As said by Tim Wise in his book, White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son, he wrote, “Colorblindness is not the proper goal of fair-minded educators. The kids in those classrooms do have a race, and it matters, because it says a lot about the kinds of challenges they are likely to face” (Wise, 2005). Prior to this reading and class discussion, I would have agreed that not seeing color is the correct approach to end racism in our society. I believed that if we ignore the idea of race then we cannot be racist. Through this book, I saw that being ‘colorblind’ only further separates white people from other races, and the idea of being able to be colorblind is a privilege. Wise continues to say, “To not see color is to not see the consequences of color. And if color has consequences, yet you’ve resolved not to notice the thing that brings about those consequences, the odds are pretty good that you’ll fail to serve the needs of the students in question” (Wise, 2005). Colorblindness is ignoring an important facet of their identity. People of color suffer discrimination in life, whether it’s through the educational or criminal justice system. If white people ignore the struggles that correlate with a darker skin color, white people are ignoring the injustice that is happening in society. This idea of ignoring race leads into my next key learning about white identity and
As said by Tim Wise in his book, White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son, he wrote, “Colorblindness is not the proper goal of fair-minded educators. The kids in those classrooms do have a race, and it matters, because it says a lot about the kinds of challenges they are likely to face” (Wise, 2005). Prior to this reading and class discussion, I would have agreed that not seeing color is the correct approach to end racism in our society. I believed that if we ignore the idea of race then we cannot be racist. Through this book, I saw that being ‘colorblind’ only further separates white people from other races, and the idea of being able to be colorblind is a privilege. Wise continues to say, “To not see color is to not see the consequences of color. And if color has consequences, yet you’ve resolved not to notice the thing that brings about those consequences, the odds are pretty good that you’ll fail to serve the needs of the students in question” (Wise, 2005). Colorblindness is ignoring an important facet of their identity. People of color suffer discrimination in life, whether it’s through the educational or criminal justice system. If white people ignore the struggles that correlate with a darker skin color, white people are ignoring the injustice that is happening in society. This idea of ignoring race leads into my next key learning about white identity and