On Monday, USD 420 hosted an all-day workshop for 700 faculty and staff on Dr. Ruby Payne’s book “A Framework for Understanding Poverty”.
The central goal of the book is educating people about the differences that separate economic classes and then teaching them skills to bridge those gulfs. Framework is the method that delivers that message. Ruby's thesis for Framework is simple. Individuals accustomed to personal poverty think and act differently from people in the middle and upper economic classes. Most teachers today come from middle-class backgrounds. Economic class differences, in an educational setting, often make both teaching and learning challenging. Too often, teachers don't understand why a student from poverty is chronically acting out or is not grasping a concept even after repeated explanations. At the same time, the student doesn't understand what he/she is expected to produce and why. Ruby discusses at length the social cues or "hidden rules" that govern how we think and interact in society – and the significance of those rules in a classroom.
How about Church? What are we doing to tear down the walls that sometimes hinder the message of Jesus being preached to ALL people even those in poverty.
Larry James is a minister that works in the inner city in Dallas, Texas. At one time he was a pulpit minister at a large Texas Church but gave that up to minister to those in poverty and despair. He wrote the following poem about those he ministers and lives with on a daily basis:
I Know Poverty
Seeing, hearing, smelling, touching, speaking—
Daily it arrives in waves, torrents,
Contained, carried about in life,
Expressed a person at a time.
Watching weathered, limping people
Trudging about, through and on,
I think of troubled, wrestling, self-possessed Jacob,
Determined to receive some blessing,
hobbled by the experience.
Tears flow from lack—
A mysterious depth releases watery, salty relief—sweat, tears,
Loss, pain, need, laughter—
Always I’m undone by the laughter—
comedic relief.
Holding the children,
So often the products of a search for purpose,
lingering embrace,
Once here the only purpose becomes survival writ large,
So, love abounds as focus fades in a cruel, satisfying circle.
Young—too young—mothers and grandmothers,
Some too young themselves,
Many more far too old
For the demands of children absent daddies.
Blame doesn’t work—
nothing sticks with this hopeless paste!
Responsibility on the forward side
Seems a reasonable goal,
A key to understand, to investigate.
Smells can be fierce or noble,
Sickening or inviting, crushing or hopeful,
Depending on the soul of community—
Are we cooking or surviving?
I know poverty.
The impoverishment of soul,
of spirit,Of private, inner space,
Meant to be a meeting ground,
A host table for sacred conversation among people
Beyond caste and class and race—but it is gone.
For more information on Larry James:
http://www.larryjamesurbandaily.blogspot.com/
Central Dallas Ministries
P.O. Box 710385
Dallas, TX 75371-0385
Phone: 214-823-8710
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