Tenemos Que Seguir . . .
by Amelia M.L. Montes (ameliamontes.com)
We are at the breaking point—whether or not you presently are or have ever been a student or teacher. All of us are affected by what is happening across the country right now. On June first, the New York Times’ article on budget cuts regarding California schools described the situation like this: “Class sizes have increased, courses have been cut and tuition has been raised—repeatedly. Fewer colleges are offering summer classes. Administrators rely increasingly on higher tuition from out-of-staters. And there are signs it could get worse: If a tax increase proposed by Gov. Jerry Brown is not approved this year, officials say they will be forced to consider draconian cuts like eliminating entire schools or programs.” (click here for entire article).
When I taught in
the California public school system, the saying was, what happens to education
in California happens across the country:
striving for an affordable education for all, innovative teaching practices,
whole language, bilingual education, Ethnic Studies programs/departments, an
elementary/high school state essay exam vs. objective testing. The rewards for such excellence in
these areas were: first and
foremost, an educated population with a well-rounded understanding of the world
or as Paulo Freire has written: “Education . . . becomes the practice of
freedom, the means by which men and women deal critically and creatively with
reality and discover how to participate in the transformation of their world”
(from Pedagogy of the Oppressed). More and more Chicanas/Chicanos and Latinas/Latinos from
working class backgrounds were entering colleges and universities. There were
many bumps in the road, but the trajectory was one of moving forward.
And that first
and second generation have become high school teachers, college and university
professors, authors, lawyers, artists, medical practitioners. On the right side of this “la bloga”
link, you will see a listing of Chicana/Chicano and Latina/Latino authors and
it is only a partial listing. Compared
to the handful of writers in the 1950s and 60s, we have certainly grown.
Those “bumps”
along the road, though, have stayed and grown too in profound alarming ways
which threaten the present and future generations. In 1978, a businessman/lobbyist and a political activist
(Howard Jarvis and Paul Gann) introduced and passed “Proposition 13” or “People’s Intiative to Limit Property Taxation” which amended the California
Constitution to “decrease property taxes by assessing property values at their 1975
value and restricted annual increases of assessed value of real property to an
inflation factor, not to exceed 2% per year” and to increase any future state
taxes, both legislative bodies today need a two-thirds majority vote—and if it
goes to a local election, the two-thirds majority vote is also required. Since 1978, libraries, schools,
programs have shut down and the New York Times article (above) only gives
credence to the saying: “As California goes, so goes the rest of the country”
because the rest of the country (since 1978) has in one way or another passed
similar Jarvis/Gann Prop 13 legislation and every time such amendments have
passed, libraries, programs, schools have diminished. Click on this link (right here) to read a Time Magazine article from 2009 that discusses the history and the effects of Proposition 13.
In 2003,
Nebraska billionaire investor, Warren Buffet said, “If California has troubles,
the country has troubles. If
California prospers, the country prospers.” This past week, Timothy White, chancellor of the University
of California, Riverside said “I’d be lying if I said what we offer students
hasn’t been changed and that there hasn’t been a degradation of the learning
environment.”
The erosion is
now glaring. Prop 13-like
legislation passing over and over again across the country prompts and
exacerbates threats and the banning of books and the closing down of Ethnic
Studies and bilingual education as we have seen in states such as Arizona.
Banning the best education for everyone in this country is putting a stop to
creating a fearless, imaginative, strong multi-dimensional and empathetic
people. Instead what we are moving toward more than ever is a country that
speaks one language, knows minimal mechanics of reading and writing, minimal
education on how our government works, minimal knowledge of U.S. History,
science, math, minimal knowledge in understanding heterogenous
populations.
We cannot
function as an empathetic, powerful society if we do not understand each other.
Gloria Anzaldúa’s Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza is a powerful text that breaks open
those boundaries of segregation.
She wrote: “To the
immigrant mexicano
and the recent arrivals, we must teach our history . . . Latinos from Central
and South America must know of our struggles . . . Other than a common culture
we will have nothing to hold us together.
We need to meet on a broader communal ground.” Such words are not welcome in various school districts
across the country. The banning of
this book and others like it reveals a fear, an inability to practice
empathy.
Sarah Blaffer
Hrdy, author of Mothers and Others: The Evolutionary Origins of Mutual Understanding, writes: “To all the reasons people might have to worry about the
future of our species—including the usual depressing litany of nuclear
proliferation, global warming, emerging infectious diseases, or crashing meteorites—add
one more having to do with just what sort of species our descendants millennia
hence might belong to. If empathy
and understanding develop only under particular rearing conditions, and if an
ever-increasing proportion of the species fails to encounter those conditions
but nevertheless survives to reproduce, it won’t matter how valuable the
underpinnings for collaboration were in the past. Compassion and the quest for emotional connection will fade away
as surely as sight in cave-dwelling fish.”
Anzaldúa’s call
and Hrdy’s cautionary statement are important reminders that we must continue
to provide everyone with our books, with our complex histories, with the best
education we can provide that encourages critical thinking. This is at the core of the fear: critical and imaginative thinking. Thank goodness for our
Chicanas/Chicanos and Latinas/Latinos who are now publishing a plethora of
bilingual and culturally themed novels, memoirs, poetry, children’s books. These will carry us forward despite the
many bannings and censorships. But
we need to keep these books in print, we need to read and discuss these in our
classrooms. And thank goodness for filmmakers who are documenting these important moments in history. (Check out the film Precious Knowledge regarding Arizona's banning of Ethnic Studies.)
1978 (when the
Jarvis legislation passed in California) was 34 years ago and today Nathan
Brostrom (executive vice president of business operations for the UC system)
says, the UC schools are in the “worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression.” Jarvis has died but his legislation is continuing to wreak havoc
in California and across the country.
All the advances we have made can feel as if they are disappearing and I
have heard mis compañeras y compañeros say they feel alienated and defeated.
This is why I also make it a point to teach, Edén Torres’ book, Chicana Without Apology: The New Chicana Cultural Studies because her words help us stay strong in
this atmosphere of continual silencing, banning, budget-cutting of our programs
and departments.
Edén Torres’
writes: “Eliminating all forms of
oppression is an ideal that no single person can hope to achieve—nor can we
expect complete agreement. But a
cultural shift does not insist on total cooperation, it only requires the force
of strong coalitions willing to work around and respect differences for a
larger goal. It also means dumping
distrust and paranoia, accepting that the people who should be our allies
really are, even though we may have differences and make mistakes. Once we begin to see ourselves as part
of a larger community seeking transformation, we have no excuse for continuing
to act solely on our sense of alienation.
After the revolution, Lucha Corpi tells us in Delia’s Song, ‘That’s when the real struggle begins.’
Keep reading,
keep writing, keep teaching!
Abrazos dear “La Bloga” readers . . .
3 comments:
Powerful piece, Amelia! Thank you.
Thanks for this piece on education, Amelia. We're (so many of us teachers and students here in Los Angeles) en la lucha ahorita to try and salvage some part of Adult Education, which serves close to 350,000 adults. June 19th is our last day of classes and as of yet, the school board has not given us a definite response regarding what (if any) adult schools will be open in the fall. Those who will be most impacted by these cuts are working-class adults, immigrants, youth of color who didn't make it through conventional high schools. Whether it's adult education in L.A. or Ethnic Studies in Arizona or the rising exclusivity we're seeing in Community Colleges and Universities, education, as you point out, our right to education is being stripped away and the idea of "higher education" is being privatized. I can't think about this country's current educational crisis without also thinking of the trillions of tax dollars wasted on wars during the last decade. Education in this country is truly one major casualty of war.
This is a wonderful post! Thank you for this important and timely piece, but most of all for some of the history of Ethnic Studies you share here! Mil gracias y pa'lante.
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