There were several charts on the walls denigrating people with blue eyes such as “Only brown eyes need apply” and “Why can’t a blue eye be more like a brown?” The brown-eyes have been instructed beforehand to treat the blue-eyes as inferior. Elliot tells them that blue-eyed participants are not as smart or clean and they should lower the expectations.…
The book Isaac's Storm by Erik Larson discusses the meteorologist Isaac Cline and his role in predicting the Galveston Hurricane of 1900, the deadliest hurricane in history. This was a time period where people believed that their technology had overcome the forces of nature. In their view, Galveston, Texas, a thriving city on the quiet waters of the gulf could not possibly be devastated by any storm. Meteorology as a science was still controversial; some people thought that the weather was god's own will and therefore should not be forecasted. Yet on September 9, over 8,000 people would die in Galveston alone.…
Isaac Cline dealt with perils that no one should have ever had to endure. Erik Larson was very good at describing what he thought and saw, but a little too much. His descriptions were too lengthy and the subject didn’t catch my attention until much later in the book. The book was written very well it excluded the too familiar he said she saids. The language flows with clarity and precision. His recount of the storm’s destruction sucks you into the dramatic effects as the storm takes over the town. Some of my favorite parts of the book are in the beginning I love the metaphors and similes. The beginning catches you by taking you across the world to Africa, “It began as all things must, with an awakening of molecules. The sun rose over the African highlands east of Cameroon and warm grasslands, forests, lakes, and rivers, and the men and creatures that moved and breathed among them; it warmed their exhalations and caused…
The children’s performance grades were significantly lower when their eye color group was on the bottom. One child mention that he was thinking about being brown eye, and felt stupid during the flashcards.…
After reading, Why This Hurricane Season Has Been So Catastrophic, by Michael Greshko I’ve come to understand that climate change isn’t “directly” linked to specific environmental events, but can be used to explain such natural phenomena and their extremity, like hurricanes. Even though the article was not specifically geared for discussing climate change, it posed a specific type of natural disaster, hurricanes, which can be excited by climate change. In the article, Greshko specifically explains that climate change increases average temperatures, and this can lead to more rainfall in individual hurricanes since warmer air can hold larger amounts of water vapor (par. 29). This struck me as a very specific example for how climate change can…
Inherit the Wind is written by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee. Bertram Cates is an evolutionist who plays a big part in the story. He and I have many similarities and differences.…
At the headquarters of the Louisiana National Guard, located in the lower 9th ward, the soldiers were not yet aware that the canal levees were giving way. The Guard’s commander was monitoring the situation from Baton Rouge. He was given misleading information.…
Popular media in our society exposes what we have collectively decided is passable behavior. If it can be published in Hollywood without the backlash of its audience, then it’s socially exceptable. In the case of such movies as Tropic Thunder, as observed by author Patricia E Bauer, while those unaffected by the movie’s harsh language may not care, it shouldn’t be so easy to dismiss those that were. The apathy in regards to the mentally disabled is a testament to a past of fear and lack of understanding towards them. Though the taboo behind the word is recognizable to us at this point, to many it’s still ok to use as long as they “didn’t mean it like that”. Bauer doesn’t have an issue with the word in its intended form. It’s the twisted use…
Originating in the Bible, there is a belief that children are born bearing the weight of their parents sins. This idea is encompassed in the novel The Shadow of the Wind by Ruiz Zafon about a young boy named Daniel, who encounters a book that changes his life. Enlisting the help of multiple people, Daniel is able to uncover many of mysteries surrounding the book, The Shadow of the Wind, and its arcane author, Julian Carax. On Daniel’s quest to uncover more about Julian Carax, he finds that both Julian Carax and the antagonist, Javier Fumero had a painful past with sinful parents that mold the two boys into becoming self destructive men. Through the adulterous and abusive sins of Julian’s real father, Don Ricardo Aldaya and through Fumero’s mother Yvonne’s mental instability, the boys, Julian and Fumero, grow up to be men with serious mental issues eventually leading to their demise. Thus, the consequences of their parents sins lead them to become people that do not want to be.…
Stanley Milgram had advertised his experiment on a newspaper to get their attention as to needing male participants. From here, being informed that there will be two males as one would be a teacher and one would be a learner – even though there would be confederate. The participant would not necessarily be told everything about the experiment as this was the whole point of Milgram experiment to see how far a male participant would obey instructions and to see if ethics had been…
In this paper, I will state my reaction on two videos, Eye of the Storm and A Class Divided. These videos are inspired from Jane Elliott, a third grade teacher, who tested a group of her students in teaching them about discrimination. I definitely agree with Elliott in her process of teaching people the importance of ethnicity and discrimination.…
Jane Elliott’s Class divided was a good lesson to show caucasian people how it feels to be African American in the segregated times in America. Elliot’s goal was to have white people realize that we are all human being and we should not be treated as less just based off of our skin color or any other personal characteristics. Personally, I feel the experiment was essential, especially with that young age group. Racism is a learned behavior that was developed throughout the white society. When children at a young and growing age learn how it feels to be discriminated against, they most likely would not carry it on to their adult life. The teacher is showing the children that they could possible play or live in harmony with African Americans because they are also human beings. The only thing that makes the African American and themselves different is an individual characteristic similar to eyes.…
In this experiment Jane segregated children in the classroom based on their eye colour. She told them that one group was inferior to the other and watched how the in-group help prejudices against and discriminated the out-group. The next day she switched the groups and the inferior group got a taste of what is was like to be discriminated against. Jane Elliot 's experiments are well known around the world today for giving the minority groups a chance to experience feelings of power and voice their opinions. They also give the in-groups the chance to experience what in feels like to be the out-group. Often people don 't understand something until they have experienced it themselves. Once someone knows the outcomes of their actions their actions often change. Even just reading about Jane Elliot 's experiments changes peoples attitudes and it is thought that they have contributed to a decrease in prejudice and discrimination. (Marsh…
The experiment took ordinary college students and had some agree to be prisoners and the rest would be guards for the prisoners. Both groups received no training on what to do or act like. They had to get all of their knowledge of what to do from outside sources, such as television and movies. The guards were given uniforms and night sticks and told to act like an ordinary guard would. The prisoners were treated like normal criminals. They were finger printed and booked, after that they were told to put on prison uniforms and then they were thrown into the slammer (in this case a simulated cellblock in the basement was used). All of the participants in this experiment at first were thought to be similar in behavior but after one week, all of that changed. The prisoners became "passive, dependent, and helpless." The guards on the other hand were the exact opposite. They became "aggressive and abusive within the prison, insulting and bullying the prisoners."…
The experiment proved a lot about social norms and breaking them. It showed the significance of social norms, how much social norms play a role in society, and how people, as individuals, act when these norms are broken. Me standing the wrong way changed the…