Power & Privilege Activity Resources

Websites:

www.unh.edu/residential-life/diversity/

~This University of New Hampshire site is FULL of activities, training and assessment tools.

www.servicelearning.umn.edu

Click on "community partner", then click on the "Get Up Get Into It Get Involved".

~This link will take you to an introduction page of a 3 hours sensitivity training done with students at the University of Minnesota prior to serving in the community.

Books:

The Education of a WASP, Lois Stavley

The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Malcolm X

White Privilege: Unpacking Your Invisible Knapsack, Peggy Mackintosh

Roote: The Saga of an American Family, Alex Haley

The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison

The Color Purple, Alice Walker

Black Boy, Richard Wright

A Class Divided: Then and Now, William Peters

Black Rage, William H. Grier with Price M. Cobbs

Rage of a Privileged Class, Ellis Cose

Faces at the Bottom of the Well: The Permanence of Racism, Derrick Bell

Killing Rage: Ending Racism, bell hooks

Teaching for Diversity and Social Justice

Readings for Diversity and Social Justice

Magazines:

izonmag.com/4/jane-elliott.asp

Journals:

Teaching Sociology

Rethinking Schools (online at rethinkingschools.org) Search for "race" or "racism"

Articles:

Peggy McIntosh, "White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to

See Correspondences Through Work in Women's Studies"

Brian Obach, Jan. 2000 Teaching Sociology

~has a very interesting activity

Brian Obach, July 1999 Teaching Sociology

Margaret Crowdes, Jan. 2000 Teaching Sociology

~has an excellent activity

Bernard McGranes, Jan. 1993 Teaching Sociology (he also has a book)

~that I have found as excellent activities to disrupt students sense of "normalacy" of being white and middle class.

Videos:

A Class Divided – Blue Eyes, Brown Eyes classroom experiment. Go to identassistant.com/programming/humanawareness/blueeyesbrowneye.htm

for a description of the activity. It is a valuable video to show and have a discussion, although it is highly recommended that you do not replicate this experiment, as it is unethical.

Specific Activities:

· The American Dream is an activity where you line people up on a horizontal

line (you can choose to blindfold, or not), and ask them to take a step

forward or backwards for various scenarios (First generation college student,

ever worried about walking alone, judged by color of your skin, denied a job

because of your gender.... etc). You can even have them hold hands so that

they can process what it was like to separate from others bades on privilege.

It's a pretty powerful activity, particularly for people with privilege.

· Divide class/group into three or more "communities," each with a border

(made of masking tape), resources to make their ideal community, play money,

etc. There is also an authority (police, housing authority, and a jail) to

keep order. Each community receives different space, and has a different

population density, and, of course, has different amounts of money,

resources, etc. In addition to the unequal distribution of money and

resources (pens, markers, papers, and other things needed to build the

community), the government officials treat communities differently, based

upon prestige of the community. They bend over backwards to help the

wealthy community and make life miserable for the "poor" community, throwing

them in jail and taking away what little open space they may have.

Eventually, the game runs its course, and there are discussion questions

that help get at the very issues you mention in your email. Students think

about what they saw (and what they didn't notice!). They being to think

about structures of power and opportunity, fairness and unfairness,

difference. They consider the significance of borders.

The game always works well for my students, most of whom are white

middle/upper-middle class students from relatively traditional backgrounds.

When times with the appropriate readings, it becomes doubly powerful.