Ain’t No Makin’ It, is a three part book written by Jay MacLeod that looks into the lives of two groups of boys growing up in Clarendon Heights. The two groups that MacLeod interviewed were the Hallway Hangers and the Brothers. He started his work by getting close to the boys and making sure they would be comfortable with him asking questions. After interviewing the boys and writing about their lives in his first edition of the book he made another edition. Eight years later he returned to the projects to find the men not doing so well. He discovered that schooling did not affect the boy's outcomes. Fifteen years later he returned to the Heights again to make another edition to his book. In his third edition of the book MacLeod explained where …show more content…
Alike the Hallway Hangers they also were not achieving what they had hoped for. Many of the boys dropped out of college with the realization that it was too expensive or too much to work a job and go to school. Learning that they needed money many of the men looked for jobs, but some went to the streets to sell drugs. This caused some of the Brothers to go to jail. Brothers who never turned to the streets got low paying job that did not meet their needs. Then fifteen years later when MacLeod came back to interview the Brothers for the third time, he found many of the men to be achieving the same life as the Hallway Hangers. Some men were in and out of jail. Some of the Brothers were still in the Heights while others moved away. Most of the men had children and full time jobs and were making a good …show more content…
Jay Macleod interviews boys for his research. This way he can use actual stories about people to see how growing up in poverty can affect someone's life. He was also able to make ethnographic observations which makes the story feel more real. I think using qualitative research for a study like this can be useful. The direction that MacLeod took on writing his book was biased. I think he should have interviewed boys and girls for his research. He did state that using girls for his research definitely could have changed the results, but he did not feel like he would have gotten true results from girls because he did not feel like he could get them to open up to him like the boys. Another biased approach that MacLeod took was interviewing boys who grew up without fathers. If he would have interviewed some boys who grew up with fathers that could have also skewed his research. Also by using quantitative research, he didn’t get results from other areas of the world. Using qualitative research, Macleod would have been able to compare his findings with what has been recorded in other areas of the world. Personally if I would have been the author of this book I would have used a mixture of quantitative and qualitative research. I would have interviewed both boys and girls from the Heights to get some personal information and also stuck some statistics in my paper to prevent
Social mobility is within the grasp of each person so long as they earnestly invest themselves. There exists, however, a dissonance between the achievement ideology and reality as discussed in Jay Macleod’s Ain’t No Makin’ It. In his book, Macleod perfors a longitudinal study over a group of young black men, the Brothers, living in the projects of Clarendon Heights and reveals the insidious social factors that
Some may argue that is okay to use the N-Word because they say it is just a word. In the article of “Rules for A word” by Jeremy Gagby he say that “Nigga is a word frequently heard in school, music, and on the streets.” This is the point that some people are arguing about, the word is used in songs and kids use it all the time and this is why they do not think it is a big deal. People may think that as time passes and other meanings of this word become popular, that it is acceptable to use this word. Newer generations have a completely different use for this
In this article, the Roughnecks were trouble, but they didn’t try to put off that they weren’t trouble. This article compared the lives of each group and how people thought about each. The teachers always believed what the Saints said because they were all well involved in the school and showed respect. On the other hand, the Roughnecks lacked the full participation in school events and they also lacked the respect that was desired to be shown. 2)
The book Black Like Me illustrated by John Howard Griffin is a book about a Caucasian southern man who wants to know how it feels to be an African-American man in the south, which was segregated during the 1950s. “You can’t just walk in anyplace and ask for a drink… There’s a Negro café over in the French Market about two blocks up”. (25) This was a quote from the book when John Howard Griffin had only been a black man for just a few days and realized things have changed since he became a black man. “A stinging indictment of thoughtless, needless inhumanity.
“’You clean it,’ Anse says. He don’t look around. Vardaman comes back and picks up the fish. It slides out of his hands, smearing wet dirt onto him, and flops down, dirtying itself again, gapmouthed, goggle-eyed, hiding into the dust like it was ashamed of being dead, like it was in a hurry to get back hid again” (31).
John Howard Griffin, a white man from Mansfield, Texas, is the author of the book “Black Like Me. ”The book is a journal he kept during the time of civil rights from October 1959 until August 1960. Griffin is trying to depict what it is like for a black man from a white man’s perspective during this period in history. John Howard Griffin is interested, yet irritated, that he cannot comprehend what a black man feels or is being treated like since he is a white man.
Scout was sick and tired of Mann Co. Bar. Why did he have to dance around on the stage half-dressed? He was a warrior, a fighter, a soldier, not some prissy piece of tail for girls to goggle over. He lost a game of Rock, Paper, Scissors one crucial time and was stuck being the dancer for Ladies’ Night. It was the third time he was being told to get up on stage that night and he wasn’t having it.
In preparation for this paper I chose to read Fire in the ashes: twenty five years among the poorest children in America by Jonathan Kozol. In this book Kozol has followed these children and their family’s lives for the past twenty five years. In his writing Kozol portrays a point of view most from his background and standing would not be capable of having. He portrays what life is like for those who have been let down by the system that was meant to protect them. Kozols writing style can be very blunt at times, not for shock value, but for the sake of portraying these children’s realities, and not sugarcoating the inequalities that they are faced with.
Gwendolyn Brooks' poem "We Real Cool" addresses the theme of mortality, especially in the context of destructive behaviors. While other topics present themselves, the varying crafts included in the essay point to the fast-burning flame of the speakers. Using identifying phrases with multiple interpretations, a short and to-the-point meter, and lyrical alliteration and assonance, Brooks tells a compelling tale of seven ill-fated youth. Gwendolyn Brooks, an African-American poet, likely wrote "We Real Cool" about young African-American boys. This is evident from the verse "Jazz June.
In the feature article “All Guts, No Glory”, I agree with the author Molly M. Ginty, that women participating in combat. If I was in the military some of the things that might affect me would be probably because of my gender. First, women would not be put into battle because people think women cannot handle the work or bloodshed. They think women are better off bring a nurse for helping men in battle if they get injured. Second, they think women in combat would be a distraction.
A man named Marlon Brando once said, “Privacy is not something that I’m merely entitled to, it’s an absolute prerequisite.” This means that privacy is essential, and all people deserve respect and privacy no matter what. In Toni Cade Bambara’s “Blues Ain’t No Mockin Bird” Granny’s privacy is invaded by a couple of cameramen. Grandaddy confronts the cameramen who invade their privacy telling them to leave. The cameramen eventually leave and give them privacy.
The narrator unconsciously thinks maybe if he can be there for these boys, when he was not for his brother, and help shape their minds; they will be able to survive the poverty and despair of Harlem, and ultimately, he will be redeemed. This is a reflection, of the narrator saying if they can escape, therefore I can also. No matter how hard he
Being called “nigger” everyday was something that any Black person would face living in the American South during the early 1900s. Richard Wright wrote a book called Black Boy describing his life in the Jim Crow era. This era of time in the South caused Blacks to feel like an inferior race to the Whites. The Jim Crow Laws was a statute that the South put into order in the 1880s to segregate the races. The laws segregated the workplace, bathrooms, restaurants, and parks ("Jim Crow Laws.").
CHAPTER 3 – METHODOLOGY THE ADVANTAGES AND LIMITATIONS OF MM The author decided to adopt a combination of quantitative and qualitative research methodology, dominated by qualitative research. Not only existing grounded theories will be studied, the author will look into a variety of case studies from an interpretative perspective to understand the realities and all possible factors making an impact. Taking account of the variety of advertising crowdsourcing projects, the quantitative elements will be used to determine the KPIs of these projects. The qualitative elements will be used to study the key metrics for projects to succeed through a variety of case studies to create an in-depth theory.
Investigation Stage Reflection At the investigation stage, I believe that youth from disadvantaged families deserve opportunities that they do not have because of their family’s situation. My major influences are my personal background and my personality. I came from an average standard of living in Cambodia, my parents both work every day even during the weekend to support my sisters and me to pursue our education. However, I am fortunate to receive the scholarship to this school which decrease the burden on my parents.