Posts Tagged ‘cannot’

Black Education – Have We Made Progress

August 15th, 2010

Black education can use the rich fertilizer of African proverbs. Here is one from the Mafa people of Cameroon, northern Nigeria, and southern Niger: Nobody kills an ignorant person who begs for wisdom. This comes from a culture where even accepting a gift without first refusing it could be considered as begging, and, therefore, disgraceful; yet, humbling yourself to learn something that you should have known in the first place is ranked above prideful ignorance.

I’ve thought about this proverb a great deal, especially concerning those black people who hold the highest academic degrees. It is a great achievement to go through the rigors of Western education and excel. Thanks to integration, this leaves black people open to participate in not only the Western economy and political arenas, but also certain levels of the Western social sphere.

Still, I cannot help thinking about the Jews and how well integrated they were into German society before World War II. Like African Americans, they were judges, doctors, professors, artists, etc. Many of them had disassociated themselves from their cultural and religious heritage just as Westernized black people are doing. Not believing themselves to be like other Jews who had not risen to socially acceptable heights, the Westernized, assimilated Jews may have been more vulnerable to voting for the very laws that would later send them to the concentration camps.

Western education, the basis of black education, systematically teaches that white scholars were the first to discover the way the world and the universe works and that white people have made the greatest contributions to society. This is systemic racism.

Why does this matter? Because you must first deny yourself in order to accept this premise. Look at the price the Jews paid for this self-denial. How many ended up in concentration camps before they rediscovered who they were?

Today, out of all other countries in the world, the United States has the largest percentage of its population in jail or tied up in its legal system. According to a Bureau of Justice Statistics report, surveying prisons, at year end 2008, 7.3 million American adults were under correctional supervision. China has only 1.5 million with four times the population of the U.S. and Russia has less than one million. African Americans, who make up officially 13 percent of the U.S. population, make up nearly one half of the U.S. prison population.

Even more about the state of blacks in America, by far, black people (even educated blacks) die at higher rates than others in the population from common diseases such as cancer; black children seem destined to kill one another faster than they can replace themselves; and, great-grandmothers are raising their great-grandchildren because both grandmothers and mothers are dead, on drugs, or in jail. Great-grandfathers, grandfathers, and fathers statistically are just absent, mostly for similar reasons.

The best source of this information is in a public school. Just teach at an inner city school for even a short while and you will see what our children are enduring far more so than those in other races.

Many educated black people are oblivious to these problems or are more prone to blame those who are suffering for making bad choices, thanking God that they are not like, “those people.”

Westernized black education discounts the psychological effects of slavery and segregation and their legacies upon the black psyche today. For many educated blacks, the extent of their compassion is to tell suffering blacks to “go get a job!” This discounts the 100 percent employment rate of slavery and the fact that it was illegal for black people to be unemployed during segregation. This dismissive attitude among many educated blacks also discounts the fact that during slavery, blacks were not the recipients of the fruits of their labor and that most blacks during segregation made only enough to keep them in a very sick state of debt, not by choice as many educated blacks live today, but by necessity.

It seems highly likely that blacks educated only under the Western educational system forget that having the right to control their own money and participate in both the economy and social spheres of this country are advents newly granted. Furthermore, these rights are subjected to the whims of American laws, which, for the benefit of black people, have been extremely fickle. On average, we can expect a major change about every 50 years or so and the tide is turning. Although there was a slight decrease in prison rates during 2008, statistics show that since the 1980s, prison incarceration rates are growing exponentially.

How does the above proverb fit into this?

Does wisdom suggest that the date on a calendar heralds progress?

Does wisdom suggest that the ability to effectively participate in an economy which consumes the earth’s resources to extinction at the price of human rights demonstrates progress?

Does wisdom suggest that abandoning your self-hood to gain acceptance in social spheres built upon a foundation that crushed the humanity of your ancestors verifies progress?

Does the Westernized educational system promote wisdom or “progress”?

If Western education does not promote wisdom, then might not Westernized, black education increase your ignorance?

Nobody kills an ignorant person who begs for wisdom.

I hope that we African Americans discover that this African proverb is true.

Knowledge of yourself is your Best HBCU. Join Pamela Hamilton to add more to your black education, the primary focus of Best HBCU. Please, leave a comment.

Super Wisdom Foundation to Eclipse Gates Foundation

August 13th, 2010

If who you are matters more to you than what you earn, you should be supporting and promoting the Super Wisdom Foundation and Super Wisdom Dot Com. One; Wherever you are on your journey of self discovery and spiritual growth, Super Wisdom can only benefit your journey. Two; As you gain personal experience with Super Wisdom, you become keenly aware of it’s benefits and value for others and feel compelled to share it. (As I do) Three; Sharing Super Wisdom requires no more personal effort than directing traffic.

As a non profit foundation, Super Wisdom generates no profit but it does generate revenue, to meet expenses and expand its work. Essentially a shoestring bookstore operation since 1998, this small company only received its official non profit status recently. To celebrate, operator Tom Russell has added podcasting and an affiliate program. I became the first affiliate less than two weeks ago. With a webmaster on vacation, I won’t earn a penny until I get my links, banners and content in order on my web site. You, on the other hand, could begin earning in days or hours and assisting the growth of Super Wisdom. I cannot recommend it too highly.

The dawn of the New Age and the Information Age is all about the global awakening to higher consciousness. No more go along to get along. Now it is lead to create leadership. while many of us can claim to have global distribution, most of us are restricted to those people who read and read English in particular. A largely isolated and illiterate world, needs to receive audio instruction in its native languages before it can learn to read anything, in any language. English ought to be an option for awakening, not a requirement.

We now have some text translators for those who are literate in their native languages. This is a growth problem that will be solved soon enough. Audio translation can not be far behind. My point is that audio removes illiteracy as an obstacle to education and consciousness raising on a global scale.

If a company such as Apple Computers was to begin philanthropic work globally, they could divorce the world from Microsoft. An Apple laptop, solar battery charger, satellite transciever and a dozen I pods for every town and village would make Super Wisdom content available to the world and create a vast market for some alternative computer hardware. Sonce Apple likely has corporate mind and not philanthropic mind, the whole thing may be left for you and me and Super Wisdom to do. Are you up for it?

I implore you to visit SuperWisdom.com and spend an hour or more evaluating their work as a potential partner in a work which has all the potential to surpass anything Bill Gates might imagine. The opportunity is here. The opportunity is now. If you can’t spare an hour, you clearly need more wisdom.

Is Your Child Struggling to Read How to Find the Right Foundational Reading Program

August 8th, 2010

One out of every four children grows up without knowing how to read. The fact is many students today are struggling with their reading skills. Unfortunately, most of these students are pushed off to the side or find themselves in a class that doesn’t help them progress. Most teachers just don’t have the time or resources necessary to spend even five minutes with each student individually on their reading skills.

The Scary Statistics

According to the 2003 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), 37 percent of fourth-graders and 26 percent of eighth-graders can’t read at a basic level, or understand what they’ve just read. Forty-four percent of American fourth-graders cannot read fluently.

Most statistics relate reading skills to how many books are in the home, and how much reading is performed at home to income and success levels.

These statistics have been solid about what happens to the majority of children and adults that haven’t learned to read. High dropout rates from high school, high criminal rates, high pregnancy rates, and low incomes. Seven in ten prisoners perform at the lowest literacy rates.

No matter what situation you find yourself in as a concerned parent, teacher, or tutor, you have to find a foundational reading program proven to help your child or student to not only read, but completely comprehend what they’re reading.

Finding a Foundational Reading Program that Works

Finding a good foundational reading program is essential to your child’s or student’s ability to read, grow, and manipulate their way through life. A good foundational program should not only address the letters and sounds or phonics of recognizing words, but convert that knowledge into comprehension.

With the easy distractions of television, video games, and the pull of peers, a program should also be able to keep your child’s attention. Namely, it should entertain them so they look forward to reading and learning. By actively engaging them in not only the sounds and letters of the English language, but the act of recognizing what they’re reading along with understanding what they’ve read; they will gladly enter the reading world with interest and gusto.

A foundational reading program should also give the student the skills necessary to expand on the basics of what they’ve learned so their cognition continues to expand and complement their lives as they progress through school and into adulthood.

Looking To The Future

Reading is essential, especially as we continue hurtling into the 21st century. Technology is injecting itself into every aspect of our lives and we, as a society, will soon not be able to maneuver our way around it. Being able to read and digest the written word and all that will be expected and demanded of us and our children, today’s student’s need the best preparation and every tool possible.

Don’t allow your child or children to continue struggling. Illiteracy in America is a growing and disastrous dilemma. Without the ability to read and comprehend, a child’s future is severely limited. Whether you’ve tried other venues or not, find the excellent fundamental reading program that will take your student to a level you didn’t think possible.

That program should be able to ingrain the basics of letters and sounds (phonics). It should take those basics and expand them into understanding and absorption. It should entertain enough to inspire an appetite for reading and learning. Finally, it should be able to carry your child into the future.