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READING FIG SESSION I

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

During this meeting we discussed the introduction and chapter 1.  All present had experiences with stereotypes affecting us personally and with our students.  We also talked about how important it is to feel that you belong to do well in college. One of the biggest problems with the pandemic has been the isolation of our students from other students.  According to Steel, minorities members often feel like they do not belong and this along with stereotypical messages that resonate internally lowers outcomes for students.   We talked about different methods we can use to help our students feel connected to other students.

In chapter 1 (p 16-17) Steel discusses the inspiration for the name of the book :

Consider the experience of Brent Staples, now a columnist for the New
York Times, but then a psychology graduate student at the University of
Chicago, a young African American male dressed in informal student
clothing walking down the streets of Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood. In
his own words:

I became an expert in the language of fear. Couples locked arms or
reached for each other’s hand when they saw me. Some crossed to
the other side of the street. People who were carrying on
conversations went mute and stared straight ahead, as though
avoiding my eyes would save them….
I’d been a fool. I’d been walking the streets grinning good evening
at people who were frightened to death of me. I did violence to them
by just being. How had I missed this…
I tried to be innocuous but didn’t know how…. I began to avoid
people. I turned out of my way into side streets to spare them the
sense that they were being stalked…. Out of nervousness I began to
whistle and discovered I was good at it. My whistle was pure and
sweet—and also in tune. On the street at night I whistled popular
tunes from the Beatles and Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. The tension
drained from people’s bodies when they heard me. A few even
smiled as they passed me in the dark. (p.17)


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