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by acangiano
5397 days ago
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> It's not an overriding concern these days. Quoting wikipedia: "Nevertheless, the idea that minority students suffer from the negative prejudices of their ethnic peers is currently accepted as generally true in much of the American media—as expressed in articles in The New York Times, Time magazine, and The Wall Street Journal—and in American society." > This is just ridiculous. Let's drop the term if you don't like it or if you think it is obsolete, but the feeling behind the statement "Achieving your goals takes a lot of acting white." is anything but ridiculous. I used the term "acting white" as a way to convey success, particularly in school, and aiming high while being belittled for it by your peers. Replace it with "Achieving your goals takes a lot of ambition and hard work often against peer pressure" if you prefer. |
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> Though the study's conclusion gained a popular foothold and has been espoused by figures such as Bill Cosby in his famous May 2004 speech, a later study challenged its validity. In 2003, Karolyn Tyson, a sociologist, and William Darity, Jr., an economist, both at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, directed an 18 month study at eleven North Carolinian schools. The study concluded that white and black students have essentially the same attitudes about scholastic achievement; students in both groups want to succeed in school and show higher levels of self-esteem when they do better in school.
You just want to use "acting white" as a euphemism for black students as underachievers. Those days are gone. Long gone.
If you use that term these days around the youth, you will be laughed at.