US Arizona State University professor says traditional grading system is 'racist', demands an end to 'white supremacy' by grading papers based on effort - He called for grading students based on the effort they put into their work instead of factors like spelling, grammar or quality

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Arizona State University professor says traditional grading system is 'racist' and demands an end to 'white supremacy' by grading papers based on EFFORT: Some students have 'privilege' because they 'embody those habits of white language already'​

  • A professor at Arizona State University is arguing that the traditional grading system is 'racist'
  • He called for grading students based on the effort they put into their work instead of factors like spelling, grammar or quality
  • He says white students have 'privilege' because they 'embody those habits of white language already'
  • Asao Inoue, a professor of rhetoric and composition, has given a series of lectures on the topic
  • He and his wife recently launched an antiracist teaching endowment that aims to fund multiple courses and presentations about topics like 'labor-based grading'
A professor at Arizona State University is arguing that the traditional grading system is 'racist' and is calling for an end to 'white language' by encouraging teachers to grade students based on the labor they put into their work instead of factors like spelling, grammar or quality.

Asao Inoue, a professor of rhetoric and composition, has given a series of lectures on the topic and most recently delivered one during a virtual event Friday, during which he argued that labor-based grading 'redistributes power in ways that allow for more diverse habits of language to circulate,' the College Fix first reported.

During his lecture, titled The Possibilities of Antiracist Writing Assessment Ecologies, Inoue said: 'White language supremacy in writing classrooms is due to the uneven and diverse linguistic legacies that everyone inherits, and the racialized white discourses that are used as standards, which give privilege to those students who embody those habits of white language already.'

In other words, Inoue urged teachers to focus on how much effort students put into their assignments and understanding the lesson rather than traditional spelling, grammar and punctuation grading norms.

Inoue's approach to teaching comes as a number of teachers from all levels of education are leaving behind traditional grading methods to address both slumping grades caused by pandemic school closures and 'institutionalized racism' in education.

For example, Joshua Moreno, an English teacher at Alhambra High School in California, dropped his point-based grading system for one that give students multiple chances to improve their tests and classwork, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Similar to Mereno's teaching model, Inoue's also focuses on how students improve their performance and says that this comes easier for some students than others because of their cultural background.

He refers to the common way most teachers and professors grade papers as a phrase he coined called 'Habits of White Language,' or 'HOWL.' Inoue said that HOWL and white supremacy culture '[make] up the culture and normal practices of our classrooms and disciplines.'

'Labor-based grading structurally changes everyone's relationship to dominant standards of English that come from elite, masculine, heteronormative, ableist, white racial groups of speakers,' Inoue said.

Inoue wrote a blog post on the matter that he shared in a tweet on October 25 with the excerpt: 'The antiracist use of any model of English languaging should open up our eyes, ears, and hearts to our own and others' languaging behaviors... to open up the conventionality and unconventionality of both our models and our own languaging…'

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In his blog, he addresses white teachers specifically and writes: 'You grade your students on the English you learned and grew up with, the kind of English in your models and training, but like those Filipino or Native American students, your students aren't you, nor are they like the authors of your models. They do not come from where you or those authors came from, not exactly. And they are not embodied in their language practices in the same ways as you are.'

He continued: 'Further, your students will likely use their Englishes for different things in their lives than you do. It's not that they don't stand to learn something good from your English or your models, but we too often grade them on how closely they are like our models. This means you punish students for not being like you or like your models.'

In his lecture, Inoue also asked teachers to consider one characteristic of white supremacy culture that they engage in during their courses, the College Fix reported. At another point in the presentation, he had participating teachers and students pause to exercise 'an important antiracist practice' of examining how they participate in racism or antiracism.

'Pausing in our work helps us intervene and disrupt by first noticing ourselves participating in racism, engaging in white fragility, in white rage, or white language supremacy,' he said.

Inoue's talk came during a 70-minute event hosted by the Rhetoric, Writing and Linguistics Speaker Series sponsored by the Department of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. The discussion was geared toward professors but was also open to students, alumni and others.

According to an online description of the talk: 'Inoue poses problems about dominant standards of the English language in schools and universities and the Habits of White Language (HOWL) that are paradoxically meaningful and harmful to locally diverse students when used to evaluate their language performances and produce grades.'

Inoue told Fox News on Tuesday that 'labor-based grading ecologies are fundamentally about creating compassionate, democratic conditions, ones that are critical and rigorous, if by rigorous we mean deep, thoughtful, engagement with each other for each other's sake and not for grades or false external motivators that ultimately erode students' abilities to learn and take risks.'

'These new conditions can provide a wider group of students who come from a more diverse set of language backgrounds, to thrive and learn. This is important to do if we are to inquire about the politics of English language in our world that end up creating situations of misunderstanding and harm.'

Inoue said that he is not calling for an end to teaching spelling, grammar or punctuation, but rather: 'What I'm arguing for are safe classrooms that offer better, clearer ways to understand what it means to learn dominant forms of English in our world today.'

Inoue and his wife recently launched an antiracist teaching endowment that aims to fund 'an antiracist teaching conference for secondary and postsecondary teachers,' 'support a summer workshop or institute for a smaller group of teachers to learn about and research antiracist teaching approaches,' and create 'several scholarships for students who wish to focus on antiracist approaches to teaching in a variety of disciplines,' according to a blog post explaining the program.

In a tweet pinned on his profile, Inoue wrote: 'The new antiracist teaching endowment that my wife and I just started is now accepting donations! If you've benefited from my work at all over the years, consider donating something. Thanks!'

Meanwhile, at Alhambra High School in California, Moreno ditched his grading system when it saw too many students discouraged by reaching so many points early in the course or falling behind and giving up.

'It was literally inequitable. As a teacher you get frustrated because what you signed up for was for students to learn. And it just ended up being a conversation about points all the time,' he told the Los Angeles Times.

Moreno changed his model to base grades on what students are learning rather than deadlines and the quantity of work they do.

Los Angeles and San Diego Unified - the state's two largest school districts with roughly 660,000 students combined - recently asked teachers to base their grading systems on similar criteria and not punish them for their behavior, work habits and missed deadlines.

'It's teaching students that failure is a part of learning. We fall. We get back up. We learn from the feedback that we get,' said Alison Yoshimoto-Towery, L.A. Unified's chief academic officer.

A letter sent by L.A. Unified to principals last month explained that traditional grading has often been used to 'justify and to provide unequal educational opportunities based on a student's race or class.'

It added that the pandemic also showed how giving students extra opportunities led many to improve their performance. In the fall of the 2020-21 school year, the district directed teachers to give students several extra weeks to make up their work and almost 15,000 grades were improved.

Yoshimoto-Towery said: 'Just because I did not answer a test question correctly today doesn't mean I don't have the capacity to learn it tomorrow and retake a test. Equitable grading practices align with the understanding that as people we learn at different rates and in different ways and we need multiple opportunities to do so.'

But not everyone in the education field is on board.

Frederick M. Hess, director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, told the Los Angeles Times that giving students a chance to retake tests is a good move, but disagrees with removing deadlines and behavior from academic grades.

'The questions that are getting asked here are certainly worth asking,' Hess said. 'My concern is that by calling certain practices equitable and suggesting they are the right ones, what we risk doing is creating systems in which we tell kids it's OK to turn in your work late. That deadlines don't matter... And I don't think this sets kids up for successful careers or citizenship.'


 
It would be pretty funny if this was an elaborate ploy for a certain group of people to retain their job security.


Love the comments.
It's hardly any fun when everyone is saying the same thing.
 
In his blog, he addresses white teachers specifically and writes: 'You grade your students on the English you learned and grew up with, the kind of English in your models and training, but like those Filipino or Native American students, your students aren't you, nor are they like the authors of your models. They do not come from where you or those authors came from, not exactly. And they are not embodied in their language practices in the same ways as you are.'
Dollars to donuts this dude never met a native. I grew up next to a native reservation and went to school with a number of them; you know what English they used, the same English everyone else used. I don't know about now with the proliferation of MTV and hood culture, but they didn't speak rap, jive, or slur their words. Every language has shortcuts that all age groups use, what makes you competent is knowing when you can use those shortcuts or knowing when you need to stand on ceremony and use the Queen's vernacular. As for Filipinos, they have three languages over there; their native Tagalog, Spanish, and English. And when you enter our Global Economy, you see that English is the language of business, and anyone wanting to do anything is gonna learn English. We may not all comes from the same place, but using language (any language) properly is how you show effort.

Inoue said that he is not calling for an end to teaching spelling, grammar or punctuation, but rather: 'What I'm arguing for are safe classrooms that offer better, clearer ways to understand what it means to learn dominant forms of English in our world today.'
To be fair, they shouldn't be teaching that shit in the college level, if this guy really is a college professor he needs to stay in his fucking lane. I'm not sure how it is now; I know they're teaching Algebra earlier than when I was in, but schools stopped with the rules of English around 6th or 7th grade, maybe a bit in 8th. Because once I hit high-school, I was old enough to know better, so I better know the fucking rules, and if you didn't, you're gonna feel the pain. If I didn't know how a word was spelled or what it meant, there's this thing called the library and/or dictionary, look it up; oh you don't know how it's spelled, do this second grade exercise called "Sounding it out." And with the internet either having or being able to substitute a library or dictionary, unless you literally have zero understanding of English, your ignorance on how to use the language is a choice, and you shouldn't be in college if that's the case.
 
Ah yes, I remember how I, as a whitey, was born with an inate knowledge of how to spell, use punctuation, and grammar. What I didn't already know from my genes I just absorbed from wytpipo in my surroundings. It's not like I had be be taught that stuff, or spent 12 years of my life trying to learn it, often not very successfully because of the constant interruptions by ghetto welfare spics who didn't care. I can't imagine what it's like to be Native American or Filipino or black and have to learn things.
 
If you live somewhere and don't fluently speak the official (or de facto official) language of the region, you get what you deserve. Unless you're a legitimate refugee, the kind pushed out of their country by genocide and not because you want gibs, you consciously made the decision to not bother putting in the effort, and now you're paying the price. That's called a consequence, and it's a good thing.
 
Two dumb motherfuckers. You can bet these turds' master's/doctoral theses was written in the King's English, spell-checked, edited, and punctuation gone over with a fine-toothed comb before being submitted.

Grading students on their effort is appropriate no higher than kindergarten. In the real world, people are paid to produce, and that means using proper spelling, grammar, and punctuation. And you rarely, if ever, get a chance to redo projects you fucked up at work. The student needs to make his/her first ten thousand mistakes in school, get corrected and learn from them without the penalty of losing a job.

These stupid shiteaters need to adopt the mindset of "the rising tide lifts all boats". Make sure the students ALL learn, no matter what color, etc., they are. Grade what was done. Correct mistakes, push for excellence from everyone. Stop selling students short. People will rise or fall to meet the expectations made of them.
 
A guy who is literally descended from Feudal Japanese Nobility is lecturing white people about privilege.


Pic attached is dude, he's at least 3/4 white. Who the fuck is he kidding?
He found out what a lot of professionals with liberal arts degrees find out; you’ll never be famous, nobody cares, and you’ll always labor in obscurity.

So I doubt this meant to fix anything or accomplish anything; he just wants attention and approval for his poor choices in education and career.
 
Hilarious that this guy's a Jap, a race notorious for being SO BASED that they have a whole different alphabet for foreign words.

I hope someone asks him how he learned to speak English so well, being a minority and all.
 
This hapa is doing his level best to look like a Grappler Baki character:
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'Pausing in our work helps us intervene and disrupt by first noticing ourselves participating in racism, engaging in white fragility, in white rage, or white language supremacy,' he said.
Has he tried going somewhere without White people?
Somalia might be a good fit for him and his ideas on rhetoric.
 
Also grammar, composition and word choice are incredibly important in scientific papers, literature and anything else. So if he wants every one of his students to fail in the real world, that's on him. He wants to be proud coddling his students, reality is a much harsher mistress.
Having a large vocabulary (total number of words known, not just big words) is strongly correlated with success in life, but, sure, keep coddling a group of people who have the worst vocabulary in the entire country. That'll fix black failure.
Doesn’t surprise me. They were pushing for this shit back when I was in college almost two decades ago.

I still recall a professor asking the students to grade each other’s papers. I was grading some jogger’s “essay” that looked like a kindergartner’s attempt, complete with countless spelling errors, street slang and emojis. When I handed it back, with enough red ink that you’d think you stumbled into a Fulci film, I got raked over the coals, told “language is constantly evolving and we don’t need to keep clinging to antiquated methods of communication.”

Fuck me for thinking you should write like a functioning adult in a college level course.
Fortunately I've only had to do peer review, but even the harder working minority students whose papers I've looked at had a fundamental problem with organizing their thoughts coherently. They would have benefited from more red ink earlier in their education.
 
This premise is stupid because:

A: If you're actually putting in effort, you should be doing well and getting decent grades.
B: If you're putting in a lot of effort, but still doing poorly, then you're probably not bright enough to be in college to begin with.

What's the point of going to college if you don't have to apply and improve yourself? The only obvious answer is for professors like this loon to continue their grifting.
 
It's weird how Japanese/Korean/Chinese kids consistently dominate white supremacist American testing systems. Have they just figured out some secret that the rest of us minorities haven't? Did the whites give them the cheat codes as a "sorry for the 19th century" gift?
No see, white people prop up East Asians on purpose so they can point to them as an example of bootstrapping while using them as an excuse to maintain the white supremacist system specifically designed to fuck over black people. Yes, this is unironically what CRTers actually believe.
 
This hapa is doing his level best to look like a Grappler Baki character:
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Has he tried going somewhere without White people?
Somalia might be a good fit for him and his ideas on rhetoric.
FRESNO lmao and got his PhD at Washington State and did his undergrad work at Oregon State, opinion completely disregarded

shamefur dispray
 
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