Friday, February 23, 2007

JACL National Youth Conference Announcement

The JACL National Youth Conference will be held in San Jose, California at Santa Clara University from June 29 to July 1, 2007. More information and registration forms should be available soon!

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Habeas Corpus and the Constitution

Please check let us know what YOU think!

According to a news article on news.netscape.com, "In one of the most chilling public statements ever made by a U.S. Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales questioned whether the U.S. Constitution grants habeas corpus rights of a fair trial to every American."

For more information on the US Constitution and habeas corpus:
1. http://www.consortiumnews.com/2007/011807.html
2. http://thinkprogress.org/2007/01/19/gonzales-habeas/

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Happy 2007!

As we embark on a new year, many people rejuvenate their efforts to break bad habbits, start new hobbies, or make change. Do you have any new year's resolutions? What are your personal or professional goals for 2007? What would you like to see accomplished by the JACL in the upcoming year? Please let us know!

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Stop the Hate Speech!

Recently, Jed Levine made several blatantly racist and hateful comments in the UCLA's newspaper, The Daily Bruin. His comments are offensive and inexcusable. You can read his column by clicking on the following link: http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/news/articles.asp?id=38302. I encourage you to write to UCLA and the editors of the Daily Bruin. You are also invited to share your opinions, concerns, and responses to Levine's column on this blog site.

Announcement!

The Japanese American Citizens League is proud to announce its 2007 National Youth Student Conference. The theme of the conference will be "Cultivating Leaders by Defining Our Roots." Please join us this summer in San Jose for an amazing experience! The conference will feature educational workshops, key speakers, social activities, and more. Registration forms and other information should be available soon!

Saturday, August 05, 2006

The Asian American "Model Student"

On August 2, 2006, Long Le released an article titled "The Dark Side of the Asian American 'Model Student,'" which can be found at http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=b89773ee251042d994e23ca0fd927512. The actual article is pasted below. Please feel free to respond with your thoughts and reactions to the article on this site!

THE ARTICLE: "The Dark Side of the Asian American 'Model Student'" by Long Le

Editor's Note: Asian American students on average scored the highest in the SAT last year and earned admiration from New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof. But according to NAM contributor Long Le, there is a dark side to stereotypes of Asian academic success. Le is a research scholar and lecturer at the University of Houston Asian American Studies Center.


HOUSTON, Calif.--In his recent essay "Stellar Academic Achievement Has an Asian Face," New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof admired Asian American students' performance on the SAT. In 2005, Asian Americans had the highest average combined math-verbal SAT, at 1091, compared with 1068 for whites, 982 for American Indians, 922 for Hispanics, and 864 for blacks.

Kristof wonders why this group is so good at school. "Frankly," he laments, "you sometimes feel at an intellectual disadvantage if your great-grandparents weren't peasants in an Asian village."

In explaining Asian Americans as "model students," Kristof cites Confucianism's reverence for education with enforcement via filial piety, in which "Asian American kids often manage both to exasperate and to finish their homework," while non-Asian teenagers rebel.

But before anyone else starts to stress out on not having a Confucian background, there is a "dark side" to Asian American academic achievement that Kristof's admiration piece veils.

First, non-Asian individuals may indeed perceive Asian American students as exceptional, but some are also likely to interpret how the success of Asian-Americans reflects negatively or positively on their own social position.

For example, Professor Stacey Lee of University of Wisconsin, who studied one particular high school found that high-achieving middle-class white students respect the academic talents of their peers. Some, however, hold up the successes of Asian-Americans to dismiss African-American students' charges of racial discrimination in America. In addition, she found that low-achieving, working-class white students are more likely to refer to students of Asian descent as "chinks and gooks" who are invading their school. And some African-American students believe that the success of Asian-American students has been achieved at the expense of their own.

According to another study, Asian-American college students say that positive stereotypes that non-Asians have of them focus on educational achievement only. Most of the stereotypes, they say, are negative, such as non-Asians' perceptions that Asians "don't speak English well," "have accents," and are "submissive," "sneaky," "stingy," "greedy," etc.

Here, the seemingly positive stereotypes conceal negative stereotypes casting Asian American students as "perpetual foreigners."

As a researcher of Asian American issues, I recently conducted a survey at the University of Houston on campus perceptions of Asian-American and Asian international students, with more than 750 student participants. A preliminary analysis shows that non-Asian students perceive students of Asian descent as "model students" and more often than not as a homogeneous group with more similarities than differences. Non-Asian students also have unfavorable impression of both Asian-American and Asian international students, saying, for example, that students of Asian descent are hard to make friends with.

Moreover, non-Asian students were less likely to prefer a student of Asian descent as a candidate for president of student government relative to other ethnic candidates.

Second, as the stereotype of Asian Americans as "model students" spreads, it may affect how some Asian-American students behave and how they construct their self-identity.

Professor Stacey Lee discovered that some middle class Asian-Americans embrace the "model student" image, perceive their role as having to live up to that image and look down on other Asian groups, particularly those from Southeast Asia, who they believe to be welfare-dependents who give Asians a bad name. Such students, however, tend to mask their feelings of depression and desperation, especially when they don't meet the stereotype's high expectations.

In fact, there has been a recent spike in the number of "unexplained" deaths and suicides among high-achieving students of Asian descent at a number of prestigious universities. Similarly, students of working-class families from Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos also mask their depression when they feel ashamed about not living up to the "model student" image. They tend to be reluctant to seek academic or emotional support.

In fact, the overall data on Asian American students' SAT score hides the variation in academic achievement across Asian groups. Southeast Asian students and other student subgroups from South Asia have different standardized test scores, high school dropout rates, college enrollment and completion rates. Their data, in fact, mirror those of African Americans rather than the overall Asian-American numbers.

If the Confucian culture emphasizes and facilitates educational achievement, it may also promote silence on the _expression of social and psychological needs.

Kristof's column admiring Asian American achievement is ultimately a kind of shorthand that the mainstream media continues to use in their assessment of Asian Americans. But such shorthand conceals negative stereotypes toward Asians, as well as the differing psychological, social and educational needs of different ethnic student groups.

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Brainstorm!

The JACL is known for its leadership in the civil rights arena, but it also provides the opportunity for social networking and scholarship. What type of JACL youth activities interest you? What has been your favorite JACL activity or event?

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

JA Identity

The 2005 JACL National Youth/Student Conference in Salt Lake City addressed the topic of Japanese American identity. By participating in cultural workshops and engaging in group discussions, young JACLers focused on the concept of Japanese American identity.

The 2006 JACL Min Yasui Oratorical Competition extended this topical area by asking contestants to answer "what, if anything, makes us Japanese American today? What can or should be done to strengthen or redefine this identity?"

How do YOU express your Japanese American identity?

Wednesday, July 05, 2006


JACL National Youth Student Council in Phoenix, AZ Posted by Picasa

Welcome

Welcome to the MDC Youth Blog! Please use this site to voice your opinion, share ideas, and communicate with other youth members across vast distances. New topics and discussion questions will be posted. If you have any suggestions or specific topics that you would like to see on this blog site, please email mdcyouth@yahoo.com.