I
decided to use Jackie's blog post about Lareau. When she said that in her
household it was a major priority for her and her siblings to go to school I
agree. My parents ever since I was in middle school always made sure that not
going to college was not an option and the standard remains with my younger
brother. My parents just like Jackie’s, “…always taught me that education comes
first.” Especially because when my parents got married my dad only had his
associates in accounting and my mother only went to school for cosmetology.
Which to be honest got us pretty far, my brother and I could never say we
missed out when it came to having a childhood. We went to Disneyworld and
Canada to see Niagara Falls but as my dad would always say. “When you leave
this house I want you to live the same or better. But you should be living
better since you will have your B.A. in college.” I have to say if it was not
for their constant strives to keep us motivated about school. I would not be
where I am today. As I mentioned in my other blog there are moments when I feel
as if they are pushing me to the edge but I know that in their hearts they are
doing it because they love me and only want the very best. Also because they
know that it is when I feel like everything is crashing down when I pull myself
back together and do even better.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Understand Youth
Veronica's Context Map
Home
Work
As I was creating my context map I realized that as much as I wanted to think that I am the same person everywhere I go. I am not, and that is okay. The reason why is because when you are at work yes you want to have a bubbly personality but you also want to be able to maintain professional so that your boss takes you serious. Or at church since I am a youth leader yes I can have fun and associate with the youth but I also have to be able to have certain boundaries and know that if I make a mistake because I am a leader I have followers who look up to me. Also when I am at home I do have the opportunity to be myself but at the same time because my parents see school as a top priority my conversations with them tend to always lead back to how I am doing in school. We have time to have fun and watch television as a family but we mostly talk about school and where I see myself in 5 years or more. They are the ones that keep my feet on the ground whenever I feel like it is impossible but at the same time because I have to be strong all the time around them about school I rarely have a moment to let myself go when I am having a hard time. Which is why I am thankful for my friends, they are the people that I can cry to and express my sadness or stress to and not feel judged. Instead they always tell me empowering words or give me my favorite type of hugs which I like to call "bear hugs"
Home
- Big sister
- Safe
- Great relationship with my parents
- Silly
- Sarcastic
- Open book
- Chatter box
- Hyper
- Comfortable
- Tired
- Always learning
- Hungry
- Sometimes fun
- Never ending homework
- Socialize
Work
- Serious
- Organized
- Fun
- Multi-tasking
- Productive
- Chatterbox with other student workers
- Leader
- Peace
- Happiness
- Relaxed
- Sing
- Complete
- Loud
- Silly
- bubbly
- caring
- happy
- chatter box
- I can be myself
As I was creating my context map I realized that as much as I wanted to think that I am the same person everywhere I go. I am not, and that is okay. The reason why is because when you are at work yes you want to have a bubbly personality but you also want to be able to maintain professional so that your boss takes you serious. Or at church since I am a youth leader yes I can have fun and associate with the youth but I also have to be able to have certain boundaries and know that if I make a mistake because I am a leader I have followers who look up to me. Also when I am at home I do have the opportunity to be myself but at the same time because my parents see school as a top priority my conversations with them tend to always lead back to how I am doing in school. We have time to have fun and watch television as a family but we mostly talk about school and where I see myself in 5 years or more. They are the ones that keep my feet on the ground whenever I feel like it is impossible but at the same time because I have to be strong all the time around them about school I rarely have a moment to let myself go when I am having a hard time. Which is why I am thankful for my friends, they are the people that I can cry to and express my sadness or stress to and not feel judged. Instead they always tell me empowering words or give me my favorite type of hugs which I like to call "bear hugs"
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Resiliency, Positive YD, and Critical YD
I remember when the Professors and Youth in Action came and spoke to us about Resiliency, Positive development, and Critical Youth development. And how we had to take a short written survey about our identity status and explain a story that has a an emotional attatchment to us. It could be something that either excited me, puzzled me, or caused me to work harder at being me, or perhaps make me sometimes feel that I am not myself. Afterwards we would turn to our neighbor and discuss our story and then figure out if we were diffused, achieved, forclosed, or moratorium. Then we walked towards the corner that was labeled with our identity status and took turn sharing a shorter version of our story to our group and figure out the connection between all of stories.
So my story was when I was in the 9th grade at first I was very close to 8 girls, based on how people treated them and how they treated others they were known as the popular girls. When you are a freshmen in high school all you really want to do is fit in. Especially if a year ago you just moved to Providence, RI from Florida, and the year before that I was born and lived in Queens, NY. So finding a group of girls that I could actually fit in with for four years was very important to me since I moved so much. The only problem was, that I was friends with girls that were popular only because everyone was scared of them. You were either friends with them because you were scared or enemies because you decided to part ways. Since I was the studious one of the group they never made fun of me and called me hurtful names, because they knew how much value I added to their grade point average. Until one day, I will never forget and until today it is something that it does not hurt me but it does make me wish I never became their friends. I was extremely shy they probably would of never noticed me. But it happened no way to turn back now. So that day during 4th grade I was in my English class and the main girl of the girls was looking around the room trying to find someone to make fun of, it was a daily routine that never went unnoticed. She stopped at me, and said some really rude comments about me and just like that the entire room erupted with laughter. Without me giving my eyes permission I started to cry and my face turned extremely red, and because she realized how embarrassed I was she enjoyed it and kept doing it. In the hallway, in the cafeteria, in each of our classes because when you are a freshman you take the same classes besides electives, then goodness for electives. I tried getting help from my teachers but unfortunately there are so many students in a classroom that they could miss so much in a matter of just turning around or stepping out to discuss something with a teacher between periods. I also tried getting help from a school counselor but she only made it worse by inviting the girl to one of the appointments we made and just when the humiliation died out it begin again since the girl went to class and told everyone that I went to the counselor. My parents never found out since back then they both work 8am-5pm jobs so by the time I came home with my brother who is 5 years younger then me, my eyes were completely cried out.
I turned to my neighbor and explained all of this to her and then told her what my identity status was in this story and I said diffused. The reason that I believed that I was diffused in this story is because I felt helpless and even though I tried going to teachers and the school counselor it just made it worse. I also feel like because I just wanted to belong and follow a group, I was losing my identity.
So my story was when I was in the 9th grade at first I was very close to 8 girls, based on how people treated them and how they treated others they were known as the popular girls. When you are a freshmen in high school all you really want to do is fit in. Especially if a year ago you just moved to Providence, RI from Florida, and the year before that I was born and lived in Queens, NY. So finding a group of girls that I could actually fit in with for four years was very important to me since I moved so much. The only problem was, that I was friends with girls that were popular only because everyone was scared of them. You were either friends with them because you were scared or enemies because you decided to part ways. Since I was the studious one of the group they never made fun of me and called me hurtful names, because they knew how much value I added to their grade point average. Until one day, I will never forget and until today it is something that it does not hurt me but it does make me wish I never became their friends. I was extremely shy they probably would of never noticed me. But it happened no way to turn back now. So that day during 4th grade I was in my English class and the main girl of the girls was looking around the room trying to find someone to make fun of, it was a daily routine that never went unnoticed. She stopped at me, and said some really rude comments about me and just like that the entire room erupted with laughter. Without me giving my eyes permission I started to cry and my face turned extremely red, and because she realized how embarrassed I was she enjoyed it and kept doing it. In the hallway, in the cafeteria, in each of our classes because when you are a freshman you take the same classes besides electives, then goodness for electives. I tried getting help from my teachers but unfortunately there are so many students in a classroom that they could miss so much in a matter of just turning around or stepping out to discuss something with a teacher between periods. I also tried getting help from a school counselor but she only made it worse by inviting the girl to one of the appointments we made and just when the humiliation died out it begin again since the girl went to class and told everyone that I went to the counselor. My parents never found out since back then they both work 8am-5pm jobs so by the time I came home with my brother who is 5 years younger then me, my eyes were completely cried out.
I turned to my neighbor and explained all of this to her and then told her what my identity status was in this story and I said diffused. The reason that I believed that I was diffused in this story is because I felt helpless and even though I tried going to teachers and the school counselor it just made it worse. I also feel like because I just wanted to belong and follow a group, I was losing my identity.
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