Assignment title: Information
Writing #1 ~ Persuasive Essay
Purpose: Persuasive
Length: 850-1350 words (3-5 pages)
Format: MLA (Modern Language Association) format, in-text citations, and
Works Cited page are required for this essay.
Prompt: In Mike Rose's essay "I Just Wanna Be Average," he approaches the
subject of education from his own unique perspective. Although the
piece reads very much like a narrative, Rose identifies—albeit
subtly at times—what he considers to be key failures of the
educational system. For this essay, you will develop and support your
own thesis regarding the state of education. I realize that is a broad
statement, so I believe it's best we all write about a common focus as
Rose does: a current key failure of the educational system.
Sources: I would like to limit outside sources for this first paper to one. You
may use Rose's piece if your chosen approach to the prompt can be
supported from Rose's piece. Alternatively, you may locate a source
other than Rose's from which to draw your support for this essay.
Due Date: Completed, computer-generated draft is due at 9:00 a.m. on Saturday
October 10 for in-class guided peer review.
Points: 20 points for arriving to class on October 10 with a completed draft
for peer review
10 points for completing a peer review of another's essay on October
10. (If you don't bring a draft for peer review, you forfeit the
opportunity to review someone else's essay.)
100 points for eventual final draft submitted to me. (This deadline will
be determined as a class in the near future.)
Just Wanna Be Average"
MIKE ROSE
Mike Rose is anything but average: he has published poetry, scholarly research, a textbook, and two
widely praised books on education in America. A professor in the School of Education at UCLA, Rose
has won awards from the National Academy of Education, the National Council of Teachers of English,
and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Below you'll read the story of how this highly
successful teacher and writer started high school in the "vocational education" track, learning dead-end
skills from teachers who were often underprepared or incompetent. Rose shows that students whom the
system has written off can have tremendous unrealized potential, and his critique of the school system
specifies several reasons for the 'failure" of students who go through high school belligerent, fearful,
stoned, frustrated, or just plain bored. This selection comes from Lives on the Boundary (1989), Rose's
exploration of America's educationally underprivileged. His most recent book, Possible Lives (1996),
offers a nationwide tour of creative classrooms and innovative educational programs. Rose is currently
researching a new book on the thinking patterns of blue-collar workers.
It took two buses to get to Our Lady of Mercy. The first started deep in South Los Angeles and
caught me at midpoint. The second drifted through neighborhoods with trees, parks, big lawns, and lots of
flowers. The rides were long but were livened up by a group of South L.A. veterans whose parents also
thought that Hope had set up shop in the west end of the county. There was Christy Biggars, who, at
sixteen, was dealing and was, according to rumor, a pimp as well. There were Bill Cobb and Johnny
Gonzales, grease-pencil artists extraordinaire, who left Nembutal-enhanced swirls of "Cobb" and
"Johnny" on the corrugated walls of the bus. And then there was Tyrrell Wilson. Tyrrell was the coolest
kid I knew. He ran the dozens1
like a metric halfback, laid down a rap that outrhymed and outpointed
Cobb, whose rap was good but not great-the curse of a moderately soulful kid trapped in white skin. But it
was Cobb who would sneak a radio onto the bus, and thus underwrote his patter with Little Richard, Fats
Domino, Chuck Berry, the Coasters, and Ernie K. Doe's mother-in-law, an awful woman who was "sent
from down below." And so it was that Christy and Cobb and Johnny G. and Tyrrell and I and assorted
others picked up along the way passed our days in the back of the bus, a funny mix brought together by
geography and parental desire.
Entrance to school brings with it forms and releases and assessments. Mercy relied on a series of
tests...for placement, and somehow the results of my tests got confused with those of another student
named Rose. The other Rose apparently didn't do very well, for I was placed in the vocational track, a
euphemism for the bottom level. Neither I nor my parents realized what this meant. We had no sense that
Business Math, Typing, and English-Level D were dead ends. The current spate of reports on the schools
criticizes parents for not involving themselves in the education of their children. But how would someone
like Tommy Rose, with his two years of Italian schooling, know what to ask? And what sort of pressure
could an exhausted waitress apply? The error went undetected, and I remained in the vocational track for
two years. What a place.
My homeroom was supervised by Brother Dill, a troubled and unstable man who also taught
freshman English. When his class drifted away from him, which was often, his voice would rise in
paranoid accusations, and occasionally he would lose control and shake or smack us. I hadn't been there
two months when one of his brisk, face-turning slaps had my glasses sliding down the aisle. Physical
education was also pretty harsh. Our teacher was a stubby ex-lineman who had played old-time pro ball in
the Midwest. He routinely had us grabbing our ankles to receive his stinging paddle across our butts. He
did that, he said, to make men of us. "Rose," he bellowed on our first encounter; me standing geeky in
line in my baggy shorts. "'Rose' ? What the hell kind of name is that?"
"Italian, sir," I squeaked.
"Italian! Ho. Rose, do you know the sound a bag of shit makes when it
hits the wall?"
1
A verbal game of African origin in which competitors try to top each other's insults.
Rose 2
"No, sir."
"Wop!"
Sophomore English was taught by Mr. Mitropetros. He was a large, bejeweled man who managed the
parking lot at the Shrine Auditorium. He would crow and preen and list for us the stars he'd brushed
against. We'd ask questions and glance knowingly and snicker, and all that fueled the poor guy to brag
some more. Parking cars was his night job. He had little training in English, so his lesson plan for his day
work had us reading the district's required text, Julius Caesar, aloud for the semester. We'd finished the
play way before the twenty weeks was up, so he'd have us switch parts again and again and start again:
Dave Snyder, the fastest guy at Mercy, muscling through Caesar to the breathless squeals of Calpurnia, as
interpreted by Steve Fusco, a surfer who owned the school's most envied paneled wagon. Week ten and
Dave and Steve would take on new roles, as would we all, and render a water-logged Cassius and a
Brutus that are beyond my powers of description.
Spanish I - taken in the second year - fell into the hands of a new recruit. Mr. Montez was a tiny man,
slight, five foot six at the most, soft-spoken and delicate. Spanish was a particularly rowdy class, and Mr.
Montez was as prepared for it as a doily maker at a hammer throw. He would tap his pencil to a room in
which Steve Fusco was propelling spitballs from his heavy lips, in which Mike Dweetz was taunting Billy
Hawk, a half-Indian, half-Spanish, reed-thin, quietly explosive boy. The vocational track at Our Lady of
Mercy mixed kids traveling in from South L.A. with South Bay surfers and a few Slavs and Chicanos
from the harbors of San Pedro. This was a dangerous miscellany: surfers and hodads and South-Central
blacks all ablaze to the metronomic tapping of Hector Montez's pencil.
One day Billy lost it. Out of the comer of my eye I saw him strike out with his right arm and catch
Dweetz across the neck. Quick as a spasm, Dweetz was out of his seat, scattering desks, cracking Billy on
the side of the head, right behind the eye. Snyder and Fusco and others broke it up, but the room felt hot
and close and naked. Mr. Montez's tenuous authority was finally ripped to shreds, and I think everyone
felt a little strange about that. The charade was over, and when it came down to it, I don't think any of the
kids really wanted it to end this way. They had pushed and pushed and bullied their way into a freedom
that both scared and embarrassed them.
Students will float to the mark you set. I and the others in the vocational classes were bobbing in
pretty shallow water. Vocational education has aimed at increasing the economic opportunities of
students who do not do well in our schools. Some serious programs succeed in doing that, and through
exceptional teachers...students learn to develop hypotheses and troubleshoot, reason through a problem,
and communicate effectively - the true job skills. The vocational track, however, is most often a place for
those who are just not making it, a dumping