Aurum Prep is deeply committed to providing a rigorous and trajectory changing education to the most disenfranchised students in Oakland. One well known but unaddressed issue facing the Oakland education landscape is the significant underrepresentation of African American children in high quality schools. Aurum Prep not only seeks to provide equity for this subgroup, but for all students it serves.…
“Teaching for Social Justice” is written by an English professor, community activist, student advocate and literary scholar, Carmen Carrasquillo Jay. She teaches all levels of composition and literature at Miramar College in San Diego. Carmen Carrasquillo Jay piece starts with her discussing a scene in the movie Good Will Hunting. She is unsettled with the scene that depicts community college students not being as committed or concerned about their education compared to the students who attend MIT, a prestigious university.…
This pack of SOC 331 Week 1 Discussion Question 1 Moral, Legal, and Religious Perspectives on Social Justice includes:…
In the documentary “Drop Out Nation” produced by Frank Koughan a student named Marcus attending Sharps town High School has fallen into cycle of oppression and other types of societal identities. He has not been successful in school because of his problems at home. Marcus’s father is always drunk and is unemployed and his mom likes to drink daily. Marcus did not choose to live that life but it is difficult for him to succeed living in the predicament he is in. His identity is based off of things around him. All he wants to do in high school is play football that is his incentive to stay in school and succeed. In the film he is seen as a nice person who wants to get his family out of that situation. Marcus gets help from the counselor from rides to school to staying at her house.…
Social Justice and Rights: Promotion of dimension of people’s rights including all welfare and concentrate mainly on the vulnerable groups of people…
Social injustice has affected our society since the beginning of its existance. Our status as one of the world most industrialized wealthy nations, and as a world power primarily led to slavery. The institutionalized systematic abuse that supassed humanity during the slave era still has lasting and lingering affects on our society today. Power, privilege and free labor build wealth for the wealthy elite, white males; all at the expense of an oppressed society. In its verb form slavery was a double crime to the many that were subjected to it. It dehumanized them by forcing them into servitue and it denied them the basic right of life, liberty and justice.…
Human beings, no matter what race or ethnicity or place or time, will not tolerate injustice forever. Webster’s defines injustice as a “violation of the right or of the rights of another” (Merriam-Webster, 1990). The history of the United States is filled with such violations. From the early challenges to religious freedom in Massachusetts to the broken treaties and systematic removal of Native Americans from their land to the abominable practice of slavery in the United States, our nation’s reality rarely measures up to the principles and ideals penned by the founding fathers in the Declaration of Independence and The Bill of Rights.…
At the turn of the 20th century, the toll that years of injustices took on American minority groups rose to a breaking point. The plethora of new technology which arrived post-civil war led to many unaddressed socioeconomic issues (“Progressive Movement.”), which caused many discontent individuals to unite to form malcontent groups. Known as the Progressive Era, the first 20 or so years of the century consisted of movements led primarily by working class citizens, african-americans, and women. The various organizations they formed had a “wide range of positions and goals” (“Progressive Movement.”), but were generally united in their desire for obtaining their inalienable rights. Among the leaders of these groups was Margaret Sanger, an…
social justice work as part of university services and scholarship. The action plan (recommendation 1) includes creating diversity and equity mission statement, encouraging professional development opportunities, providing support to develop partnerships between student, university, and community organizations, and to conduct on-going assessments of Campus Climate. Recommendation 2 allows for a space or forum for people interact with together and improve the communication among all associated with IUP. Recommendation 3 would allow for funding for research, for the Frederick Douglass Institute, and support scholarly exchanges.…
The Southern Poverty Law Center, otherwise known as SPLC, is a civil rights organization here in the United States that helps slay racism, hate groups, discrimination and injustice meant to harm and dehumanize people. (www.SPLCenter.org) Founded in 1971 by civil rights activist and attorney Morris Dees, SPLC has continued to flourish in its promise to ensure equality and justice for all. The power force behind this leadership is a great team of board members, program staffers and civil right lawyers who fight for the exploited, abused and forgotten. Together they have formed an unbreakable ring and have triumphed continuously, winning lawsuits in defending workers whose rights had been violated and children who were being exploited. In efforts to raise awareness of social inequality and racism and to help encourage others to stand against it, their website offers direct links to a “Hate Map”, in which hate group organizations are located, as well as a “Hate Incident” report that lets viewers read about recent hate crimes in their area. They have gone as far as bankrupting one of the nation’s most notorious hate groups. This is a civil rights movement happening right now and the homepage of their website emphasizes so, with the current events headings flashing by slowly, depicting high scale photos, suggesting to the headlines of current events taking place this second. The Southern Poverty Law Center website provides an easy to navigate interface designed to help involve, educate and raise awareness of discrimination and injustice to civil rights supporters.…
Discrimination in America has never been condemned like today, but how did the country change from a place where discrimination was a part of every day’s life to a place where discrimination is not encouraged by many. Unfortunately, African Americans have been the ones who have suffered the most from discrimination mainly because of the type of their skin. The Civil Rights is the moment when African Americans could finally achieve what their forefathers had been promised a Century ago. To achieve these people had to sacrifice their lives, the sages were not wrong when they uttered the proverb no pain no gain.…
The issue of civil rights was very divisive in the United States. The majority of white Southerners still opposed the integration of blacks in the school systems as well as on public transportation and in restaurants(Shultz, 2013). Not only were blacks still being segregated, they were also being [physically assaulted, along with any white sympathisers that were will to speak out.…
The three most pressing social issues in the United States today are the economy, lack of appropriate education, and our priorities. In the U.S. today our national debt is over fifteen trillion dollars. Our national unemployment rate is 8.5%. Big businesses seem to continue to flourish at the working classes’ expense. When the wealthy lose their jobs, they tend to have “nest eggs” or resources that they can rely on until another position comes available. Yes, they sometimes have to make sacrifices until they get other means of employment, but usually that doesn’t mean whether to feed themselves or their children. Many people have lost their homes and self-worth along with the economic down fall. This really leads into my next social problem: education. Our educational systems are flooded with all the politically correct information and the testing requirements, that we have lost sight of some value basic information. Many students are able to recite book knowledge, but cannot demonstrate basic common sense. Although, I know that classes like “home ec” are not popular anymore, but maybe a small portion should be mandatory. Teaching our youth about balancing their personal budgets might lead to someone helping our national debt. And if they learned about nutrition and how to cook, then maybe obesity would decline. Finally, is the concern over our nation’s priorities. We say that freedom, security, education is all important, but look at what we spend our money on. We pour millions of dollars into professional athletes, but not into our children’s education or their educators. When we have to wait at airport security or are subject to a luggage search we grumble, but yet we demand security. We want freedom to choice anything we want, but protest when others choose differently than us. There are more social issues I would love to discuss, but with any of these issues come needed resolution that I unfortunately do not possess.…
Social justice, it is a right everyone deserves yet not everyone receives. Our world today faces numerous and wide range of issues; including but not limited to health care and educational rights, to gender and racial equality, as well as waste management and illegal immigration. To be completely honest, I am indecisive as to where I stand under this immense social justice umbrella. The one thing I am certain of, as I mentioned before, is that social justice is something everyone deserves.…
The United States has several different social groups, but some groups were seen as second class citizens in the past hundreds of years. African Americans experienced brutal treatments as slaves after being brought to the American society. Other minorities groups, including female and LGBTQs, had unequal opportunities in the society as well. As the society developed, civil rights policies, which are designed to improve the living conditions of minorities, were made into laws; however, not all civil rights policies were effectively in solving inequalities. The United States had made both successful and failed civil rights approaches.…