5/25/15, 7:22 PM Susan Naomi Bernstein - Writing and White Privilege: Beyond Basic Skills - Pedagogy 4:1
Page 1 of 3 https://muse-jhu-edu.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/journals/pedagogy/v004/4.1bernstein.html
Copyright © 2004 by Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Pedagogy 4.1 (2004) 128-131
[Access article in PDF]
Writing and White Privilege:
Beyond Basic Skills
Susan Naomi Bernstein
[Works Cited ]
For students classified as "at risk," preparation for accountability testing rarely offers the middle-
class luxury of time and space for imaginative writing. As Julie Landsman (2001: 161) suggests,
"White people too often want solutions to be quick and easy. They want something they can
follow and in a few months, a few years, the problem will be solved." Standardized testing fits the
criteria for "solutions" that are "quick and easy," at least on the surface. If a specific "standard" is
set for all children, then institutions can be certain that students who achieve the standard are in
control of basic skills—and that all students are held to "high expectations" (Traub 2002: n.p.).
Nonetheless, "high expectations" are often defined in terms of "standard" written English and rote
memorization of the rules. Institutions deem these "basic skills" as necessary in order to achieve
high scores on accountability measures, and these "basic skills" then become the basis for
curricula. In Texas public schools, for example, K-12 "writing" is defined primarily as
standardized test preparation (see Texas Education Agency 2002), which is particularly
detrimental for poor children, children of color, and immigrant children whose first language is not
English (McNeil and Valenzuela 2000). For many first-year college students, then, placement in
basic writing courses is just the next phase in a school experience that for years has marked them
as "other" or "different."
When I taught basic writing for the first time in Houston, my students were native speakers of
Spanish, Urdu, Vietnamese, and Black English Vernacular, languages that were inseparable from
culture—and culture that was inseparable from race. Such "differences" became even more
complicated in the days following 9/11 when these first-year students were particularly vulnerable
to harassment based on perceived racial/ethnic identity. Some claimed that they were afraid to
reveal their ethnic identity at school and on the street; in order not to reveal "accented" speech,
they didn't speak. One student worried that her immigrant family would interrupt her schooling by
returning home to live with relatives in more secure circumstances.
More central to this essay, my students and I struggled throughout the semester with the
contradictory goals of preparing for high-stakes testing and facilitating growth as imaginative