(NAME-MCE) keynote
kfellers at cox.net
kfellers at cox.net
Mon Sep 15 13:44:09 EDT 2008
Antonio
Well spoken
Well known people are always chosen because thats what brings in the crowds and the money.
I do have to say that Sonia Nieto, Carl Grant and others that have spoken for NAME have always given me something I can use in my classrooms.
But I do have to say that we do not hear enough from the people that do the day to day work in the classroom, that make a difference in a child's life that we never hear about.
Keith Fellers
Wichita High School East
Special Education Teacher
---- "Garcia Jr wrote:
=============
What are we looking for in a keynote speaker? Are we looking for
someone to tell us about the best practice or what we should do
according to research? Are we seeking someone to illuminate the
political and ideological struggle? Or are we looking for someone with
something to say? Keynote speakers should be passionate, invigorating,
and speakers who evoke emotion about the state of education in all
areas (urban, rural, and suburban) and demographics (race, sex,
language, SES, etc
). Does a keynote have to be published, popular,
or charge outrageous fees? Moreover, a true speaker for the cause of
social justice and egalitarian idealism should command only the ears
and not the money of the individuals to whom they speak. Our politics
and emotions surrounding the world must be understood that the cause is
bigger than ones self. We must look to someone with a Freirean idea
of dialog and emancipation. The keynote speaker I want to see is an
individual who understands what is needed and is willing to put the
needs of the oppressed, marginalized, and essentially all those outside
the hegemonic machine of whiteness before him/herself. The missionary
zeal that surrounds movies depicting inner city education like
Dangerous Minds and Freedom Writers still leaves audiences with a
notion of white people saving the world. Even if we were to get Jaime
Escalante as a Keynote speaker and applaud the movie Stand and
Deliver we would be making the same error in judgment because he is
known to be politically conservative, for English only, and so on.
Popular culture paints a picture of what is presumed to be real with
such popular movies. We have been cautioned by Henry Giroux, Richard
Dyer, Stuart Hall, Peter McLaren, and others about the manifestation of
whiteness on the big screen and its hallucinatory representation to the
masses.
So find me the person who no one knows except the students they teach.
Find the person who is the quiet hero of a small school. Find the
person who may never have a movie made about them, but will live
forever in the memories of his/her students. Most importantly, find
someone who generates hope in the hearts of educators and academics. I
want to be inspired not star-struck.
De la gente pala gente! From the people for the people!
Antonio Garcia
Indiana University
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