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[Diversity 1151] Re: My concluding thoughts about dress codes, boundaries, ethics, social class and culture
Katherine Mercurio Gotthardt
katherine.gotthardt at gmail.comSat Oct 24 13:01:33 EDT 2009
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Michael and others, I truly appreciate your thoughts on this topic. Yes, we
have had this conversation before in other ways, but attacking it from this
angle has been enlightening.
On Sat, Oct 24, 2009 at 1:54 AM, Michael Gyori <tesolmichael at yahoo.com>wrote:
> Hello to all,
>
> This conversation string has been quite a lengthy and lively one, dating
> back to when there was a discussion about burkas, if not even earlier.
>
> There are only a few more thoughts I feel inclined to contribute to the
> discussion:
>
> 1. As long as instruction is truly student-centered with instructional
> goals and desired life outcomes aligned with and incorporated into the
> curriculum, we're off to a promising start. Of course, some learners may
> develop a sense of what they wish to happen in their lives as a result of
> the learning that occurs.
> 2. We all exude a "presence" to which others respond, I sense by
> and large unconsciously. For example, how we dress and why we do so can
> have a variety of underlying reasons: the desire to make a strong and
> deeply-felt statement or belief on one end of a contiuum, perhaps, and a
> simple sense of comfort in our attire on the other. Human beings will
> respond accordingly.
> 3. The fact that I dress informally (albeit modestly), is not intended
> (nor do I believe received) as attire my students should aspire to wear. I
> am I, and my students are "they."
> 4. If a learner wishes to engage in a life domain with the least of
> potential friction, I may advise him or her to dress in a manner completely
> unlike the one I am in. Should I choose to live in conditions in which my
> present attire is glaringly in opposition to the attire associated with a
> particular culture, I will change it lest it strongly conflicts with values
> that I embrace. I will not wear a Gestapo uniform if my surroundings demand
> it. My choice in that case will be to initiate resistance or leave such a
> setting. I don't know what I would do, because I have never consciously been
> in such circumstances
> 5. As for attire that signals to me that it carries signs of oppression
> (say of gender), the setting becomes much more challenging if one chooses to
> participate in it. I am not engaged in such settings, perhaps because I
> am not drawn to them, perhaps because they are they drawn to me, or more
> likely, a combination of the two. That said, there may be fundamental moral
> issues associated with "endorsing" practices simply by not questioning, even
> challenging them.
>
> On the level of human coexistence, matters can become quite delicate on one
> level, yet remain quite simple on another (in my opinion).
>
>
>
> If we could only dance in harmony...
>
>
>
> Michael
>
>
> Michael A. Gyori
>
> Maui International Language School
>
> www.mauilanguage.com
>
>
>
>
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--
Katherine Mercurio Gotthardt
Community Writer for NEWS AND MESSENGER
www.insidenova.com
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