Friday, April 20, 2012

Comforts of Rural Living



Please examine the blog: Understanding the Aspirations of Rural High School Students

     This blog examples one of the instances of containment culture that I have personally witnessed. The author, Jonathan Bartels, couples himself with a researcher, Dr. Meece, to describe the underachievement of the students attending rural high schools around the nation. After completing their research, they concluded that rural students are not achieving at the level which they should be. They propose this piece for anyone who is not a part of or someone unfamiliar with the challenges of the rural life style. Although the writing is not persuasive, it does inform the reader of a moving topic – the containment of young rural students and their future. Informing the public is their main purpose for publishing their work because if people are not informed about the problems of our nation, they will most definitely never seek to solve them.
            
     This blog strikes home to me; growing up and attending a rural high school that could have easily been a facility for the author’s research. I see the containment of students from the bright futures that they could possess constantly. The problem is identifying who plays the role of “the container.” The blog fails to offer any real explanations, simply offering informative statistics and leaving out any in-depth reasoning. As a student and a rural citizen, I feel as if I escaped the containment culture of rural living. However, I did and still do feel the effects on my life. I feel like the cause of this containment culture comes from the lack of aspirations in rural living. Actually, it is less of a matter of aspirations but more of an issue of feeling too comfortable. I find that kids growing up in the rural areas are often times too comfortable or plain out unwilling to leave the easy life they live and seek out a bigger and brighter future. Although it may seem as if I am playing towards the cliché of big cities and big dreams, this is not my goal; actually it is the opposite of my goal. I want more students growing up in areas much similar to rural Bainbridge, Ohio where I have lived all my life to seek secondary degrees, seek promising futures, and most importantly seek to improve upon the live they have been living all their lives. Not to say that country living is bad; personally I love it and miss it dearly. I just know from firsthand experience that opportunities are limited in that environment. Of course most people analyzing the situation would offer that the education systems in rural areas lend student to be unable to handle a college course load or even getting accepted into college altogether. This is simply not the case; I went to a subpar high school and pay the price for it currently. I had little to no help or guidance while applying to and getting into college; now that I am here I find courses to be much more difficult than the average student and spend countless hours studying to compensate for my poor basal-education. However, I know it is possible for most rural students to come to a larger university and succeed; myself as an example, I maintain an above average GPA at one of the nation’s best universities in an effort to find a greater purpose in my life than living around the rural neighborhood and working a simplistic and non-skills related job. This requires me to live outside my comfort zone constantly – a thing more rural students should do. Doing so is the only way to escape the containment culture of rural living.

After reading this, are you reminded of any examples in your own life where you have “escaped” containment culture? If so, explain how and why you did.

Can you think of any other containment culture placed upon the youth of America nowadays that suppresses and limits their futures?

2 comments:

  1. Your point is that rural students are contained by the idea that country is more comfortable and they shouldn't reach for a secondary degree because that will only lead to a life less comfortable, right? I think a lot of lower-class African-American students feel contained by their class/race and therefore feel like they will never make it to college. On the other hand, white, suburban, upper-class kids may be contained by the idea that they have to go to college or will never make anything of themselves.

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  2. I think Nora makes a good point. Society can contain a people by their class and cause the people of that class to think they can't make it into college but it can also cause people of another class to think they have to go to college. I know several of my friends are only in college because "its the thing to do".

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