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- Organization: Doctoral student, English, Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, PA
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cis.ohio-state.edu!news.sei.cmu.edu!bb3.andrew.cmu.edu!crabapple.srv.cs.cmu.edu!andrew.cmu.edu!lv08+
- Newsgroups: sci.edu
- Message-ID: <IfLiGe600WB98iAXsl@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 13:00:10 -0500
- From: Lili Velez <lv08+@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Subject: Growing up to be a truck driver (was: RE: Branding Kids)
- Lines: 41
-
- I teach. I want all of my students to become critical thinkers, to be
- creative in the fields they pursue and the lives they lead outside of their
- work. But there's been something that's bothered me about this "Branding
- Kids" thread, and the last message from MIT (forgive me; I can't see the
- message I'm responding to, but I remember it was an athena address) crystal-
- lized it for me.
-
- Is there something inherently _wrong_ about being a truck driver? Must we
- be disappointed in someone who _wants_ to be a beautician, a cook, a
- mechanic?
-
- Yes, I completely understand being distressed when someone believes that one
- career or another is the "only job they could ever be suited for, so
- why try...?". Abandoned or misguided potential is a tremendous loss, to
- both the person and the society which has to trundle on without their
- contributions -- but it seems to me that we can brand careers ('vocations'?)
- as unworthy or `below us' just as easily as we can brand children.
-
- Come to think of it, I have an an example of this in my own family. I'm
- finishing my PhD. I've always loved academics (give or take some horrible
- moments in my mathematics education, but I'm about ready to repair that
- damage). My brother has managed with his academics, but his goal was never
- a college career, it was to be a police officer (local or state trooper).
- My parents wanted him to go to college (particularly my mother, who was much
- more open than my father about saying that "Erik, you could be so much
- _more_ than just a police officer!"). The local police officers tried
- steering him away from the idea, telling him he could really do a lot
- better than a career in law enforcement. What's going on here?
-
- Someone has to drive the trucks and repair the wiring which makes our
- pleasant academic discussions possible. I know that this bboard is for
- discussions of science and education, but there are sociological aspects
- to how and why people become 'educated' --- would it be easier to convince
- the ordinary majority of citizens to support educational initiatives to
- improve education in the sciences if we demonstrated that we respected who
- they are and what they do with their lives?
-
- Lili Fox Velez
- Rhetorician in Residence "Rhet in the Blue Linen Labcoat"
- Department of Biological Sciences
- Carnegie Mellon University
-