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Monday, June 21, 2004

Who's Bright Idea Was This?

I remember seeing a film about this woman. At the time, watching the experiment, I was both intrigued and revolted. Intrigued because it was a powerful statement and lesson in the roots of racism. Revolted because she knowingly used powerful social pressures for a scientific study on people without their consent. (This, in real science settings is a big "no no".) The glaring omission in this article is that the author did not mention that Ms. Elliott would switch the "good eye color" on day two of her experiment. This article makes it seem like she would choose an eye color and that was that without teaching or explaining anything to the students afterwards.

Ken
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By LINDA SEEBACH
Jun 21, 2004, 06:58


One of the more sadistic exercises practiced by some operators who drive the diversity machine goes by the name "Brown Eyes, Blue Eyes." You may have heard of it, because an elementary-school teacher in Iowa first perpetrated it on her fourth-graders in 1968 and it quickly became notorious.

Jane Elliott divided her students into two groups based on their eye color. The blue-eyed children were forced to wear collars symbolizing inferiority, and were constantly humiliated by the brown-eyed children, egged on by their teacher.

Elliott once told an interviewer, "It was just horrifying how quickly they became what I told them they were." She described how one of the blue-eyed girls changed from a "brilliant, self-confident carefree, excited little girl to a frightened, timid, uncertain little almost-person."

You would think that any normal person would realize that she had just done an evil thing. But not Elliott. She repeated the abuse with subsequent classes, and finally turned it into a fully commercial enterprise, hawking workshops, lectures, books and videos. You can find her on the Web, but I won't give you the address because I think she is a disgrace.

Here's how her Web site advertises the workshop: "This is a one-day seminar in which participants will be exposed to an exercise in discrimination based on eye color. Blue-eyed participants will be identified as the inferior group and all the negative stereotypes ordinarily applied to people of color and women by white people and men will be applied to them. Those people having green or hazel eyes will be designated inferior or superior as the instructor sees fit."

One of the many companies that sell her videos describes the results this way: "In just a few hours, we watch grown professionals become distracted and despondent, stumbling over the simplest commands."

Why am I telling you about this now? Because an extremely and righteously angry woman wrote me recently that her son, a ninth-grader at Peak to Peak Charter School in Lafayette, Colo., had been subjected to this abusive treatment in his English literature class, which was studying "Othello."

"The teacher made my son wear a blue card on a string around his neck. He was required to smile ingratiatingly, bow his head, and beg people to tie his shoes for him," she wrote. "The teacher wore a yellow card, that of the superior race, and she petted and made much of the other yellow card students."

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© Copyright 2004 by Capitol Hill Blue

2 comments:

gberke said...

ah yes, capital hill blues...
I caught this too. It absolutely looks, from the article, that she springs this without knowledge or consent: that would seem to be quite an impossible thing to do. No mention is made of prior consent requirements, would be a serious omission either on capitalhillblues or Ms whatshername: this is no longer an experiment, it is a simulation with predictable and painful results and informed consent is required, and therefore I say she got it and capitalhillblues just skipped the facts for a good story.
Well, not "good" as in "good" but as in "this should get people pissed off and unhappy, scared, hateful, etc"

Matt said...

What a bunch of crap!

Just kidding - very interesting. I think I remember hearing about this a while back. I'm suprised teachers are still doing this little experiment. What are kids supposed to learn through this? I think I'd have a few words for the teacher that played this game in my kid's class.