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English: The Language of White "Oppressors"-professor: Ebonics superior to tongue of White Devils
Frontpagemagazine/Discoverthe network ^ | 8-4-05 | Jacob Laksin

Posted on 08/04/2005 5:06:34 AM PDT by SJackson

A Brooklyn College professor says Ebonics is superior to the tongue of White Devils

--Assistant Professor of Adolescence Education at Brooklyn College

--Teaches that rap music is an effective tool for teaching English literacy to schoolchildren, and that proper English is language of white "oppressors"

--Required students to view Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 911

Priya Parmar is an Assistant Professor of Adolescence Education at Brooklyn College's School of Education in New York, where she teaches both graduate and undergraduate courses to aspiring teachers.

Of special interest to Parmar, whose doctoral dissertation is titled "KRS-One Going Against the Grain: A Critical Study of Rap Music as a Postmodern Text," is rap music. No mere enthusiast of the genre, Parmar holds that it is an unappreciated tool for imparting English literacy to young children: A 2003 Brooklyn College faculty newsletter reports that Parmar's scholarly writing "focuses on using hip-hop culture as a tool to increase literacy skills" in elementary and secondary schools.[1]

Those critics who question whether rap music, with its on reliance grammar-averse Ebonics slang, is an effective medium for teaching literacy are dismissed by Parmar as craven apologists for bourgeois hegemony. "Rap music causes moral panic in many because of its 'threat' to existing values and ideologies held by the dominant middle class," asserts Parmar.[2] On the strength of no evidence whatsoever, Parmar also claims that "research has shown that Ebonics is a legitimate systematic language."[3] Nor does Parmar doubt that the explicit lyrics and violent subject matter of rap make perfectly appropriate learning aids for young children:

"From my experience in the classrooms—and that of my students who are practitioners in the field—we've learned that kids—even as young as third grade—are very sophisticated about the homophobic, violent and sexual messages from some mainstream rap artists. If you give students an opportunity to deconstruct the lyrics and then compare them with those of more political and social-consciousness raising artists, such as [rap groups] The Roots and Dead Perez . . . youth are capable of distinguishing between reality and false perceptions and stereotypes perpetuated in commercialized rap."[4]

Rap, Parmar teaches, is more than a means of teaching literacy. It is also a vehicle for social engineering. In addition to teaching children grammar and sentence structure, Parmar maintains, the "critical examination and deconstruction of rap lyrics becomes a method to get students to critically examine such issues as race, class, culture, and identity." Parmar calls this mode of instruction an "an empowering, liberating pedagogy." She notes with approval that one of her former students used rap to "explore economic social and political issues" in a middle school.[5]

Parmar's controversial course at Brooklyn College, "Language Literacy in Secondary Education," typifies the professor's preference for politicized pedagogy. Required of all students who intend to become secondary-school teachers, the course is designed to teach students to draft lesson plans that teach literacy. Parmar's syllabus informs students that the principal focus of these lesson plans must be "social justice."[6]

Another theme animating Parmar's course is her aversion to the proper usage of English. To insist on grammatical English, Parmar believes, is to exhibit an intolerable form of cultural chauvinism—a point reinforced by the a preface to the requirements for her course, which adduces the following quotation from the South African writer, Jamul Ndebele: "The need to maintain control over English by its native speakers has given birth to a policy of manipulative open-mindedness in which it is held that English belongs to all who use it provided that it is used correctly. This is the art of giving away the bride while insisting that she still belongs to you."[7] Students are expected to share Parmar's antipathy toward grammatical rule-based English, as she does not countenance dissent: In December of 2005, for instance, several disaffected Brooklyn College students wrote letters to the dean of the School of Education taking issue with Parmar's hostility toward students who dared voice their support for the correct usage of English.

Nor was this the only confrontation between Parmar and her students. Evan Goldwyn, a Brooklyn College student who took Parmar's course, caused a campus storm when he wrote a lengthy critique of the course detailing his objections to Parmar's teaching methods. Topping Goldwyn's list of grievances were Parmar's pronounced bias against English and her alleged bigotry against white students. "She repeatedly referred to English as a language of oppressors and in particular denounced white people as the oppressors," Goldwyn wrote. "When offended students raised their hands to challenge Professor Parmar's assertion, they were ignored. Those students that disagreed with her were altogether denied the opportunity to speak."[8]

Students also charged that Parmar's insistence on bringing politics into the classroom went beyond issues relating to English literacy. For instance, one week before the 2004 presidential election, Parmar turned over her course to a classroom screening of Michael Moore's polemical anti-President Bush documentary, Fahrenheit 911.[9] Students were allegedly required to attend the screening, even if they had already seen the film. "Most troubling of all," Goldwyn wrote, "she has insinuated that people who disagree with her views on issues such as Ebonics or Fahrenheit 911 should not become teachers."[10]

Parmar, according to Goldwyn, has also retaliated against students who disagreed with her political opinions by lowering their grades. After challenging Parmar about her teaching methods, Goldwyn and another student found themselves accused of plagiarism after the semester had ended. The accusations were reportedly based on the final assignment for Parmar's course, which asked students to devise a special lesson plan for "linguistically and culturally diverse students." Following an informal investigation, conducted, at Parmar's instigation, by the dean of the education school, Goldwyn received a D-minus for the course.[11]

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[1] http://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/bc/pubs/fn/fall03/1103.pdf

[2] http://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/bc/pubs/bcmag/spr2004/bcmag.pdf

[3] Ibid.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Ibid.

[6] http://www.nysun.com/article/14604

[7] Ibid.

[8] Ibid.

[9] Ibid.

[10] Ibid.

[11] Ibid.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: New York
KEYWORDS: academia; academialist; academicbias; blacks; brooklyncollege; campusbias; censorship; collegebias; culturewars; discrimination; diversity; ebonics; education; educrats; english; facultybias; foshizzle; language; mtv; pc; politicalcorrectness; pspl; racism; racists; rapmusic; schoolbias; teachers; tenuredradicals; universitybias; whiteness; whitenessstudies; whites; yo
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To: Tax-chick

She has the luxury of being educated and having money. Her students, most likely poor with uneducated peers, are being given an educational death sentence. She will be lauded as a great professor but the reality is that she's dooming a generation of students to mediocrity.


61 posted on 08/04/2005 6:07:17 AM PDT by cyborg (Karma can be a cruel taskmaster or a bearer of blessings.)
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To: Tax-chick
A graudate level course?

Gee... how far are they gonna get in the market place?

The inmates are running the asylum.

Liberalism... a mental disease. - Michael Savage

62 posted on 08/04/2005 6:07:28 AM PDT by Northern Yankee (Freedom Needs A Soldier)
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To: SJackson
"'Rap music causes moral panic in many because of its 'threat' to existing values and ideologies held by the dominant middle class,' asserts Parmar."

I don't know of anyone who has "moral panic" over rap music, just nauseated aversion because of the putrid lyrics and infantile music. I can't imagine anyone listening to such garbage for more than 15 seconds without feeling their I.Q. slipping precipitously.
63 posted on 08/04/2005 6:07:32 AM PDT by reelfoot
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To: Just another Joe

Yo yo yo yo

be bumm bumm bop

be bumm bumm bop

My name is Calpernia
and I'm here to say

dontcha be doin nothing the farrakhan way

da man is a clown
da man will keep you down

he can't make his money with out your anger around

be dum dum bop
be dum dum bop


64 posted on 08/04/2005 6:07:54 AM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: cyborg

Ah, just saw your post. I thought so too.


65 posted on 08/04/2005 6:08:51 AM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: cyborg

LOL

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1456700/posts?page=64#64


66 posted on 08/04/2005 6:09:39 AM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: ItsOurTimeNow

I have it on good authority that Shakespeare wore a doo-rag and grabbed his crotch the entire time he was writing Hamlet.


67 posted on 08/04/2005 6:10:22 AM PDT by Inwoodian
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To: Tax-chick
White devils...

Dare I say racist?

or is it ok these days to attack whites in racial tones?

This person should be immediately suspended.

68 posted on 08/04/2005 6:10:24 AM PDT by Northern Yankee (Freedom Needs A Soldier)
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To: Calpernia

Yeah.. I'm desperately trying not to inhale my breakfast down my windpipe laughing :D


69 posted on 08/04/2005 6:10:52 AM PDT by cyborg (Karma can be a cruel taskmaster or a bearer of blessings.)
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To: ericthecurdog

ping.... for a great Thursday chuckle....


70 posted on 08/04/2005 6:11:57 AM PDT by GreenEggsNHam (Hey... what if the hokey pokey really IS what it's all about?)
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To: Northern Yankee
or is it ok these days to attack whites in racial tones?

Of course it is, in elevated circles such as academia. Has been for 15 or 20 years.

71 posted on 08/04/2005 6:12:09 AM PDT by Tax-chick (Liberals: Too stupid to realize Dick Cheney is the real Dark Lord.)
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To: cyborg
cy- here is an ebonics dictionary for teachers and social workers.... see why I got out of that field????

EBONICS DICTIONARY HERE

72 posted on 08/04/2005 6:12:27 AM PDT by Diva Betsy Ross (Code pink stinks!)
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To: cyborg

Seems this is ALL she teaches?

Other Presentations

Parmar, Priya. “Rapping Against the Grain: A Hermeneutics Approach to Rap, Culture, and Education” Association of Teacher Educators. Accepted at the (ATE) 81st Annual Meeting. Bowling Green University, Bowling Green, Ohio: February 2002.

Parmar, Priya. “Rap Music: Moral Panic or Civic Virtue?” Association of Teacher Educators (ATE) 81st Annual Meeting. New Orleans, Louisiana: February 2001.

Parmar, Priya. “Breaking It Down: An Empowering Education Using Rap Music.” First Annual Dogwood Conference on Education, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia: February 2001.

Parmar, Priya. “A Critical Pedagogy on Rap Music ” Accepted at the First Annual Conference on Curriculum and Pedagogy, Austin,Texas: November 2000.

Parmar, Priya and Haroon Kharem. “Rap Music: Moral Panic or Civic Virtue?” Accepted at Journal of Curriculum Theorizing (JCT) Conference on Curriculum Theory and Classroom Practice, Dayton, Ohio: October 2000.

Guest Lecturer/Presenter for Brooklyn College course Education 76, “Social Studies Education” on the topic of “Critical Pedagogy/Critical Media Literacy.” Brooklyn College-CUNY: October 2001.

Presenter for The Pennsylvania State University for “Introductory Field Experience” course, Curriculum & Instruction 295 on topic of “Connecting with Diverse Learners.” University Park, Pennsylvania: January 2001.

Guest Lecturer/Presenter for The Pennsylvania State University “Media Literacy In The Classroom” course, Language and Literacy Education 480, University Park, Pennsylvania: November 2000.

Presenter for The Pennsylvania State University for “Introductory Field Experience” course, Curriculum & Instruction 295 on topic of “Connecting with Diverse Learners.” University Park, Pennsylvania: January 1999.

Publications

In Press:

Parmar, Priya. 2002. “Critical Thinking and Rap Music: The Pedagogy of KRS-One,” Chapter in forthcoming text Encyclopedia of Critical Thinking (Greenwood Press) by Joe L. Kincheloe and Danny Weil (Eds.)

In Progress:

Parmar, Priya. 2002. “KRS-ONE Going Against the Grain: A Critical Study of Rap Music as a Postmodern Text”


73 posted on 08/04/2005 6:12:38 AM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: cyborg

So I shouldn't take that on the road? ^-^


74 posted on 08/04/2005 6:14:10 AM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: SJackson
As long as life consists only of pimping and dealing drugs, Ebonics is a perfectly good language.

SO9

75 posted on 08/04/2005 6:15:37 AM PDT by Servant of the 9 (Trust Me)
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To: SJackson
Ebonics = Illiterate
Just another excuse for not educating children. Amen. This guy is truly a nut case.
76 posted on 08/04/2005 6:16:11 AM PDT by gakrak ("A wise man's heart is his right hand, But a fool's heart is at his left" Eccl 10:2)
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To: SJackson

Yo Priya, whassup ho!


77 posted on 08/04/2005 6:16:14 AM PDT by OB1kNOb (Democrats - The French of American Politics)
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To: Diva Betsy Ross; Calpernia

I was watching the Venus and Serena reality show last night. Her mom pulled them out of school and home schooled them because the schools were that bad. I could never be a teacher because I'd be fighting with administration. I would never teach this ebonics stuff. This teacher sounds very enamored of rap music. I listen to some rap, mostly the stuff from the early eighties when rap was good. Otherwise, I can't listen to hardcore rap for long. It makes me nervous.


78 posted on 08/04/2005 6:16:36 AM PDT by cyborg (Karma can be a cruel taskmaster or a bearer of blessings.)
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To: SJackson

this guy is a racist. is that OK?


79 posted on 08/04/2005 6:17:15 AM PDT by the invisib1e hand (In Honor of Terri Schiavo. *check my FReeppage for the link* Let it load and have the sound on.)
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To: Calpernia

LOL It worked for William Hung.


80 posted on 08/04/2005 6:17:19 AM PDT by cyborg (Karma can be a cruel taskmaster or a bearer of blessings.)
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