Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Rigged Game

Just to get us all started off on something super interesting:

I found this poem one night as I was surfing the web (as only a good teenager would do), and I think I then listened to it upwards of 15 times in 13 hours. This poem not only is my favorite poem in the world, but it has also made me become a poetry person.

Now I find myself at Open Mics performing this poem not only because I love it, but also because I think that it shares a message that we don't think about on a daily basis because it doesn't affect most people directly.

Please enjoy, and just think about it a little bit. I am not asking you to agree with what he is saying... just form an opinion and look into your opinion a little bit.

Why do you feel the way that you do? Is it because of personal experience, or because of the environment in which you live (teachers, parents, politicians, etc.) Does the other side have some validity to their argument? Are their only certain parts of the poem that you agree or disagree with? Do you agree/ disagree with the poem as a whole?





Rigged Game By Dylan Garity

Every day when I was five, my older sister would play teacher.
Her students were me, my stuffed rabbit and an American girl doll,
She’d line us up at the end of the bed and teach us whatever she’d learned in school that day.
Now, she teaches ESL at an elementary school in Boston
and every week she tells me stories about her students.
Ana does not know how to read in Spanish, much less English
but she still wants to be a writer when she grows up.
Juan chooses to stay inside and study at recess so that one day he’ll be able to teach his own brother.
These kids are good organs in a sick body.
In 2001, No Child Left Behind
gutted bilingual education.
Students who have been in the country for one year
are now expected to perform at grade level
on standardized English tests.
My sister is not allowed to instruct them in Spanish.
If the kids don’t jump high enough, the school loses money
Improving a school by picking its pockets
is like tuning a guitar by ripping off the strings.
Learning to read in a new language
before you can even read in your own
is like learning to walk while a pit bull is chasing you.
Like learning to sing with the conductor’s fist down your throat
This year, for my sister’s birthday,
I bought books for her students.
A poem on one page in Spanish, the next in English.
She is not allowed to help them read the first.
Their heritage is a banned book
Learning to read in a new language
when you can’t even read in your own
is like trying to heal a burn victim by drowning them.
We are telling these children
who have spent their whole lives in the deep end
that they’ll learn how to swim if they just float out a little farther.
In the 1980s, American slaughterhouses
began building corrals in curves,
so no animals could see the blood at the end of the track.
This is how we kept them moving forward.
In 2001, we began building the hallways of our schools in curves.
This is how we keep them moving forward.
You never learn, you fail the test
You never learn you fail the test
You never learn, you drop out.
I know, I am lucky enough to be one of the winners of this game
I was handed a head start
and a rulebook in my own tongue
but the winners of a rigged game
should not get to write the rules.
On the television,
some senator preaches that throwing money
at an “urban school” is like feeding caviar to your dog.
They just won’t know how to appreciate it
After all, if these parents can’t take care
of their own children, why should we?
Well tell that to Ana
who has my sister translate newsletters aloud to her father
because he, too, was never taught how to read
Tell that to Juan
whose mother and baby sister are still in Guatemala
whose father works three jobs
My sister tells me school is the most stable place in these kids’ lives.
She has been a teacher since she was smaller than they are.
but since when does being a teacher mean having to swear not to help?
Since when does being a teacher mean having your hands tied
as the schoolhouse burns to the ground?
We are leading these children along a track built in circles
as their lungs fill with smoke
telling them it is their fault
they can’t find a way out

(As a side note, you should also check out some of his other poems.. He's a really great poet)

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