honorentheos wrote:Jersey Girl wrote:honor consider aggregates and how they formed, dispersed, and formed again during the event. Did the symbols and symbolic meanings change during the continuous reorganization of the aggregates? When the individuals that make up the aggregate change composition, shouldn't we consider the possibility that the symbolism they employed also changed meaning?
How can we determine what the intentions and motivations behind the behaviors and use of symbols really were?
Because we know what they mean to us when we choose or decline to use them?
You went over my head, Jersey Girl. My sense is this is getting into a particular vein of something you've studied. I'm just a dummy who deals with symbols in a very visual way now and again. Maybe you can explain more about what these terms mean and how they apply?
I couldn't go over your head if I tried, honor. Aggregates are temporary groups of people who are in the same place at the same time, usually for a common purpose. Aggregates of people often have no relationship outside of the common purpose--the people you talk to and interact with when your plane is delayed. You register frustration, talk about all the times United delayed your flight, how you'll never choose United as your carrier ever again in your life, you talk about how the delay is affecting your plans, you spend an hour talking to these folks until the delay is over, and the group disbands when the flight is ready to board. It's a sociological term.
Aggregates typically disband after the purpose is achieved. You're never going to see or interact with the people who shared the flight delay again. Though, that's not always the way an aggregate works. It could be made up of people that you know such as all of the people who attended your birthday party who interacted as a group to celebrate with you. Some of those people will see each other again for a common purpose. The behavior of the group might change along with the composition of the newly formed aggregate. There could be dynamic changes in the group due to the role everyone takes on in the group.
Example: Leader.
I think it's possible to describe the ever changing clusters of students as forming aggregates. Let me label some of the groups that I see.
1. Students doing the high school cheer
2. Students doing the tomahawk chant
3. Students responding verbally to the Black Israelites
4. Students responding verbally to the Native Americans
When I consider the behavior of each group (aggregate) of students (the composition of which changed minute by minute) I wonder why the students behaved as a group in the ways that they did.
The high school cheer group, for example, has a leader to whom leadership was delegated by an adult in a position of authority.
What was the intention of the cheer leader?
1. Turn a negative into a positive?
2. Rally the troops in case they have to employ a physical defense against the Native American's or the Black Israelites?
3. Kill some time before the buses arrived?
4. Posturing to the two groups of adults that were present?
We don't know what the intentions of the aggregates were because we're looking largely at non-verbal cues to do our bidding. We hear the school cheer but do we know what it means to the leader or the group performing the cheer?
I reckon we could do the same analysis of the tomahawk chant and other groups that I listed. And, in my view, we'd still come up short because most of the interaction was non-verbal.
When Phillip's approaches and enters the group, do we hear even one student say "Hey, what are you guys doing?"
Nope.
In any case, I'm posting on the run right now but I do want to mention one last thing in this post. You may have seen my pull the plug response to EA regarding the student's "bad behavior". I came back and listed various child behaviors and characterized them. He says that he is trained in much the same way. Yet, more recently he has posted that the students should experience guilt and contrition for their bad behavior.
I say that's jumping the gun.
I think that first, it must be determined if the students understood that their actions could be considered offensive. If not, then I see an opportunity to teach a school wide awareness unit in how their behaviors can be received by the groups with whom they interacted.
Near the end of the educational unit of learning, I would discuss the tomahawk chant and possibly the black face issue. I would engage students in evaluating those behaviors and practices, and encourage them to develop alternative behaviors and practices that support school spirit. Then, and only then, are the ideas coming directly from the students based on their own evaluation as to whether or not those activities are offensive enough to eliminate them in favor of something more positive.
Once the education piece is satisfied, and if the students repeat said behaviors, THEN I'd drop the hammer on the students by doling out consequences.
Now. I am about to join an aggregate of largely female adults with whom I will chat about various topics and come home with a new hair cut.
Thanks for wading through this if you did.
:-)