The most surprising thing was East Austin city is
growing and has their unique history and background. When I interviewed people
about how they think of east Austin, people only said that east Austin is a dangerous
city where low income people and family live. However, after I read the
articles, I learned that east Austin is the fastest growing cities in the US
and the area is now undergoing the rapid gentrification and economic changes. House
market increases and people do investments. People who live in the east Austin
and having a financial difficulty are suffering from the economic changes and
the rise of poverty tax in the city. They are also worrying about their health
because the growing industry pollutes the community. I could also learn that
how east Austin people lived in the past days, and economic, education issues
in east Austin.
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Sunday, September 21, 2014
ASSIGNMENTS DUE on SEPT 22nd
Interview
Criteria
·
Interview
is complete, includes student reflection
·
Timely
completion
·
Provides
a good sense of the student’s strengths/challenges coming into the class
·
DUE DATE: September
22, 2014
I asked to my friends and my sister about how they think
I am and my strengths and weakness. One friend describes me with the Korean
idiom, Wae Yu Nae Gang, which means being gentle to others and in appearance,
but sturdy in spirit. People said I have a kind mind, and know how precious the
people around me are. I am social and have a good relationship with people. I
am a good listener, and I am confident and I have a high esteem. I’m strong and
don’t give up easily. I am passionate about what I want to do and learn, and I
am independent so that I could come to US alone, and go school. I am sincere
and responsible. I’m good at self care and treatment, and do exercise regularly
and take vitamins. I’m good at music and playing the instruments. I do a proper
invest in myself and buy good things for me sometimes. I am mature than other
people in my age. People also told me about my weakness. I am delicate and hesitate
to act and behave get out of rules. I think too much to make a decision, and
worry about something before it happens. I try to do everything by myself, so I
need to ask to others to get help. I need to be more punctual, and I’m not good
at dancing.
Interviewing about myself was really great opportunity
to know about who I am. After I could hear my strengths and weakness from close
people, I could find my strengths and weakness which I didn’t aware of by
myself. I feel like I became a better person after I heard my strengths, I became
more confident and I feel happy that people acknowledge my strengths. I also
thought I should keep try hard to keep my strengths with me. Also, I thought I
should be careful to not people feel uncomfortable because of my weakness. I
should try to correct my weakness.
Cultural Assessment
The purpose of
this assignment is to identify your “collective me” that has shaped your social
identity. Choose 5 items that represent your social identities (e.g., race,
ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, ability, religion, social class,
nationality, age, size) that have influenced your worldview or behavior. These
items might include photographs, pieces of art, jewelry, piece of clothing, or
anything you believe has significant influence on how you perceive and behave
in the world.
- Bible: Bible shows my religion. I am a Christian,
and grown up with Christian family.
- Korean ornament: shows my nationality
- Folding fan with traditional pattern: This
shows my race and ethnicity because several Asian countries have a similar
pattern.
- Jewelry: I like jewelry, and it shows my
gender and age.
- Piano, guitar: I like music and I like to
play the instruments.
Criteria
for evaluation
· Write
brief paragraph to explain your cultural self-assessment
· Share
with the class (based on your personal comfort level) items and aspects of your
cultural self-assessment
· Thoughtful
reflection and sharing
· Completion
of reflective blog post on activity
· DUE DATE: September 22, 2014
I was born and raised in Korea which is
one of the countries in Asia. Politeness is
really important in my culture, so I try to be polite to strangers and elders. In Korea, I use the honorific word to
elders and bow instead of waving hands. Making a direct eye contact considered impolite
behavior, which is opposite from US. When I am about to having a
dinner together with my grandparents or my parents, I wait for them to start
eating because it is impolite to start eating before the elder starts to eat. Also,
my culture values the community like family, company,
school and so on. I consider my family first in my life. There is a MT culture
in my countries college. MT is short for membership training. When I was a
freshman in Korea, every grade in the same major gathered
together and went on a trip before the semester started. Students eat
BBQ, drink a lot and
play the games together to know each
other and tighten the bonds. There are also several MT’s during the semester.
Saturday, September 20, 2014
BLOG PROMPT #2
1. What are some of the
similarities and differences in experiences of racism globally? In general,
describe the “exploiter and exploited” relationship. Discuss specific
parallels between U.S., France, Brazil and South Africa.
There are similarities among the racism in
global. Racism has begun with capitalism. As the capitalism pursues the wealth,
it needed the human labor. As the worker’s labor was the source of capitalists
and elites’ wealth, the exploitation and oppression has begun. These two groups usually divided as colonizers
group and colonized group. The exploiter oppresses the colonized people by their
system officially in the name of civilization. White equated their culture with
civilization. They generated stereotype and ideologies and used the violence to
maintain their superior status. White considered themselves as superior,
intelligent, modernized and gifted people, and colonized people as inferior,
uncivilized, lazy and wild people. Whites destroyed colored people’s lives and
communities to maintain the discrimination, and those people treated unequally in
education, housing, business, health care, employment and etc. Colonized people
have been demanded their rights in these fields. Nowadays, society tries to
compensate for their unfair treatment, but the society still needs to reflect
and understand deeply of the unequal reality.
There are also differences between the racism
shown in each country. In the US, the white people, who were a colonizer, will
become a minority in the future. Colored people in America are increasing their
power and strength in the economic and political status gradually. In France,
there are a lot of violent crime which target for attack foreign born immigrants
and their children. Racist right political parties are resurging. The
population of immigrants has not increased, but there are parliaments. In
Brazil, more than 60 million people are African-origin, and mixed ancestry.
Institutionalize racial discrimination still impact on Afro Brazilians. Black
Brazilians are mostly poor, and only 1% of the students are in the universities.
Racial inequality is maintaining by whites. In South Africa, the racial
discrimination appeared with apartheid. The country was built as a country by
European imperialists, and they justified the colonization and killing. As
Nelson Mandela was elected to the president of South Africa, the political
power has shifted to the colonized people.
The content describes the exploiter and
exploited relationship. Exploiter has a power and wealth. They oppress people
to generate wealth by exploited people’s human labor in capitalistic system.
They call themselves as civilized people, and discriminate other racial
officially. To maintain their wealth and power, they use the ideologies and
stereotypes. Exploiters say they are intelligent, but exploited people are lazy
and cruel. Exploited people are a people who create valuable things, but the
profits from their labor taken by the exploiter, which are also capitalists. Their
labor is the foundation of capitalists’ wealth, but they treated unequally.
They could not have enough right in housing, education, health care, and so on.
US, France, Brazil and South Africa had racism
systemically. The exploiters in these countries built up wealth by
exploitation, and stereotyped exploited people that they are violent, prefer
welfare or always complaining. There was a barriers and invisible ceiling in
the societies such as job or career, and it maintained. Exploiters are more
educated and wealthy, but they ignored the racial discrimination and
discriminated people’s rights. Today, these countries are trying to compensate
for the unequal treatment and reinforce the welfare.
2. How has racism
influenced the history of housing and urban development in the United States?
As the whites enslaved a people from Africa and
discriminate them, African American was poor because the benefits and profits
they made through their labor transferred to whites. However, the government
did not guarantee enough the African American’s right for housing before. The Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 is the movement to
take care of the people who had been discriminated by the majority in the US country.
The government expands funding for the federal housing. This program helps people
who suffer from financial problems such as the elderly, disabled, poor
homeowners and veterans. It will be helpful for people to rehabilitate, who
does not have enough money. It will also improve their rights in the society.
3. Tatum’s article
discusses three barriers to talking about issues of race and racism with
students in a classroom setting. What
are these?
Tatum says the barriers to talking about issues
of race and racism in class. One barrier is the individual’s concept of
identity. Self creation of one’s identity or self definition can be different
from their ethnicity, life experience, environments they grown up and etc. For
example, students of color usually define themselves with their racial group or
ethnic group, while white students are not. Also, dominant group does not conscious
about their authorities and privileges. They have a power in the society and do
not really aware of the existence of inequality for a subordinate group,
because they do not have an experience of the subordinates life. Finally, many people are both dominant and
subordinate. It is hard to tell that one is in one particular category. As one
person has several aspects and various experiences, he or she can be in
dominant group in one category, but subordinate group in another category.
4. Finally, following
Peggy McIntosh’s format, list a few of your privileges and your overall
reaction to this article.
After I came to US, I became a minority in US
society as I am a foreigner, and I only focused on my status as a foreigner.
However, after I read this article, I could realize how I lived comfortable as Korean in
Korea, and dominant group in other categories. I could recognize the privilege
that I could have, and I was thankful to live without oppress from religion or
race. When I was in Korea, I thought I know and understand how hard to live as
a foreigner when I see the foreigners and international students in my college,
but I realized that I did not fully understood them until I experienced to live
as a foreigner in another country. I should care about the others who suffering
from the oppression as a minority such as race or religion in the world.
1. I lived in the Seoul,
which is the capital city of Korea. I use a standard language, and enjoy the
cultural life, education, foods and etc.
2. I am a Christian,
and I don’t need to hesitate to say that I’m Christian, because the people in
the country where I live can have a freedom of religion.
3. I am heterosexual, and I didn’t experience the oppression from the
society.
4. I was born and
raised in the middle-upper class family, so my family and I didn’t suffer from a
serious financial problem.
5. I was grown with
happy family. Family always loves me and supports me, and I didn’t experience
the family trouble or abuse.
Sunday, September 14, 2014
BLOG PROMPT #1 Introduce my self & about east Austin
Hello, my name is SeonKyung Lee. I usually go
by Seon. I’m 21 year old, and I’m from South Korea. I went to the college in California
for one year, and then I transferred to UT for this fall semester as a junior
in Youth and Community studies major. I
take this class because I wanted to know the social problems in these days and several
community services that can enhance the people’s lives and develop the community.
I want to do a counseling or family therapy in the future, and I thought this
class might be helpful to learn social problems and understand the communities
and people.
I interviewed the person graduate of UT about the personal opinion and knowledge about East Austin. She said she had never been to east Austin, but she thought a lot of families in the East Austin are low income families. She thought usually minority people are living in the east Austin, and mostly Mexican and black people are living in there.
According to the news that I saw online, most of the people considered east Austin as a dangerous place. African Americans or Hispanics were majority in east Austin, but white residents had become the majority in two of the tracts by 2010. While the number of whites living there increased by 40 percent, whites surpassed blacks as the second largest racial group. East Austin ranked no.7 for hippest community. It said East Austin is the newest hipster home base and there are a lot of Mexican eateries, coffee shops, a farmers market and food trucks, and the music venues every night. East Austin seems gaining a new reputation. East Austin is facing the gentrification. The changes in east Austin made people in trouble, who lived there for decades. Their quality of life is endangered as they struggle financially to stay there. Longtime families have to move out because they cannot pay higher property tax bills, since the area became hot property. Most of the people loved to stay but financial pressures are so strong.
I interviewed the person graduate of UT about the personal opinion and knowledge about East Austin. She said she had never been to east Austin, but she thought a lot of families in the East Austin are low income families. She thought usually minority people are living in the east Austin, and mostly Mexican and black people are living in there.
According to the news that I saw online, most of the people considered east Austin as a dangerous place. African Americans or Hispanics were majority in east Austin, but white residents had become the majority in two of the tracts by 2010. While the number of whites living there increased by 40 percent, whites surpassed blacks as the second largest racial group. East Austin ranked no.7 for hippest community. It said East Austin is the newest hipster home base and there are a lot of Mexican eateries, coffee shops, a farmers market and food trucks, and the music venues every night. East Austin seems gaining a new reputation. East Austin is facing the gentrification. The changes in east Austin made people in trouble, who lived there for decades. Their quality of life is endangered as they struggle financially to stay there. Longtime families have to move out because they cannot pay higher property tax bills, since the area became hot property. Most of the people loved to stay but financial pressures are so strong.
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