Social Issue Synthesis
America represents the ideals of liberty, opportunity, and equality for everyone, no matter who you are. A land of prosperity and success. But in all reality, America is a country of capitalistic greed and favors the white affluent. While the American Dream is no doubt still alive and well, for some, it is an outstretched hand grasping for this optical illusion. There are many barriers in our modern society that affects the attainability of these promises. One of the largest obstacles is poverty. An author who teaches children in poverty ridden schools defines poverty as, “Persons with income less than that deemed sufficient to purchase basic needs—food, shelter, clothing, and other essentials—are designated as poor”
…show more content…
(Jensen). But however you describe it, poverty is complex. There are many kinds of poverty, some are fairly easy to escape from if you have access to the proper resources, but some cycles are seemingly never ending. The same author states the different types of poverty. Situational poverty is generally caused by a sudden crisis or loss and is usually temporary. Generational poverty occurs in families where at least two generations have been born into poverty, and most are not equipped with the tools to move out of their situations. Absolute poverty is rare in the US but involves a scarcity of necessities such as shelter, running water, and food, mostly focus on day-to-day survival. Relative poverty is the economic status of a family whose income is insufficient to meet its society’s average standard of living (Jensen). But what sociologists and economists try to understand is the reasons for poverty, how it acts as an obstacle in reaching economic prosperity, and lastly, possible solutions to this everyday issue. There are many reasons people fall into poverty’s ghastly clutches. Most of the time, poverty is a temporary situation but in other cases, it’s like digging yourself an unreturnable hole. A popular news tribune states the main reason for falling on or below the poverty line, “The breadwinner of a household might get laid off from a job, or a family member could require expensive medical treatment. Generational poverty, on the other hand, refers to a culture of pervasive poverty passed from parents to children (Denney).” These sudden circumstances affect people’s lives negatively but it’s also possible to bounce back from these unfortunate events. For some of the afflicted, like generational poverty, it’s an incurable case of hopelessness. For a lot of Americans, poverty is not a case of circumstances rather than an unfair income. According to Oxfam America, an organization dedicated to educating the public about poverty, they address the issue. “The current federal minimum wage is $7.25 per hour, which works out to $15,080 a year for a full-time worker. That’s almost $4,000 below the poverty line for a family of three (Cooper)”. These unfair wages for fulltime workers are far beyond the income they should have to be able to take care of a household. This information shows that minimum wage is not a livable wage, although there are far more minimum wage jobs than middle-income jobs in America right now. Although poverty is a major obstacle to achieving the infamous American Dream, the real question is, why?
A prize winning editorial cartoonist made a fairly accurate piece about the mirage that is the American Dream and people trying to chase after it, but they are suspended in their place by crippling student loans, credit card debt, and underemployment (Keefe). This is an accurate depiction of today’s problems in a satirical disguise. When trying to make their way to the “achievable” economic prosperity, people have many barriers that stop them from doing this. Generational poverty, when people are born into poverty, also stops people from achieving this dream, at least when it comes to child education. “Children raised in poverty rarely choose to behave differently, but they are faced daily with overwhelming challenges that affluent children never have to confront, and their brains have adapted to suboptimal conditions in ways that undermine good school performance (Jensen).” Children raised in poverty are used to the life-style that their parents have lived in as well. These external factors affect children negatively, because they are not exposed to the same opportunities, motivation, and support that children not raised in poverty will experience. This creates an unfortunate cycle of hopelessness. This nature vs. nurture argument is extremely relevant in today’s culture since children are the future of our modern society and to raise them successfully is to create …show more content…
hope for our world. Most people who start out in poverty, and are raised in poverty, usually end up in poverty. This is a vicious cycle that needs to be broken for any progress to be made. Which only stresses the importance of finding possible solutions. While there is no overnight solution to ending poverty for Americans, there is a few ways that hypothetically decrease the odds of falling into the generational poverty cycle.
Nicholas Kristof, a writer for the New York Times, wrote an opinion article on the potential ways to reverse the “inevitable” generational poverty cycle, the key is to start with education, “A program called Talent Development in Philadelphia gave ninth graders a double dose of math and English and reduced absenteeism and significantly improved performance for at least the next couple of years. Tentative results suggest it is also improving high school graduation rates” (Kristof). A student’s motivation and dedication to education can greatly benefit their future success. A proper education provides many things for children, such as access to higher education opportunities, like college or trade schools, which then can lead to a higher income job. A lot of children coming from poverty stricken homes, where there is little to no support or economic comfort, need a figure to help give them hope for their own future, and teachers can potentially fill this role that parents or guardians cannot provide. A law professor wrote an article for the New York Times discussing poverty, “The first thing needed if we’re to get people out of poverty is more jobs that pay decent wages. There aren’t enough of these in our current economy. The need for good jobs extends far beyond the current crisis; we’ll need a
full-employment policy and a bigger investment in 21st-century education and skill development strategies if we’re to have any hope of breaking out of the current economic malaise” (Edelman). Because one of the main reasons for poverty is the large amount of low income jobs that don’t pay enough money to live on, one of the best solutions is to create more middle income jobs. He also discusses education importance, stressing the previous point about children being the most susceptible to poverty. Poverty is a complex subject that is seemingly impossible to eliminate, but with dedication and the proper resources, the American Dream is attainable for everyone. So far, the types of poverty have been defined, the reasons people fall into poverty, and how it stops an individual from achieving the infamous American Dream. Finally, possible solutions were addressed, such as educating children affected by generational poverty and by also creating more jobs with livable wages. One thing that is for sure, is that the only way we, as Americans, can solve this issue is by working together for a common goal, rather than acting in selfish greed.
David K. Shipler in his essay At the Edge of Poverty talks about the forgotten America. He tries to make the readers feel how hard is to live at the edge of poverty in America. Shipler states “Poverty, then, does not lend itself to easy definition” (252). He lays emphasis on the fact that there is no single universal definition of poverty. In fact poverty is a widespread concept with different dimensions; every person, country or culture has its own definition for poverty and its own definition of a comfortable life.
It’s considered a rarity now days to walk down a major city street and not come across a single person who is fighting to survive poverty. The constant question is why don’t they go get help, or what did they do to become like this? The question that should be asked is how will America fix this? Over the past year, Americans who completed high school earned fifteen point five percent more per hour than that of dropouts (Bernstein, Is Education the Cure to Poverty). According to Jared Bernstein, in his article “Is Education the Cure to Poverty”, he argues that not only do the poor need to receive a higher education, but to also maximize their skill levels to fill in where work is needed (Is Education the Cure to Poverty). Counter to Bernstein’s argument Robert Reich expresses that instead of attempting to achieve a higher education, high school seniors need to find another way into the American middle class. Reich goes on to say “the emerging economy will need platoons of technicians able to install, service, and repair all the high-tech machinery filling up hospitals, offices, and factories” (Reich, Why College Isn’t (and Shouldn’t Have to be) for Everyone). Danielle Paquette, though, offers an alternative view on higher education. Paquette gives view that it doesn’t matter on the person, rather it’s the type of school and amount of time in school that will determine a person’s
(Brooks-Gunn et all, 1997) That points out the disadvantage and how the family income influence youngsters overall childhood, since under the poverty condition, they children do not have enough money to support for their necessary needs, they will more likely to have low self-confidence and hard to blend in with their peers. Poverty has impact on children’s achievement in several different ways. Payne (2003) maintained that the poverty could affect children achievement though emotional, mental, financial, and role models (Payne, 2003). Thus, the children from low-income family are more likely to have self-destructive behavior, lack of control emotional response and lack of necessary intellectual, that is really important for the students under the age of 16.
Especially in regard to educating children in poverty so they will not fall behind. Helping adults to understand how to help these children is vitally important because those in poverty have different needs and require a different means of motivation, “if poor people were exactly the same cognitively, socially, emotionally, and behaviorally as those from the middle class, then the exact same teaching provided to both middle-class students and students from poverty would bring the exact same results (Jensen).”
In many low income communities, there are teachers that are careless and provide their students with poor quality education. These teachers are there just to make sure that they keep receiving their monthly paychecks and act in this way because they believe that low income students do not have the drive, the passion, or the potential to be able to make something of themselves and one day be in a better place than they are now. Anyon reveals that in working class schools student’s “Work is often evaluated not according to whether it is right or wrong but according to whether the children followed the right steps.” (3). This is important because it demonstrates that low income students are being taught in a very basic way. These children are being negatively affected by this because if they are always being taught in this way then they will never be challenged academically, which can play a huge role in their futures. This argument can also be seen in other articles. In the New York Times
The philosophy of the American Dream has been with Americans for centurie; James Truslow Adams says that, regardless of social class, "life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement” (Adams). Although this vision has never fully encompassed the entirety of America, it has been generally a positive ambition that all Americans should look past their circumstances and rely on only themselves to succeed at life. However, American capitalism and Marxist ideas have contradicted the traditional dream. Materialism is a simple concept, but its definition has been skewed over time. At ...
Basic education is mandatory for all kids in the United States. There are laws with minimum and maximum age limits for required free education, but this does not make all education equal. The minimum age varies from four to five to begin kindergarten, while most students graduate high school by age of eighteen or nineteen. However, there are kids that begin their education much earlier. Bell Hooks’ “Seeing and Making Culture: Representing the Poor”, Jonathan Kozol’s “From Still Separate, Still Unequal: America’s Educational Apartheid”, and Barbara Ehrenreich’s “How I Discovered the Truth About Poverty” have a common topic, “poverty”. Moreover, each of these readings has a different perspective with a different agenda attached, but “poverty”
As stated by Franklin D. Roosevelt, “the test of our progression is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little.” Many people may agree with this statement considering that the United States is such a wealthy country and in 2012, 46.5 million people were living in poverty in the United States and 15% of all Americans and 21.8% of children under age eighteen were in poverty.The honest truth is that many people do not know the conditions this group of people must live in on a daily basis because of the small number of people who realize the struggle there is not a great amount of service. In the article Too stressed for Success, the author Kevin Clarke asks the question “What is the cost of being poor in America?” and follows the question by explaining the great deals of problems the community of poverty goes through daily by saying, “Researchers have long known that because of a broad reduction in retail and other consumer choices experienced by America's poor, it is often simply more expensive to be poor in the United States.
The phrase “The American Dream” is an incredible thing. The promise of that dream has convinced hundreds of millions of people that, as a citizen of this country, you can accomplish anything if you work hard enough. Whether you want to be a doctor, athlete, or even a president, those things should all be within your reach, regardless of your class or race! America is the nation where dreams can come true. Unfortunately, for a large number of people that believe this, this is a concept that does not apply to them. Many Americans find opportunities are denied to them because of their race. Others can be found living in poverty and far from anything that would be considered desirable. Statistics show that the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans earned 9 percent of all U.S. income in 1979. Did you know that the same 1 percent earns 24 percent of all U.S. income today? That is a staggering example of the income inequality in America. The American Dream is that if you work hard and have the ability you will succeed, but that has become an impossibility for millions of disadvantaged Americans because the income inequality has been steadily increasing since the 1970s and racism and poverty are constant barriers to their success and financial security.
Education can be somewhat helpful to people headed toward poverty or homelessness. However, new research is showing that education is needed but alone it is simply not enough to help people get jobs and help their situation. Along with their education, the poor need job training in the area of work they are looking towards (Bernstein 1). The training along with the mandatory education helps people excel in something they are good at and improve their job chances. The people who do get their education and job training then run into another roadblock. In the U.S. economy, typically low-wage jobs are more abundant. In fact, the low-wage sector of the economy is the part that is projected to grow the most. In the next ten years, thirty new low-wages jobs are expected to be added to the work force. Of those thirty, half of the new jobs will require very little training (Bernstein 3). This results in a lower quality of work and less pay. Many people on the verge of poverty occupy these low paying job...
America is one of the wealthiest nations on earth with having a high inequality than other industrialized country. Inequality exists in income, wealth, power and education. Persons who are legally and socially poor in the United states tend to stay in a cycle through life, not always by choice but because they are given fewer opportunities, education and tools to achieve success. Poverty class has a much larger income gap than the upper class, the American Dream is lessens through opportunity and is shown through statistics.
Several citizens in America may not empathize with many social conflicts which transpire in America. Unfortunately, when poverty is mentioned people of diverse gender, race/ethnic, and age can relate to poverty in America. Although several societies have not experienced the undesirable measures of relative or absolute poverty; several people know poverty exist through many channels, such as the media, social networking, history and charities.
Throughout the nation, education inequality affects many minority students that have low-income which reinforces the disparity between the rich and the poor. The amount of children that have a socioeconomic background of poverty in the United States is estimated to be 32.4 million (National Center for Children in Poverty, 2011). Since many of these children are from
Living in poverty exposes children to disadvantages that influence many aspects in their life that are linked to their ability to do well in school. In the United States of America there are an estimated 16.4 million children under the age of 18 living in poverty (U.S. Census Bureau, 2010). “The longer a child lives in poverty, the lower the educational attainment” (Kerbo, 2012). Children who are raised in low-income households are at risk of failing out before graduating high school (Black & Engle, 2008). U.S. children living in poverty face obstacles that interfere with their educational achievement. Recognizing the problems of living in poverty can help people reduce the consequences that prevent children from reaching their educational potential.
Poverty is an undeniable problem in America. In 2014, 14.8 percent of the United States was in poverty (“Hunger and Poverty Fact Sheet”). There are more people in the United States than it seems that do not have their basic necessities. In an