Rodolfo F. Acuña |
Guest essay by Rodolfo F.
Acuña
We have allowed the uninformed and ignorant to define what
Mexican American Studies is. Every time I discuss the subject I feel as
frustrated as a scientist trying to explain science to a creationist. No matter
how well you know the field those who do not want to believe will distort your
words to fit their preconceptions and belief system.
As I have explained, MAS or Chicana/o Studies is not
sociology. MAS has courses in sociology that examine the MAS corpus of
knowledge but MAS does not belong to the field of sociology. If it were just
sociology, it could be reduced to one or two courses on race.
MAS is a strategy that incorporates multi-disciplines. The
truth be told, if the academy had cared about Latinos, which are the second
largest Spanish-speaking nation in the world, it would have hired specialists
to explore the role of Mexican Americans and other Latinos in the United
States.
If this had happened Latino courses would be integrated
organically within departments. But consequent to the racism in higher
education this field of study has been ignored. Even today, most academic
departments do not offer a single MAS or Latino course or employ a single
Latino faculty member.
Incredible but most schools of education have not developed
courses on how to teach or counsel Latino students. This is criminal since I
would not expect, no matter how good she is, an optometrist to perform open
heart surgery.
How to teach Mexican American students was the motive for
establishing CHS.
The record of its accomplishments speaks to its importance:
In 1968 only about fifty Mexican Americans nationally had
doctorates; today there are thousands. Truth be told, MAS developed despite the
academy.
The dramatic surge in the study of Mexicans in the United
States and Mexico surged because of Chicana/o studies.
Before December 31, 1970, not a single dissertation had been
written under the category “Chicano.” By 2010, 870 dissertations were recorded under
this heading. Under “Mexican American” 82 dissertations had been written before
1971, and 2,824 after that date. For “Latinos” the record shows 6 before 1971, and 2,887 after.
Mexican scholarship also benefitted from Chicana/o studies.
I found 660 in the Proquest data bank before 1971; after 9,078. The number of
books and journal articles on Chicano and Latinos also exploded.
It is improbable that this would have happened without
Chicana/o student militancy.
Despite this impressive growth, there is still confusion as
to why MAS was developed and why it is necessary. Repeating myself, MAS was an
outgrowth of the education reform movement that wanted to stem the horrendous
dropout rate among Mexican American children.
Reformers advocated a course of study designed to train more
teachers on how to teach Latino children as well as encouraging research on
their contributions to the United States. The best available research concludes
that a student who has a poor self-image has difficulty learning. The dominate
research also shows that Mexican Americans have a negative self-image due in
part to the American education system.
Today this research has been almost totally erased; however,
the hypothesis has not been disproved.
MAS took these studies into account and designed courses on
how to motivate students to acquire skills for success in school and life.
An additional component, which has been as of late ignored,
is these courses prepare educators to teach Mexican American children. It
teaches methods and the content courses on how to teach Mexican Americans as
well as all students to appreciate the importance of Latinos to our society.
How others look at students is very important to the
students’ educational success.
With time the pedagogical function of Chicana/o studies has
been obfuscated and today most professors want to forget it. Even at California
State University Northridge, the largest Chicana/o Studies departments in the
country, most professors know their discipline but few know the department’s
course of study or its pedagogical mission.
There has been a failure to communicate this message
although the curriculum has defined the department’s growth.
The Tucson Unified School District’s MAS program has yielded
important lessons. Its primary strength is that it molded a team of teachers
committed to how to teach all students and found the key on how to motivate
high risk Latino youth.
While the course of study remains important, the hub around
which the Tucson program revolves is its team of teachers.
TUSD’s MAS program began in 1997 in response to a court
mandate. The recently fired Sean Arce was one of the co-founders of the program
and he molded the group into a team. While the teachers specialize in different
disciplines, they have almost daily interaction with each other and discuss how
to more effectively teach students. Lessons in the Mexican historical and
cultural experience are then applied to the American experience.
As of 2010, MAS co-sponsored twelve “Annual Institutes for
Transformative Education Conferences” in which prominent educators made
presentations for four days to MAS and other teachers. Sean and his team kept
the mission to teach focused and they built upon this new knowledge.
I attended two conferences at which I met educators such as
Pedro Noguera of New York University, Sherry Marx of Utah State University,
Angela Valenzuela of the University of Texas Austin and David Stovall of the
University of Illinois at Chicago - College of Education. It was instructive to
learn about different theories and pedagogies that are currently being used.
I spoke to various MAS teachers that included white
Americans. Their enthusiasm was contagious.
It was all the more impressive because it was on the advent
of HB 2281 that was proposing the elimination of the program making claims that
were simply mendacious. Since then the program and the teachers have gone
through a living hell.
They have been libeled as un-American, subversive and the
livelihood of their families attacked. Without any funds and limited national
exposure, the team, the students and the community have fought back.
Struggle destroys lesser beings, but it also helps create
legends. The best in the Mexican American community surfaced in this struggle
in the persona of Sean Arce. He did not take a deal, he did not sell out, and
he fought back, jeopardizing his home and family.
But much more than Sean is at stake. Some have say, “Well if
we win in court at least we will still have the program.” My response is that
then it won’t be MAS but just another program to teach Mexicans and others to
learn how to dance the jarabe tapatio.
Removing a person like Sean is like taking the heart out of
the program. It is reducing the program to the Tin Woodman of the “Wizard of
Oz” who asked: "Do you suppose Oz could give me a heart?"
If wishes could come true I would send Superintendent John
Pedicone and his gaggle of thugs to the Oz; like the Strawman, the Oz could
give them brain: “It must be inconvenient to be made of flesh, for you must
sleep, and eat and drink. However, you have brains, and it is worth a lot of
bother to be able to think properly."
Apparently the Arizona cabal has neither brains nor a heart.
What Tucson had will be very difficult to replicate. The
Pedicones and the Huppenthals will be condemned by history, but this means
little because we cannot travel back to the future.
The whole affair leaves me feeling how I felt the first time
I read the Chicano poet, Abelardo who wrote:
Stupid America, remember that chicanito
flunking math and English
he is the Picasso
of your western states but he will die
with one thousand masterpieces
hanging only from his mind.
Tucson has lost its heart, we are left with the Tin Woodsman who has no heart, and there is no rainbow in the horizon.
Tucson has lost its heart, we are left with the Tin Woodsman who has no heart, and there is no rainbow in the horizon.
[Rodolfo F. Acuña, Ph.D., is an historian,
professor emeritus, and one of various scholars of Chicano studies, which he
teaches at California State University, Northridge. He is the author of Occupied
America: A History of Chicanos, which approaches the history of the
Southwestern United States that includes Mexican Americans. It has been
reprinted six times since its 1972 debut (the seventh edition was published in
2010). He has written for many publications including the Los Angeles Times, The Los
Angeles Herald-Express, La Opinión,
and numerous other newspapers. His work emphasizes the struggle of the Mexican
American people. Acuña is also an activist and he has supported the numerous
causes of the Chicano Movement.]
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