Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Western Migration

Our latest conversations in Mrs. G class has been about Western Migration. Many people went west for multiple reasons. People of all different races and size made the trip with their families and animals, of the hopes of starting a new and better economic life. One of the main reasons people left was because of agriculture and the gold rush.

African Americans were a large group of people that went west. Mainly because of the fact that many African Americans didn't want to wait for the government to start making conditions better for them in the south, so they decided to move west in the hopes of beginning a farm and a agricultural life or striking gold in the gold rush.

Another group of people that left was poor white young men in the South. Young poor white men had nothing going for them in the south after Reconstruction so they did like many and moved west. They really wasn't looking for the land that the west offered but the gold it did. The young white men thought that if they moved west they would become rich.

Other people went west strictly to make money. These types of people were called speculators. Speculators are people who buy land and then sell it later on for more than they bought it for to make profit. This was widely done during western migration because the price of buying land was cheap , $10, and affordable.

I think that western migration was good during that time period because it gave people that was poor a chance for a new start that could possibly lead to making money. Though the trip for many was hard, long, and for some lonely, they all new one thing, that there life could change for the better. That was the motivation that each person had and if it wasn't for that many wouldn't of last the grueling trip.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Enrollment in South Africa in 1982

During the past couple classes, we , our class, have been talking a lot about South Africa. Mainly our discussions has been about Apartheid and how it affected that region. Recently we have took a glance at a 1982 survey that was taken in South Africa. The survey showed the enrollment rates between blacks and whites from the lowest level grade to the highest. Not to our amazement, it showed how the numbers were drastically different between the two races. This set of information had lead our class to the group discussion on how the whites outnumbered the blacks in the number of enrolled students in all grades.

When I first read the survey, I wasn't startled by the information that i read just as everyone else wasn't either. We all know that in South Africa theres still a major gap between the whites and blacks that still exist today, so theres no reason to act like its not happening. It just amazes me how the United States have come a long way since the end of slavery in the 1800's, and how far the U.S. has come since the end of segregation in the 1900's but in South Africa, they still haven't made the huge step into equality yet. It just seems to me that if this part of the world is changing, how come other parts of the world is not.

The 1982 Enrollment in South Africa between blacks and whites clearly shows that more white people were enrolled in school in every single grade than blacks. First of all, whites and blacks didn't even attend the same school, so it wasn't like one group didn't enroll in school because they were intimidated by the other group, so this wasn't the case at all for the difference in numbers. Whites and blacks went to two separate schools in two separate areas. Thats another thing, whites and blacks don't even live in the same neighborhood! This background information is what lead me to be confused about how the number of students enrolled in school could be so different when the two racial groups never interacted with one another. This made me pay attention even more in class to get to the bottom of this dispute.

In South Africa, the majority of the good jobs were obtained by the white people. This meant that the better your parents job was, the less concern for the students to get a job to help support the family. Vise versa, the worst your parent job was, the more concern there was for the student to get a job to help support their family. Well in South Africa most blacks had bad jobs, so this was one of the leading factors for blacks dropping out of school or not enrolling at all. Another major contributor to the drop in enrollments for blacks, were the number of disease and STD's that blacks were unfortunately acquiring. Since whites had money, the could afford medicine and STD preventing products, unlike the blacks who were too poor to afford those kinds of things. These two causes were the main factors that made the drop in enrollment so drastic between blacks and whites in South Africa in 1982.

Its very hard for me to relate to not only the schools but the overall environment in South Africa in 1982 to the United States today in 2008 but I just can't imagine the numbers of dropouts being that big. I'm not saying that theres no dropouts that exist today in Christiana because there is, but the reason for students dropping out here is different from student dropping out in South Africa. If you asked a recent drop out of Christiana, I bet there answer will never be, "I'm dropping out of school because I'm about to die soon because I have AIDS not because I chose to get it but because I was too poor from preventing it". That answer alone just makes me think how lucky I am for the situation I'm in now. A junior in high school and a year from graduating not a year from dying.