In the story "Nilda" by Diaz the relationship between Nilda and the narrator is a unique friendship. Although it seemed that the narrator always wanted more from Nilda than just friendship, the feeling wasnt mutal. Throughout the text Nilda is described as trashy and is also in a relationship with the narrators brother, who eventually dies from cancer. Nilda and the narrator grow apart and their friendship eventually diminishes. The last the narrator sees of Nilda is when they are both doing laundry and at the end of the story the narrator says that they dont know where she went.…
In her article “ Our Tired, Our Poor, Our Kids.” Anna Quindlen discusses the issue about homeless families in the United States and the impact of homelessness on the children. Quindlen describes one situation where six people, a woman and five children, live together in a room the size of a master bedroom. The idea, Quindlen says, is that the ineffectiveness of the welfare system has negative impact on families, particularly, mothers and their offsprings . She poses the statement that each day the younger children go to daycare, while the others go to school. During that time their mother, Sharanda, looks for an apartment when she isn’t at her drug-treatment meetings. Quindlen suggests that ultimately shelters will become the…
The interview with school nurse Diane Ferrara has lead me to believe that all of what we have learn in this SPE-358 course are dead on point in many ways. She spoke about using universal precaution which we learn during this course when dealing with body fluids and blood. The author of this summary has worked with Ms. Ferrara over the past eight years and witnesses her using many of these strategies and techniques over the years, with a number of students’ that I had knowledge of having infectious diseases. Ms. Ferrara also spoke on teachers learning more about their student’s health history and the importance of reading the student’s IEP, where allot of this information may be listed. During the interview with Ms. Ferrara she was asked…
This article is an analysis on student’s food journals while in college. Harris used one hundred and thirty-six different papers to find out why students were failing their diets. This article goes on to debunk how college life is why people’s diets are bad. Harris points out that students are just using this as an excuse to eat more and not feel as guilty. Students continuously made excuses throughout their papers as to why their eating habits were so bad.…
To understand education reform, it is helpful use Jay P. Greene as a scope for reading Diane Ravitch. Ravitch is a former education reformer and now a prominent spokesman for antireform. In her book Reign of Error, Ravitch classifies education reformers as corporatists and profiteerists, recklessly associating major foundations (Gates Foundation, Broad Foundation, Walton Family Foundation, Zuckerberg Foundation etc.), philanthropists, entrepreneurs, Wall Street hedge fund managers, US Department of Education, Barack Obama, Arne Duncan, Teach for America, and ALEC as the big bad players in education reform. Ravitch vilifies reformers by using polarizing language by classifying the as elitist and with her large platform, she casts a cynical one-sided…
Looking at the state of low wage workers in America today, many are struggling to make ends meet and provide basic needs to themselves and their families. Is this a new situation or just a necessary part of the overall American economic structure? In her book, “Nickel and Dimed” (2001), Barbara Ehrenreich steps out of her comfortable, middle class existence to find out how the people working in the lowest rung of America’s economy are getting by. Using her sarcasm, dry wit, and no-nonsense storytelling style, makes her main claim that in the economy of today, low wage workers are not anywhere near making it, let alone moving up the socio-economic ladder. This claim is hotly debated in every possible theater, from the political campaign trail, in the press, and at the local community college campus. Ehrenreich also states that there are several accompanying causes that are also at play, that high housing costs, access to basic health care, and the lack of a basic “living wage” contribute to a “hidden-cost” economy, and that they are working against people in low wage jobs. There are numerous arguments that have been presented that both support and refute Ehrenreich’s claims, mainly examining the validity of her examples, support information, and her execution of the experiment. Discussion of these different points of view and analysis will provoke further healthy debate on the state of the working poor and the possible solutions that we need to explore as an educated society.…
Sometimes in life people face tragic experiences that haunts them for the rest of their lives. In "the minefields" by diane theils, a poem about a man who has been haunted by memories from his childhood and how it effected him in everything he did. Theils used dark imagery and symbols to create a picture in the readers mind about a life changed forever. The poem argues that one traumatic incident can affect you and the people around you for the rest of your life.…
We need to rethink how we work with homeless families” (258). While I read this article it seems that homeless families are not getting the extra support they need just for the simple fact that there is more homeless people in a family. We want to get them out into society by giving them their own home and all these materialistic things but not helping them maintain the ability to keep up with those things. I can see why it is easier to help one person than a family of 5 because of the mainly needs a family has but when children are involved it makes it such a bigger issue. For me seeing a family that is homeless with little children pulls at the heart string and makes me have an uncontrollably urge to want to help.…
Duffield proves ethos in the article by quoting Federal law, The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) criteria, and her professional credentials on the issues of homeless. According to HUD in the article it “…bases people's eligibility on where they happen to find refuge: with very few exceptions, HUD limits homeless assistance to people who are on the street or are fortunate enough to have found a shelter bed.” (2013, para. 2) and “Under federal law, public schools, Head Start programs, and runaway-youth programs include families and youths in these living situations in their definition of homelessness.” (2013, para.4). In her article, Duffield uses regulations quoted from different agencies to show the inherent conflict in these separate definitions. By examining how these laws, affect homeless individuals she then suggestions how federal laws need to change. Duffield is the Policy Director of the National Association for the education of homeless children and youth,…
States that are placing bans on homelessness instead of accepting the grants that could be given to them by this act are completely ignoring a solution that would cost them far less than placing people in jail. The Mckinney-Vento Act was created to give federal funds to local, regional, and state homeless assistance programs and in the year of 2015 nearly $2.14 billion was available ("McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Grants." 1). Due to this act being in place, banning homelessness to try and solve the problem shouldn’t even have to be considered. The use of bans completely ignores a viable solution to the homeless problem. It’s clear that Congress felt homelessness is a big enough problem to make a federal act for it and city government that disregard this act in an attempt to “solve” the problem themselves are making a big mistake. Admittedly, it is a city’s choice to use or not use the government funding available to them. Though this previous statement is true, recent ruling has proven that banning homelessness is out of a city’s…
In order to determine who exactly is homeless we need to use critical thinking skills to do so. The government seems to think that this is the definition of homeless: An individual who lacks a fix, regular, and adequate…
But, the definition of homelessness has not be agreed upon, McKinney defined it as a person who ‘lacks fixed, regular, and adequate night-time residence’. In fact many believe that the idea of homelessness is an embarrassment because the United States is such an affluent society. Though this embarrassment can be solved by providing affordable housing because many people become homeless due to cheap apartment buildings becoming high priced living spaces. Also, providing jobs and education will help because some people are homeless due to losing their source of income. Another, instance that would is to provide mental health services because many people whom are without a home are the mentally ill. The reason for this is that many who suffer with these types of illnesses are not able to hold a job and many also do not have families that are willing to take care of them. However, there are groups such as 1212 Corporation, Better Homes of Seaford, Inc., and Homeless Planning…
The problem of homelessness in America is escalating day by day. Homelessness doesn’t discriminate between races or skin color, although some may be a bit more prevalent. Homeless people range from former veterans, to immigrants, to families struggling to find a solid paying job and a stable lifestyle. Also, although most people relate a homeless person to an underdressed, rugged man, the homeless population now leans towards families. There are more and more homeless families on the streets every day. Homeless families can be an effect of discrimination because of race, a result of violence in a family, or an effect of a physical disability or mental illness.…
Ralph Nunez. (Summer, 1999), A Snapshot of Family Homelessness across America Cybelle Fox Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 114, No. 2 pp. 289-307 Retrieved August 20,2010, from The Academy of Political Science.…
Homelessness is a growing social injustice in the United States. The degradation that these people face every day is terrifying. It is a crisis that we too often ignore, hoping it will restore itself. That assumption delivers a widespread lack of understanding about the facts that lead to homelessness. Homelessness exists as a problem that we should acknowledge and treat.…