九成是个烂坑, 1.亚裔的眼睛不是black,一般在大陆会说黑眼睛。有驾照可以看看驾照,写的都是“brown” 2.德州的话,你看看人口组成,Hispanic已经接近或者超过white people,然后下次挖坑记着Hispanics have almost all but purple and orange colored eyes 具体到墨西哥裔,the brown color is the most common in Mexico: Followed by green and blue。 3.这个坑最大的可信之处只在于,老师里边也又蠢的,而且可以蠢到这种地步。 4.一个层主说的好,“无论如何,教会孩子强大”
" A 2002 study found that the prevalence of blue eye color among the white population in the United States to be 33.8% for those born from 1936 through 1951, compared with 57.4% for those born from 1899 through 1905.[14] As of 2006, one out of every six Americans, or 16.6% of the total US population, has blue eyes,[53] including 22.3% of whites. Blue eyes are continuing to become less common among American children.[54] 56% of Slovenes have blue/green eyes.[55]" 从wikipedia上copy的,lz所说的情况,从统计学上来讲,概率实在是不高啊,很好奇是什么样的学校。
" A 2002 study found that the prevalence of blue eye color among the white population in the United States to be 33.8% for those born from 1936 through 1951, compared with 57.4% for those born from 1899 through 1905.[14] As of 2006, one out of every six Americans, or 16.6% of the total US population, has blue eyes,[53] including 22.3% of whites. Blue eyes are continuing to become less common among American children.[54] 56% of Slovenes have blue/green eyes.[55]" 从wikipedia上copy的,lz所说的情况,从统计学上来讲,概率实在是不高啊,很好奇是什么样的学校。 karaage 发表于 2021-08-27 11:32
On the day after Martin Luther King Jr. was murdered in April 1968, Jane Elliott’s third graders from the small, all-white town of Riceville, Iowa, came to class confused and upset. They recently had made King their “Hero of the Month,” and they couldn’t understand why someone would kill him. So Elliott decided to teach her class a daring lesson in the meaning of discrimination. She wanted to show her pupils what discrimination feels like, and what it can do to people. Elliott divided her class by eye color — those with blue eyes and those with brown. On the first day, the blue-eyed children were told they were smarter, nicer, neater, and better than those with brown eyes. Throughout the day, Elliott praised them and allowed them privileges such as a taking a longer recess and being first in the lunch line. In contrast, the brown-eyed children had to wear collars around their necks and their behavior and performance were criticized and ridiculed by Elliott. On the second day, the roles were reversed and the blue-eyed children were made to feel inferior while the brown eyes were designated the dominant group. What happened over the course of the unique two-day exercise astonished both students and teacher. On both days, children who were designated as inferior took on the look and behavior of genuinely inferior students, performing poorly on tests and other work. In contrast, the “superior” students — students who had been sweet and tolerant before the exercise — became mean-spirited and seemed to like discriminating against the “inferior” group. “I watched what had been marvelous, cooperative, wonderful, thoughtful children turn into nasty, vicious, discriminating little third-graders in a space of fifteen minutes,” says Elliott. She says she realized then that she had “created a microcosm of society in a third-grade classroom.” Elliott repeated the exercise with her new classes in the following year. The third time, in 1970, cameras were present. Fourteen years later, FRONTLINE’s A Class Divided chronicled a mini-reunion of that 1970 third-grade class. As young adults, Elliott’s former students watch themselves on film and talk about the impact Elliott’s lesson in bigotry has had on their lives and attitudes. It is Jane Elliott’s first chance to find out how much of her lesson her students had retained. “Nobody likes to be looked down upon. Nobody likes to be hated, teased or discriminated against,” says Verla, one of the former students. Another, Sandra, tells Elliott: “You hear these people talking about different people and how they’d like to have them out of the country. And sometimes I just wish I had that collar in my pocket. I could whip it out and put it on and say ‘Wear this, and put yourself in their place.’ I wish they would go through what I went through, you know.” In the last part of A Class Divided, FRONTLINE’s cameras follow Jane Elliott as she takes her exercise to employees of the Iowa prison system. During a daylong workshop in human relations she teaches the same lesson to the adults. Their reactions to the blue-eye, brown-eye exercise are similar to those of the children. “After you do this exercise, when the debriefing starts, when the pain is over and they’re all back together, you find out how society could be if we really believed all this stuff that we preach, if we really acted that way, you could feel as good about one another as those kids feel about one another after this exercise is over. You create instant cousins,” says Elliott. “The kids said over and over, ‘We’re kind of like a family now.’ They found out how to hurt one another and they found out how it feels to be hurt in that way and they refuse to hurt one another in that way again.” Originally published January 2003
Can eye colors change? Sometimes, yes! Most non-Hispanic, Caucasianbabies are born with blue eyes. In some cases, a baby's eye color will darken over time. It appears this is caused by more melanin developing in the iris during infancy and early childhood. So, a child born with light blue eyes may end up with a darker blue eye color or an entirely different eye color. Most individuals achieve stable eye color by 6 years of age. However, a subpopulation of 10% to 15% of Caucasians can have changes in eye color throughout adolescence and into adulthood.
胡说八道的是你自己 Can eye colors change? Sometimes, yes! Most non-Hispanic, Caucasianbabies are born with blue eyes. In some cases, a baby's eye color will darken over time. It appears this is caused by more melanin developing in the iris during infancy and early childhood. So, a child born with light blue eyes may end up with a darker blue eye color or an entirely different eye color. Most individuals achieve stable eye color by 6 years of age. However, a subpopulation of 10% to 15% of Caucasians can have changes in eye color throughout adolescence and into adulthood.
不但要求学校处理这个老师,还要建议学校对全体老师定期进行diversity training. 有一个这样的,保不准还有别的。
做老师的如果有歧视的心,对孩子伤害太大了!
是啊,很无奈
是这样,而且大人还是可以装一装的,对孩子有时候真的比较残酷。
这老师绝对有问题
可是你们也真有勇气,就算所有的老师都是圣人,这全班都是蓝眼睛,就是说连墨裔,非裔,混血,其他亚裔一个没有,只有你们家一个minority 孩子,真不担心孩子可能遇到的融入问题吗
大人已经被磨练到脸皮厚了,小孩子的心灵还是很脆弱
不知道华人为什么迷信私校,私校很多老师真的是一言难尽
我也有同感
如果送私校,之前功课要做好,然后要家长跟得很紧
孩子哭的事倒是另说,我觉得可以趁机鼓励孩子,自己是unique的。是少数族裔,同时proud。
一年级的娃懂啥啊
你这人怎么这么怂!
楼主别听她的!直接直白告校长这就是种族歧视!眼睛颜色是跟皮肤颜色走的还能有人不知道?按color分类是非常非常明显的种族歧视!
直接告校长种族歧视的白女教师不适合当教师教育孩子,必须受到处分或开除!学区里这种种族歧视的风必须制止!
对的,歧视要自己说出来,对方才能感受到严重性。还等对方说。。。
等你家孩子回来跟你哭述,你也会说:骗人,怎么可能人家都是蓝眼睛?
唉,没办法,只能站出来,有没有用再说,给孩子立榜样,校长要是和稀泥,估计只能转学了。
其实小宝宝还真没关系,小小孩直接歧视少,大家会凑着一起玩,反倒大了会按肤色头发颜色分group玩。
确实难以置信, 我在最保守的中部住过,蓝眼睛都没有那么普遍。难道楼主在北欧?
又来了!你的意思是弱者就活该被欺负了?!为什么有些人总爱blame受害者?难道我们不能一边鼓励孩子一边尽力争取一个平等友爱的环境?你这种心态以后很容易不是被更强的bully就是bully别人,很难有和谐的人际关系的
那么是每天来论坛上哭诉更好?争取有爱平等的环境不需要斗争?上帝救自救的人,你随便吧爱听不听 弱者被欺负是不是活该要看情况。有些弱是天生残疾,有些弱只是自己懒惰,不进取造成的。
只能北欧了。 美国的话,选校的时候要看他的diversity啊,那种一个minority没有的学校,他敢收我也 不敢送孩子去啊。
其实可能只是按深浅,蓝的灰的绿的其实看不太清,但棕黑就很明显了。
犹太人意大利的啥的白人深色眼睛多的很。 而且什么学校啊,没黑人劳模印度人? 但凡有点追求的学校都不会允许Student body 里面这么白吧!
1.亚裔的眼睛不是black,一般在大陆会说黑眼睛。有驾照可以看看驾照,写的都是“brown”
2.德州的话,你看看人口组成,Hispanic已经接近或者超过white people,然后下次挖坑记着Hispanics have almost all but purple and orange colored eyes 具体到墨西哥裔,the brown color is the most common in Mexico: Followed by green and blue。
3.这个坑最大的可信之处只在于,老师里边也又蠢的,而且可以蠢到这种地步。
4.一个层主说的好,“无论如何,教会孩子强大”
从wikipedia上copy的,lz所说的情况,从统计学上来讲,概率实在是不高啊,很好奇是什么样的学校。
估计是——蓝眼睛天才小学
白人小娃蓝眼睛金发的比例特别高,长大才变色
呵呵 果然
re。写邮件给校长并且cc给学区委员会,直接闹大才不会被压下来。
对啊 严重怀疑楼上质疑楼主挖坑的是不是见过的白人不多,根据我在playground观察,爸妈都是白人的,不管爸妈头发和眼睛是什么颜色,小娃80%都是金发碧眼,大娃才开始变成深色头发和眼睛
我没发现啊,是不是中西部都是这样的。
没听说过。头发长大了还变是有,眼睛除非小婴儿,看孩子同学基本不变了。都小学,还变啥。
能不要再信口开河胡说八道了吗
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/article/introduction-2/
这样问开放性问题太weak了根本不会有人当回事的,lz是维权不是求人,定性和诉求都要清楚表达才会被重视
现在亚裔多的地方,基本大部分亚裔都是烙印啊
白人的眼睛有很多是棕色,黑色,绿色的。不觉得小时候是蓝色,长大会变成棕色。
同意孩子一定要强大起来。
Can eye colors change? Sometimes, yes! Most non-Hispanic, Caucasian babies are born with blue eyes. In some cases, a baby's eye color will darken over time. It appears this is caused by more melanin developing in the iris during infancy and early childhood. So, a child born with light blue eyes may end up with a darker blue eye color or an entirely different eye color. Most individuals achieve stable eye color by 6 years of age. However, a subpopulation of 10% to 15% of Caucasians can have changes in eye color throughout adolescence and into adulthood.
胡说八道的是你自己 Can eye colors change? Sometimes, yes! Most non-Hispanic, Caucasian babies are born with blue eyes. In some cases, a baby's eye color will darken over time. It appears this is caused by more melanin developing in the iris during infancy and early childhood. So, a child born with light blue eyes may end up with a darker blue eye color or an entirely different eye color. Most individuals achieve stable eye color by 6 years of age. However, a subpopulation of 10% to 15% of Caucasians can have changes in eye color throughout adolescence and into adulthood.
是的,也总感觉哪里不对,我门这里学校 白人居多,一个班级一个两亚裔,有的甚至没有,蓝眼睛的白人小孩 都是极其少有的,基本都是浅灰色, 深灰色。
蓝的最容易看出来了
眼睛都是蓝色也有不同的蓝色 ,有的偏绿,有的偏蓝。 这老师是要搞个色谱吗?
人家认为那是灰蓝色,也算蓝色