Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Asian Lesbian Struggles

A visible minority is one who could never pass as being part of the majority or in this case, "white." An invisible minority is one who is part of the minority in society but doesn't run the risk of being discriminated against. Sticking to your own kind means staying with that minority and not having the values and accents of the majority. In other words, it means not conforming to the majority race. The author is going through the struggle of identifying and embracing her own culture even though she regards herself as a sinophobic. She overcame her struggle through meeting other people from her group, such as colored lesbians. I don't tone down many aspects of myself more than normal. One thing I do is to avoid telling people that I am from Naperville, a rich, rich suburb of Chicago because most people assume that I am spoiled and look down on me for it. It's a confusing and selfish habit...

Perpetuating Sexism

I don't think that I necessarily act sexist because I believe myself to be relatively neutral about women in that I don't judge them because they are not wearing make-up or acting accordingly to how women should act. I think sexist when I see sorority girls all formally dressed up and screaming at each other because i believe that is what's degrading to women in general.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Paraphrasing Activity

In order to stop overuse of quotations in your research paper, you should limit them at the source. This means that you should limit the amount of quotations you take down as notes, therefore, a smaller portion of your research paper will be direct quotations (Lester, 1976).

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Reflections on Breaking the Code activity

What I learned from this activity was the importance of the literature review as part of the research process. Also, I think that this helped me understand how I can delve deeper into the articles and other sources I have collected. It was hard to do but with those specific questions to find an answer to, it is relatively easy.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Summary Practice

The author discusses the social functions of "serious" and "popular" music, a distinction he makes between mass produced popular music and a real form of art which is "serious" music. He posits that "popular" music serves only a sociological function in that it is determined by the social atmosphere of that time and "serious" music is created for transcendental purposes in that it passes through social forces. His main point is that "serious" music has social forces at the time it was made hidden in it while "popular" music literally tells us those social forces.

Monday, September 6, 2010

Three Workable Research Questions

Can cross-cultural community relations training and different hiring techniques help curb police discrimination in urban American cities?

Are there similarities and differences between urban and rural police discrimination and what is the reason for them?

Do public acts of discrimination through brutality by police officers result in retaliation by the victim's community members? Does this result in cyclical violence towards the police and community?

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Finding the Focusing Questions

Important Question:
When police officers commit racist acts against the public, what specific types of factors and settings can be determined to pinpoint why that racist act occurred.


Sub-Questions:
Would providing cross-cultural community relation training and diversity training help curb racism within the urban police force?

Can the hiring of more minority police officers create a trust between the police and urban minority communities?

Does the setting for which police stereotype people determine whether it is racist or efficient?

When racism in the police force occurs, is it a more personal or institutional cause?