Friday, October 7, 2011

Youth Resistance


After reading Bruce Levine’s article, it is clearly apparent that America’s youth isn’t “fighting back” as much as could be necessary. Of this points, there are some I agree, and some I disagree with.

One point I disagree with is his thoughts on schooling. I don’t see school being a sole reason for youth resistance. He seems to say that because in the classroom and are to obey a teacher and take their directions, that alone is reason enough to not go out and voice your opinion. Maybe school doesn’t “teach us to act in a friction causing manner,” but I don’t feel that the classroom is a place where that should be taught.  
He says that schools “teach kids to care about things they don’t care about”. I don’t see how teaching a kid what they aren’t interested in can be something that enables them from voicing their opinion. If you don’t care about algebra, that doesn’t mean you blow it off and not do it. In life everything you do isn’t going to interest you, or be fun for that matter. If your everyday job is to stock groceries, but on a given day you are asked to take “do the numbers”, you don’t blow it off, you do it because it’s part of responsibility. Maybe kids don’t feel that school is the place they feel that they get “most educated,” but the school system is a system that is not just there to help you solve quadratic equations, it’s a place where you learn life lessons and hard work.

One bullet point that I agree is his eighth example when he says:
Fundamentalist consumerism destroys self-reliance, creating people who feel completely dependent on others and who are thus more likely to turn over decision-making power to authorities…”
I do feel that American youths are becoming more dependant on other people or hierarchies to take control, or simply hope that someone else voices their shared opinion.

Additional Points:

1.)    One reason not mentioned in the article that I feel contributes to this is problem is that people don’t feel that their single voice will make a difference. Whether it’s insecurity, lack of self-confidence, or simply not caring, certain issues will shut people up. If you were to gather 100 students, I’d bet that at least 75 (probably even higher) of them will sit back and watch the other 25 debate certain topics. That’s not to say that the majority doesn’t have an opinion or care about the topic, but many people today are so worried about how they’re perceived by their peers, they fear engaging in animated discussions.  
2.)    Another is the advancement in technology and social media. First, youths are now prone to distraction with so many new gaming consoles, computers, iPads/iPods, etc. These advancements are coming in at the height of social networking as well. Facebook, Twitter, and many more of these sites have become so big that it is changing how individuals interact with one another.
3.)    Peoples dependence on their parents. Some kids many have grown up with their parents doing everything for them, they’ll believe that their parents will always be there to fight their battles for them.

3 comments:

  1. I also wonder about the educational aspect here but for different reasons. Schools have always taught youth to comply with authority, to not question, to avoid critical thinking, etc. So what is different today? I think his point about teaching what people want to hear is about avoiding topics, issues that might make students uncomfortable; in this regard, what types of students and young people is he talking about; how is he privileging and who is he ignoring within his discussion

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  2. I can see what he means by avoiding topics, totally, which yeah, could be wrong. But at the same time there may (right or wrong) be some issues better left for other areas. I know that he is taking about bigger sample sizes; but for my example, I guess he would be ignoring those "25" or so people who do engage and speak out.

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  3. I completely agree with your additional points about why teenagers don't fight back. They are comfortable in the life they live that they don't want to make a disturbance because of fear of denial and being shunned from their peers. Technology is becoming a way for people to hide and confront people without having to see them, without having to meet face to face and that is a shame. Pretty soon people aren't going to know how to talk to someone on the phone or in person because email, texts, or Facebook are going to become the main way of communication.

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