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Caitlin Bergan
EPSY 430
Sunday, April 11, 2010

       Much focus has been placed on a typical adolescent who would qualify as a

member of mainstream American society. While this has uses, many teachers also come

from that background. Where the learning for teachers needs to occur is in looking at

situations that are not so typical or are not the situations that they experienced as an

adolescent. These situations would not be intuitive or solvable by thinking back over the

teacher’s past experiences. The value comes in seeing the perspectives of people who you

were not.

       In the case study of Jean in “Someday my Elders Will be Proud,” we see an

adolescent who does not follow many of the patterns outlined for adolescents in America,

largely because she is from a minority population with more traditional structures. Her

case study has much to teach, as she comes from one of the most marginalized ethnicities

in the nation. She is Native American.

       For Jean, the development of her identity was highly linked with her family

relationships. She comes from a Native American family who are her base, her root. She

is held up by them as a chance to be something better. Even though she was abused as a

child by an uncle, she still feels highly attached to her family, and highly supported by

her mother. All of the ideas she discusses comes back to her family. She does not want to

let down the people supporting her, she wants to be a good example for other kids from

her community and other communities like hers.

       While all this is on her mind, and while she holds her family so close, her

relationships with her family are still not perfect. In particular, this seems to come up as a
side effect of her conflicts with majority culture. She gets a scholarship to a private

school filled with privileged white students who have no idea what to make of her. Jean

gets tired of being looked down on because of her second hand clothes. She goes so far as

to start shoplifting and stealing from kids at school. But rather than blowing up at her

mom with outrage about “you can’t understand what I’m going through” after she gets

caught, Jean understands why her mom is disappointed in her. She also begins to

understand how much her mom is going through trying to support her and her brothers.

While this situation brought her in conflict with her mother and probably got her in

significant trouble with the school, it is still an experience that ties her to her family in its

resolution, and it is one that she grows from.

        Even though the discussion with her mother gives her some perspective on what

her family is capable of and what she needs as a person, she still tries to fit in with the

majority culture, making up lies about her life, and about her family, saying she was part

Greek instead of Native American. When someone asks about her “Greek” grandmother,

Jean again feels disappointed in herself and that she was letting down her family and her

heritage. But in going through this process of trying to be someone else and being

disappointed about not being who she is, she reaffirms her identity. She tried a identity

and found that it was not her. While her life was not like those around her, it still made up

who she was, providing important definition of herself.

        Even as she knows that her family is important and a defining characteristic of her

self, perhaps even because of this, she still struggles in conflict with the elite faction of

the majority culture she faces at school. She says, “It seemed that we had to learn to be

one way at school and another at school . . . ” and “School was easier because it was
shallow. I could handle talking about classes, but I couldn’t do anything to help Mom or

not make us poor.” This continues to be a problem through college as she battles also

with a drinking problem, not being able to meet the expectations of college, and not

having her college experience meet her expectations. It is through her job as tutor in an

inner-city program for Native Americans that she sees that her experiences are a cultural

way of life – abuse, poverty, and alcoholism had become the norm for these kids, and

they could expect nothing better. They did not deserve that lifestyle, just as she had not

while she was growing up either. It made it all the more real that she could be an

instrument of change, and now as an adult, she dicides to try college again, this time with

a purpose.

       All of her experiences relate back to her family – how she did and did not want to

feel in front of her family. She was most happy there and within her church culture, and

she felt the most fake when forced among the majority culture. She did make friends with

her peers, but only a few peer relationships are mentioned, and not with the weight that

her family relationships are mentioned. This is unlike the patterns discussed Arnett,

where peer relationships become more important than family. While peer relationships

seem to become more important to her in high school, Jean still focuses most of her

energy on her family relationships and those from her church and powwows.

       Arnett suggests that more traditional cultures have more of an emphasis on family

and that their expression of difficulties in adolescence can be different than that in

mainstream American culture. However, comparing Jean’s story to Tatum’s musings on

the development of African American identity shows that that is not an accurate

representation of other minority experiences. Cross’s model of racial identity
development is in particular not helpful, as does not apply to a broad racial experience,

but only to the limited scope of African Americans.

       The Native American culture that Jean describes is rejected on levels far above

and beyond African American culture. It is far more politically convenient for it the

reaction to be severe and for it to stay that way. I will also point out that the Native

American community does not have the national advocacy and leverage to institute

change. All of this means that experiences of Native Americans trying to navigate

mainstream culture is very different and much more difficult. Jean and her brothers never

had a pre-encounter stage. She describes her childhood and school experiences from the

beginning as having to endure bullying and discrimination due to her Native American

background. They were always aware of how they were stigmatized by mainstream

culture. There is no period of integration and understanding. Instead, Jean and her family

have always been marginalized.

       By the Cross model, Jean’s whole life has been an encounter phase. The problem

became more acute as she enters the private school, where students were not only white,

but from a drastically different socio-economic background. They had no appreciation for

her heritage and her ways of life, seeing only that they do not match up to their own.

Quite frankly, they were too busy figuring out how they could be misunderstood and

overly pressured by their parents, as the Luthar and Shawn article outlines, for them to be

sympathetic to Jean’s problems.

       While much of the analysis done by Tatum does not apply to a different minority,

Tatum also advances the idea of racelessness, which might be a useful concept in looking

at Jean’s case. She discusses case where an adolescent will de-emphasize the
characteristics that would firmly align them with the rejected group. Jean does try to do

this by trying to get clothes that would make her fit in more – or stand out less. Also her

series of lies about her life in an attempt to make it sound more like the lives of her peers.

These attempts leave her feeling ashamed, though. Rather than embracing this

racelessness as part of her identity, Jean chooses to continue the struggle to fine

ownership in her identity as part of the Native American community, and more

particularly as a member of her family.

       Tatum’s discussion of being an emissary might also apply to Jean’s case after she

returns to college. She is more settled in who she is than in middle school or high school,

or even in her first attempt at college. She has a goal – to make life better for children

who live in similar circumstances to her own. She goes back into the majority society

with the intention of making life, particularly the school experiences, better for other

Native American kids. She seeks to better the community, in her reception at school and

what she does with it after. This is similar to the idea of emissary. Tatum also remarks on

the influence that southern Black teachers might have had in being role-models of

academic achievement and effort to their students; this is exactly the goal that Jean comes

back to college with.

       Jean’s experiences show what it is like to be at the bottom of the bottom and try to

make something of it. Even with a good attitude and the support of her family, she still

struggles mightily with the social stigma attached to her ethnicity and how that

challenges the formation of her identity. However, the more her identity was challenged,

the more she had to think about who she was, and the stronger it was when it did

crystallize. The process was vastly different from what many mainstream youths face,
being based more on her family and her links to her traditional culture. But it is these

differences that make reading about her experiences all the more valuable for teachers

who could have someone as marginalized, as tortured and confused, as Jean in their

classroom.

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EPSY 430 Case Study Paper

  • 1. Caitlin Bergan EPSY 430 Sunday, April 11, 2010 Much focus has been placed on a typical adolescent who would qualify as a member of mainstream American society. While this has uses, many teachers also come from that background. Where the learning for teachers needs to occur is in looking at situations that are not so typical or are not the situations that they experienced as an adolescent. These situations would not be intuitive or solvable by thinking back over the teacher’s past experiences. The value comes in seeing the perspectives of people who you were not. In the case study of Jean in “Someday my Elders Will be Proud,” we see an adolescent who does not follow many of the patterns outlined for adolescents in America, largely because she is from a minority population with more traditional structures. Her case study has much to teach, as she comes from one of the most marginalized ethnicities in the nation. She is Native American. For Jean, the development of her identity was highly linked with her family relationships. She comes from a Native American family who are her base, her root. She is held up by them as a chance to be something better. Even though she was abused as a child by an uncle, she still feels highly attached to her family, and highly supported by her mother. All of the ideas she discusses comes back to her family. She does not want to let down the people supporting her, she wants to be a good example for other kids from her community and other communities like hers. While all this is on her mind, and while she holds her family so close, her relationships with her family are still not perfect. In particular, this seems to come up as a
  • 2. side effect of her conflicts with majority culture. She gets a scholarship to a private school filled with privileged white students who have no idea what to make of her. Jean gets tired of being looked down on because of her second hand clothes. She goes so far as to start shoplifting and stealing from kids at school. But rather than blowing up at her mom with outrage about “you can’t understand what I’m going through” after she gets caught, Jean understands why her mom is disappointed in her. She also begins to understand how much her mom is going through trying to support her and her brothers. While this situation brought her in conflict with her mother and probably got her in significant trouble with the school, it is still an experience that ties her to her family in its resolution, and it is one that she grows from. Even though the discussion with her mother gives her some perspective on what her family is capable of and what she needs as a person, she still tries to fit in with the majority culture, making up lies about her life, and about her family, saying she was part Greek instead of Native American. When someone asks about her “Greek” grandmother, Jean again feels disappointed in herself and that she was letting down her family and her heritage. But in going through this process of trying to be someone else and being disappointed about not being who she is, she reaffirms her identity. She tried a identity and found that it was not her. While her life was not like those around her, it still made up who she was, providing important definition of herself. Even as she knows that her family is important and a defining characteristic of her self, perhaps even because of this, she still struggles in conflict with the elite faction of the majority culture she faces at school. She says, “It seemed that we had to learn to be one way at school and another at school . . . ” and “School was easier because it was
  • 3. shallow. I could handle talking about classes, but I couldn’t do anything to help Mom or not make us poor.” This continues to be a problem through college as she battles also with a drinking problem, not being able to meet the expectations of college, and not having her college experience meet her expectations. It is through her job as tutor in an inner-city program for Native Americans that she sees that her experiences are a cultural way of life – abuse, poverty, and alcoholism had become the norm for these kids, and they could expect nothing better. They did not deserve that lifestyle, just as she had not while she was growing up either. It made it all the more real that she could be an instrument of change, and now as an adult, she dicides to try college again, this time with a purpose. All of her experiences relate back to her family – how she did and did not want to feel in front of her family. She was most happy there and within her church culture, and she felt the most fake when forced among the majority culture. She did make friends with her peers, but only a few peer relationships are mentioned, and not with the weight that her family relationships are mentioned. This is unlike the patterns discussed Arnett, where peer relationships become more important than family. While peer relationships seem to become more important to her in high school, Jean still focuses most of her energy on her family relationships and those from her church and powwows. Arnett suggests that more traditional cultures have more of an emphasis on family and that their expression of difficulties in adolescence can be different than that in mainstream American culture. However, comparing Jean’s story to Tatum’s musings on the development of African American identity shows that that is not an accurate representation of other minority experiences. Cross’s model of racial identity
  • 4. development is in particular not helpful, as does not apply to a broad racial experience, but only to the limited scope of African Americans. The Native American culture that Jean describes is rejected on levels far above and beyond African American culture. It is far more politically convenient for it the reaction to be severe and for it to stay that way. I will also point out that the Native American community does not have the national advocacy and leverage to institute change. All of this means that experiences of Native Americans trying to navigate mainstream culture is very different and much more difficult. Jean and her brothers never had a pre-encounter stage. She describes her childhood and school experiences from the beginning as having to endure bullying and discrimination due to her Native American background. They were always aware of how they were stigmatized by mainstream culture. There is no period of integration and understanding. Instead, Jean and her family have always been marginalized. By the Cross model, Jean’s whole life has been an encounter phase. The problem became more acute as she enters the private school, where students were not only white, but from a drastically different socio-economic background. They had no appreciation for her heritage and her ways of life, seeing only that they do not match up to their own. Quite frankly, they were too busy figuring out how they could be misunderstood and overly pressured by their parents, as the Luthar and Shawn article outlines, for them to be sympathetic to Jean’s problems. While much of the analysis done by Tatum does not apply to a different minority, Tatum also advances the idea of racelessness, which might be a useful concept in looking at Jean’s case. She discusses case where an adolescent will de-emphasize the
  • 5. characteristics that would firmly align them with the rejected group. Jean does try to do this by trying to get clothes that would make her fit in more – or stand out less. Also her series of lies about her life in an attempt to make it sound more like the lives of her peers. These attempts leave her feeling ashamed, though. Rather than embracing this racelessness as part of her identity, Jean chooses to continue the struggle to fine ownership in her identity as part of the Native American community, and more particularly as a member of her family. Tatum’s discussion of being an emissary might also apply to Jean’s case after she returns to college. She is more settled in who she is than in middle school or high school, or even in her first attempt at college. She has a goal – to make life better for children who live in similar circumstances to her own. She goes back into the majority society with the intention of making life, particularly the school experiences, better for other Native American kids. She seeks to better the community, in her reception at school and what she does with it after. This is similar to the idea of emissary. Tatum also remarks on the influence that southern Black teachers might have had in being role-models of academic achievement and effort to their students; this is exactly the goal that Jean comes back to college with. Jean’s experiences show what it is like to be at the bottom of the bottom and try to make something of it. Even with a good attitude and the support of her family, she still struggles mightily with the social stigma attached to her ethnicity and how that challenges the formation of her identity. However, the more her identity was challenged, the more she had to think about who she was, and the stronger it was when it did crystallize. The process was vastly different from what many mainstream youths face,
  • 6. being based more on her family and her links to her traditional culture. But it is these differences that make reading about her experiences all the more valuable for teachers who could have someone as marginalized, as tortured and confused, as Jean in their classroom.