at floor level; on the contrary they'll grow strong resentments. Furthermore, students can aid from the books by increasing their reading level and vocabulary. Children depend on books to absorb, the knowledge that it’s within them, and play with it, but unless children are not under the possession of such satisfactory quality and quantity books they will not be at their ability to do so. As small as a book can be it is an object that can overpowers children's reading, comprehending, and many more skills. Yet, this is only about the books they lack. These poor children experience many more shortchange, additionally, which clarifies and accord that materials for them are of absolute necessity.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

English 1A Homework: Comparison from Research to Book and vice versa. :)


Eva Tovar
Instructor Monique Williams
English 1A
September 30th, 2013

Schools that fall within the integration of the bay area, alike those to Burbank Elementary, Explore Middle and Hillside Elementary schools, are at low achievement alike the many of the schools in states like East St. Louis High, Woodrow Wilson High and Du Sable High, which don’t receive the necessary aid which doesn’t bring about the same factors to that of other better aided schools. In Differences exist far away from each other in fact these schools are very much alike. According to Jonathan Kozol’s view, as he mentions in one of his projects Savage Inequalities, the image which the poorest schools he’s visited create a feeling of, “simply, bleak.”(91) Kozol’s observations in regard to the schools he attends to are pointed out as inappropriate environments for the children. In 1965 Kozol experienced “35 children in the [fourth grade] class [that] hadn’t had a permanent teacher since they had entered kindergarten.” In the state of California, “[the] average number of students per teacher [is] not to exceed the greater [number] of 29.9” for grades four through eight; according to the California Department of Education in the current fiscal year of 1964. The average numbers are not much far from each other’s. Regarding a recent post as of the year 2011 to 2012 “Union City where schools had an average of 34 students per class” (Oakley, Doug) without including that school officials expect for, Union City high schools, members within a classroom to increase up to 37 students per class by 2013. Districts received no new funding which lead them to cut down their staff members to a lower number leaving the students with fewer teachers and less aid from these members, “Less money forced school districts to cut staff so class sizes grew and individual students got less attention,…” (Oakley, Doug). Teachers in schools located in Boston, Chicago, New York and New Jersey, and other states mentioned throughout the reading, have had to share other school areas that have no relativeness with lecturing a class. Instructors have been forced into school restrooms, hallways, gyms and other extensions that do not contribute with lecturing. Having been enrolled in two of the lowest performing high schools in Hayward, CA Tennyson and Mt. Eden, I have experienced many of these unpleasant happenings. Tennyson’s school campus did not quite had a special application for a computer lab nor did the library had any computers or even an expansion for suitable reading. The supposed “to be a” computer lab had many old computers, computers from 1998 which are rarely found nowadays. Indeed there were many of these computers inside the look-alike storage room, however about an eighty percent of these did not work. Space is not the only factor for low achievement within these schools, however, the branch spreads its twigs. Alike many other urban schools, “We don’t have the money.” (Kozol 168) to afford new technical equipment for students. “Each school in which I volunteered suffered from lack of current technology, but the extent of inequality in this realm was baffling.” states the author of the article Reboot Our Schools as he portrays his experience while volunteering at San Francisco public school, alike the situation of typewrites which are still being used in a Camden school, as mentioned by Kozol. Restating the fact that schools within the bay area region, we don’t only lack the money to keep the staff but we lack the motivational and willful teachers similar to Irl Solomon the 58 year old history teacher who had been teaching for nearly thirty years and still received an income of $38,000 or similar to the 40 year old fifth and sixth grade teacher Cola Hawkins who invests her own money on school materials to provide her students with the most she can help with and keep them enrolled. Many children attending schools in the bay area, alike the students mentioned by Kozol, are dropping-out of school “because they are not getting a strong foundation at the elementary level” reason why “Adequate Yearly Progress [is] not meeting the proficiency levels in both English-Language Arts and Mathematics.” (Kurhi, Eric). Among these elements, school districts can’t provide a safe environment for the children in Glassbrook elementary parallel to the East St. Louis children. Glassbrook is a “very bad school to go to if you want your children to have a good life. they have gangs and kidnappers. i was a student there once and everyday there was this guy that would be there, say hello, and then disapear in a split second. i was very worried that i was going to get kidnapped or molested.” comments one of the reviews posted for the school’s overview on great schools web page.  Schools don’t have the position of these fundamental necessities due to money and yet its members are only children, innocent victims who don’t deserve such scarcity.
Savage inequalities, brings about every bit of information as possible to the reader. I concordantly, gathered from reviews of witnesses to numerical statistics, including factual events. Alike Kozol whom introduces his own attestants I searched for reviews on GreatSchools.org which asserted to have experienced the lack of funding and little appreciation towards the education of the children; very similar points of view to that of the characters in the book. Kozol also introduces a great variety of supportive numerical statistics which I also found in a different research on the California Department of Education web page. The CDE page contained information similar to that of the statewide salaries to teen pregnancy and parenting in California rates. The Oakland Tribunes post article With new state funding, East Bay schools eye crowded classrooms by Doug Oakley supports one of Kozol’s main arguments throughout the whole book. Oakley, in its article, mostly addresses the fact that schools and students can increase their achievement in a successful technique, meanwhile on the contrary the low funding can harm its performance.
Many of these elements are all unfavorable factors due all to funding. Low funding towards the education of children does not only create a melancholic bleak atmosphere in addition it also constructs a blue anonymous soul. Is not just about fighting over a crayon rather how fighting over crayon affects the thinking of a child. It creates the thought of wonder of reason why educational materials dissolve within his or her surroundings. Computers of expensive brands can be of luxury for those who can afford them, however what poor schools require and ask for their students, to succeed in class and complete with their assigned researches, are updated computers. Teachers are one of the main essential appliances for learning, yet mentoring as any other existing service has a value. Teaching has a value which is out of reach for many schools. According to California Department of Education statistics statewide salary for a beginning elementary teacher is $38,625 while for the higher annual salary for a high school teacher is $77,129. The districts may just look at it as just a waste of money but for a poor crowded school it means a four square foot more of space. School resources are vital for the students’ achievement however much high of a cost the object may be. Students seek for their mentors for aid alike their mentors who seek for assistance to help out their students. It’s a cycle, without funding there is no improvement without improvement there is no funding; as ironic as it may sound. Not only does the teacher feel more secure with an accessible class along with them the students feel more successful and less pressured reason why the more available the teacher becomes the more students become encouraged to ask questions. Once leadership takes a start by one of the students then encourage is passed on into other students, and makes them feel comfortable as they get involved with their teachers. These emotions that are created within the students are therefore to be appreciated due to the availability of enough teachers.
Restating what Doug Oakley states in With new state funding, East Bay schools eye crowded classrooms an article in which the foggy view for several districts is finally releasing away from the stress cause by the cuts which were made years ago. Due to cuts many staff members got released from their positions at schools which eventually harmed the performance of students. Oakley summarizes the cause and effects due to low school funding in a small portion of the article. Generally, Oakley asserts that class size does matter for education in fact it creates a better education for its students particularly for kids enrolled in kindergarten or preschool educational programs which is the most affected area of all. Additionally, it addresses the fact that focused teaching for students who fall behind is more reachable and adjusted to classes of smaller sizes. According to one of the studies mentioned smaller class sizes doubles the knowledge grasped by students. Class size also creates concern within the parents and the wellbeing of their children. In kindergarten teachers have more time to spend with their students, individually and in smaller groups, during reading time which can help to increase the child’s capability of reading. The CDE web page provides its user with more accurate numerical facts akin to the state’s constitutions. Reboot Our Schools with anonymous author arguments the lack of current technology within the public schools of San Francisco which he/she experienced encountered while volunteering for a non-profit organization. The author discusses how some schools lack actual computers however it argues that neither the government nor schools districts are at fault for such shortages.  In fact, who is at full fault is the San Francisco district for not keeping up with the maintenance of the already set up computers at these school. The author includes within its article the charitable act of obtaining donations from other companies to include their computers to the schools at no cost. With the identification of this gap the author believes he/she and community members can actually financial stakes could be easily avoided through corporate donations.