Thursday, October 22, 2009

This morning completed my writings based on chapter 1 of Technology and the African American Experience. I think this book, at least the first chapter, has produced gold in terms of contributing to my chapter one and describing the problem of Why There Are So Few African Americans in Information Technology. This chapter lays the foundation for the historic origins of the attitude that black people are technologically inferior. This is important because we see these attitudes prevailing in several of the studies i have examined thus far in 2009. What has to change is the eradication of these attitudes by those who have been conditioned and those who are doing the conditioning. I hope to finish the book this week before returning to Technology and Social Inclusion. After that I should have enough to craft my chapter 1. It should be rich. However, I will need to arrange and wordsmith. I am really looking forward to finally submitting a first draft of my chapter 1 to Dr. Riel. I really feel that I am gaining momentum, learning a great deal, and truly enjoying the journey. I also discovered several resources, scholars such as Ron Takaki, Robert Rydell, and Michael Adams, as well as Technology and Culture, which is a magazine that examines the history of technology. I need to figure out how to get access or a subscription.

Stay Tuned,
Kai

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

This morning I progressed through chapter 1 of Technology and the African-American Experience. It is a collection of essays edited by Bruce Sinclair. I purchased this book because before becoming a doctoral student, much of the improvement in my life has been born out of reading of Africans in America. This book examines the intersection of race and technology and it is mind-blowing. Here is a quote from page 1


White Americans, including those as committed to Enlightenment ideals as Thomas Jefferson—even as he corresponded with Benjamin Banneker, the African American astronomer and almanac maker—believed that black people among them were mentally inferior, and by that they didn’t just mean a capacity for advanced intellectual accomplishment. What good would freedom be, one southerner put it, to a field hand whose highest faculties were taxed “to discriminate between cotton and crop-grass, and to strike one with a hoe without hitting the other? (Sinclair 2004, p.1).

Now we are getting somewhere. This document the origins of the concept that African Americans do not have the ingenuity to invent and that technological innovation to be left to those of a lighter hue. Was Thomas Jefferson a white supremacist. I like that term better than racist because it is more precise. After reading the chapter I wrote 2 pages in my chapter 1. Again this is zero-draft stuff. This book has me very excited about how I will fit this historical viewpoint into my chapter 1,so I am going to take it to work and read another chapter. I would like to get through the book and capture my thoughts for the weekend. My goal is to craft first draft and send it to Margaret on November 1.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

No work yesterday. There are simply no opportunities for me to work when I am home on the weekends. Focus should be better next week if work allows. Last week was brutal.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Nothing to report. I am simply too mentally tired from the work week. I must get some writing done over the weekend.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

No work last night. I worked a 12-hour day and I was back at work at 7:30. I was simply too tired. I am hoping to do a couple of pages tonight as well as on Friday morning.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

I was not able to do any writing on Monday night. This is my travel day and I am usually too tired to even think by the time I arrive at my hotel. However, I am ready to complete my research so I have decided that no matter what I will write for at least an hour, even on Monday evenings. Last night I forgot the book I am reviewing so I did some work from Technology and the African American Experience. This book does a nice job at looking at the intersection of race and technology in America. I did some writing after reading the first chapter.

Friday, October 09, 2009

This morning and last night I completed my review and zero draft of Stuck in the Shallow End. This work yielded 43 pages of zero draft. Next I am on to Technology and Social Inclusion. It should not take as long as I have learned how to be more effective at doing this. Probably, over the weekend, I will take a break from this work, and get back to some reading. It is easier for me to read on the weeks as opposed to write since I am back home. My plan is to make significance progress in the reading of Grown Up Digital. I also wanted to place the link here for the software used by the Margolis team: http://www.atlasti.com/

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

More of the same. Almost done reviewing and writing about Stuck in the Shallow End. The last chapter is providing content for the kind of information that is suited for chapter 2, meaning approaches that have been attempted to solve the problem I am describing in chapter 1. My goal for Wednesday is to finish this book and move on to Warschauer. But I must say Margolis is a gold mine of information and ideas.

Monday, October 05, 2009

Tonight I continued going over Margolis. It is very promising but it is slow going. I think once I have done my review I will have plenty to do a rough draft of chapter 1. However, so far I do not have much for a chapter 2.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

For the last 2 days I have continued my work on going back over my readings (name stuck in the shallow end) and doing zero drafts of my chapters 1 and 2 as suggested earlier. One conclusion that I have come to since my starting this research is that the dearth of African Americans and Latino students in this field has nothing to do with the field or anything to do with access and it all has to do with race and social conditioning and how expectations shape these communities beliefs about themselves and their identity as it relates to this field. When I began I felt something interesting was going on between African Americans and this particular field. I do not believe that anymore.