04 September 2016

Stupid teacher

The Washington Post has an article by Katie Mettler, a reporter for The Washington Post's Morning Mix team; she previously worked for the Tampa Bay Times, about a ignorant woman in Texas:


A Texas teacher nicknamed her class the j-word. Her defense for the racial slur: ignorance.
The nicknames were meant to create togetherness for the sixth-grade classrooms at Bell Manor Elementary Schoollocated in a town between Fort Worth and Dallas, and intended to begin the school year with a trip to Camp Thurman, reported the Dallas Star-Telegram, a day camp with “fun in the woods” activities. The nicknames would be used during a team-building exercise.
One group of children claimed the name Dream Team.
Another got Jighaboos.
When one student’s father found out, he was appalled.
“You have Dream Team and then you have the Jighaboos. Really? Really?” he told Fox 4. “That’s unacceptable.”
The father, who spoke on camera to the television station, but asked not to show his face, said he learned of the nickname when he asked his son, like he does every night after school, what he had learned that day. He couldn’t understand how the teacher, who he told Fox 4 was white, could assign such a derogatory and commonly known racial slur for a black person to a group of children in a school that is majority-minority. “I had to see it myself,” he said. He stopped by the classroom when it was empty, the father told Fox 4, and found evidence of the nickname tacked to the wall. On a laminated sheet of white paper, bordered by green construction paper, a classroom mantra-type sign bore the slur:
“Mrs. _____’s Jighaboos are at school today to achieve our sixth grade goals and prepare for seventh grade,” the sign read, according to a photo the dad sent Fox 4. “We want to achieve higher reading levels and score level III on the Reading STAAR test. We can make this happen by reading more challenging books, working as a team, and always giving a hundred percent while having fun!”
Around the sign’s border, it appears the students scrawled their initials.
School administrators conducted an investigation once the slur was brought to their attention, the Telegram reported. “The teacher took the sign down,” school district spokeswoman Deanne Hullender told the newspaper. “She was mortified, and she cried.”
The district told local media the teacher, who has not been identified, was not aware jighaboo (properly spelled jigaboo) was a racial slur.
“We would like to extend an apology for the inappropriate actions taken by one of our elementary teachers, who failed to vet a class name,” a statement from the district said. “We take this situation seriously and the issue was immediately addressed with the principal and classroom teacher. Both the principal and the teacher have apologized to the parent reporting this concern.”
Fox 4 reported that the parents of the rest of the children in that class were to receive an apology as well, but it was unclear whether that had yet happened. The students in that class are white, African American, and Latino. State data shows that, during the 2014-15 academic school year, the 759 elementary students were 36 percent Anglo, 23.5 percent African American and 26.9 percent Hispanic.
The father who initially reported the transgression said he was unimpressed with the teacher’s response. “Ignorance is not a defense,” he told Fox 4. “It is not a defense.”
But it’s a defense that has been used before. In 2015, a Fox News anchor in Cleveland, Ohio was commenting during the morning show about Lady Gaga’s performance at the Oscars when she said this: “It’s usually so hard to hear her voice with all that jigaboo music, whatever you want to call it, in the background.”
The Internet promptly exploded, and the next day she issued an apology. “I just want to take a moment to address a comment that I made yesterday that got a lot of attention,” Capel said. “It’s important for me to let you know that I deeply regret my insensitive comment. I truly did not know the meaning of the word and would never intentionally use such hurtful language.”
In the wake of criticisms that followed, political analyst Jason Johnson wrote a scathing critique on NBC News: "The idea that Kristi Chapel had no idea that jigaboo was a negative reference to black people is a total stretch,” Johnson wrote. “She didn’t make an “insensitive” statement, she made a racist statement, and to believe her story you’d have to believe that a woman with a degree in journalism uses words on television that she doesn’t know the meaning of.”
In that same vein, an editorial board member for The Dallas Morning News critiqued the Bell Manor teacher in a column, echoing the outraged dad, writing, “her ignorance is not an excuse. It’s mind-boggling that a teacher in racially-sensitive 2016 would adopt a term she doesn’t know, display it, and have her students recite it,” Leona Allen wrote. “I’m left with a lot of questions.” She said this situation demonstrates why a diverse staff is important, and that it prompts teachers to be more proactive in learning about the historical backgrounds of their racially diverse students. She also offered background on the origins of the slur:
The slur is rooted in slavery. It was used as a derogatory term for a black person deemed too dark-skinned, hair too kinky, and therefore somehow thought of as less attractive, just undesirable, period, than someone born with lighter skin and straighter hair.
It insidiously became a way that black people compared themselves.
On the Internet, some people have found themselves confusing the derogatory term with the 1999 Destiny’s Child single Bug A Boo:


In the song, a bug a boo is, one can surmise, a boyfriend who is bothersome.
Perhaps the Texas teacher had just been listening to too much Beyoncé.

Rico says she didn't even spell it right...

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