Post#3: Why All The Black Kids Are Sitting Together In The Cafeteria, and How Tatum Goes About Explaining What You Can Do To Combat Racism
The purpose of Tatum's book is to educate the reader on modern/ systemic racism, as well as how they can combat it in their daily lives and internal dialogues. She shows how racism manifests itself in stereotypes, microaggressions, and racial disparity in treatment, and then how these thing affect people's thoughts and actions, and how they can combat these influences. In chapter four ("Identity Development in Adolescence"), for example, she explains how Black students with the same grades as White students are far less likely to be recommended for advanced classes. A famous example of this is Malcolm Little, now known as Malcolm X, who was told by his English teacher that because he was Black, he could not be a lawyer. Frequently, when students so affected by racism in education talk to White friends and acquaintances about these encounters and disparities, their White friends and acquaintances frequently tell them that there is no issue, or do not unde...