Page 4 - Tuesday, December 9, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Page 4 - Tuesday, December 9, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Ma ynard St. Ann Arbor, MI148109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCDONALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. F R OM T HE D A ILY Policing the police Body cameras are a good first step towards improving law enforcement The recent decisions to not indict police officers involved in the deaths of Black men such as Michael Brown and Eric Garner have inspired passionate conversations about our justice system. Across the nation, several police departments are seeking to rebuild trust in their respective communities by implementing policies to increase transparency. On Dec. 2, the Ypsilanti City Council approved a resolution for the purchase of 15 body cameras for its police staff after nearly a year of discussions. While the Garner case has proven body cameras alone can't be expected to solve deeply rooted and systemic issues of police brutality, requiring officers to wear them has been statistically shown to create more accountability on all sides. Therefore, the Ann Arbor Police Department, the University of Michigan Police Department and other law enforcement agencies across the nation should adopt the use of body cameras as the first step in a multi-pronged approach to police reformation. Intheproblem-posingmethod,"The teacher is no longer merely the-one- who-teaches, but one who is himself taught in dialogue with the students, who in turn while being taught also teach. They become jointly responsible for a process in which all grow." This philosophy considers the student a human entity with intellectual value, able to contribute to his or her own journey of education. Simply put, dialogue is stimulating. Lectures are not. As I come to a close on my four years as an undergrad, I reflect on the classes I've taken - those that have inspired and those that have fallen short. Unfortunately for me, the ratio seems a bit off. Some of that has to do with distribution requirements forcing me to take courses I'm not interested in. Much ofithas to do with my professors' seeming disinterest in taking a true role in the dialectical relationship of education. Spare me your lectures and textbooks and multiple-choice exams. Provide me with the tools and freedom to think. Marls Harmon is an LSA senior. The Ross School of Business is located on Tappan Avenue, in a building so large, orange and modern that it almost looks as though it was intentionally designed to differentiate itself from the rest of campus. The inside - filled VICTORIA with hanging NOBLE artwork, glass windows that flood the space with natural light and small study rooms each equipped with audio- visual equipment - looks nothing like Lorch Hall down the street, or Mason Hall a few blocks away. When I visited the University as a prospective student, this was intenselyobviousto me. Last winter semester, I was one of a handful of people in my Econom- ics 101 class who had no intention of applying to the Business School. One day in discussion section, as my class and I waited for class to begin, I listened as students detailed their concerns that, if they didn't get into Ross, they wouldn't have anything else to study atthe University. Trying to be helpful, I offered economics, statistics and communications stud- ies as possible alternatives. "No," one student told me. They had no inten- tion of staying in LSA. If they didn't get into Ross, they would be applying to the Ford School of Public Policy, another exclusive "special program." Happy to have found someone who I thought might've shared my interested in politics, I excitedly asked what kind of policy they were interested in. Oops, I had again mis- read my classmate. As it turned out, they weren't really interested in policy at all. Andthatkindof made me wonder - out of the probably hundreds of people in my class who were applying to the Business School, how many were interested in business? Not business as a.high-powered career andaperceived pathtoahighstarting salary. Not business as a major that might provide added benefits like an intense recruiting process, a ?oss and the res shiny, high-tech class building or a closer community of students also in their major. But rather, how many of these students were interested in the major for the skills and lessons it might provide? How many of them even knew, beyond what they had been told in mass meetings and read onthe Ross website, what those skills were? There's no doubt that the Business School, ranked fourth in the country in 2014, is an excellent program. Likewise, there's no doubt that Business School graduates are highly desired by employers - 92 percent of 2014 graduates were offered a job by graduation. But, if a student finds themselfinthe programforthe wrong reasons, the overall strength of the program won't make up for the missed opportunity to study' something about which they were truly passionate. So to freshmen considering apply-, ing to Ross, do your best to ensure that you're doing so for the right rea- sons. You'll do the best at the thing you're most passionate about. The ability to demonstrate that passion and commitment - not to mention show off the higher grades that often follow trueengagement with course- work - will likely get you a whole lot further in the job market than a BBA degree and Ross-sponsored networking opportunities. Ircan per- sonallytell you that I've found a lot of incredible internships and opportu- nities as an LSA student. If you don't know what you're passionate about- this is the time to find out - but don't settle for a major just because it's highly ranked, likely to get you a job or housed in a pumpkin-colored architectural masterpiece. While it's important that students do some serious introspection before choosing a major, it would be unwise to ignore the many ways in which University action has nudged students toward programs that they may not truly be academically iriterested'in. The Business School also offersso many resources to its students that students from other majors usually don't have access to. For example, Ross-affiliated student organiza- tions can get access to special fund- ing, and can use Ross facilities for meetings and events. Meanwhile, non-affiliated groups have to pay to use University facilities. The Business School also holds a pro- fessional recruiting process that is generally restricted to Ross stu- dents - though other students can pay a fee to participate. Many Ross students also participate in student organizations explicitly restricted to or mostly filled with other Ross students, providing an added sense of community. Due to the exclu- sivity of the school, it's completely understandable that many students might apply to the Business School, even if they're unsure whether the program is right for them. In some cases, similar resources are availableto general LSA students. It's certainly possible for them to get career guidance and ad-hoc funding for student organizations. However, while smaller special programs can offer a more centralized and struc- tured approach to connect students with resources, LSA students are often on their own. For example, while .professional planning and recruitment is heavily emphasized for Ross students, 36.8 percent of unemployed recent LSA graduates didn't begin their job search until after graduation. The Career Center can provide resources to help stu- dents find a job, but they have to seek that guidance out on their own. The University has a responsibility to ensure that the perceived (or actual) inequality of experiences or resources between LSA and special programs like the Business School is not contributing to students' decisions to pursue any given major. When students decide to attend the University of Michigan, most do so with the expectation that they will receive a world-class education in whatever they choose to study. Once they arrive on campus, they deserve the freedom to decide what that subject is without-feeling constrainedbyadisparityinavailable opportunities. By strivingto provide a uniform quality of experience and opportunity to all students, the University can surely make progress toward that end. - Victoria Noble can be reached at vjnoble@umich.edu. Ypsilanti Police Chief Tony DeGiusti submitted a request to the Ypsilanti City Council for nearly $55,000 worth of equipment purchases andupgrades. While Ypsilanti police cars currently have dashboard cameras that can record police interactions in front of the vehicles, DeGiusti noted that the outdated equipment has become a problem for the department. In addition, a bargain offered by law enforcement technology company L-3 Mobile-Vision, motivated the police force to purchase the cameras. Similarly, Eastern Michigan University has announced plans to invest $17,000 in body camera equipment for officers, and Ann Arbor officials discussed the implementation of body cameras Monday,Dece. , Body mcaeras would not only hold police more accountable for their actions, but also the civilians with whom they interact. The cameras could also potentially help with conflicting witness testimonies that so often result from encounters with police officers. Furthermore, a study of the use of body cameras by police in Rialto, California, shows that the use of force by police fell by 60 percent and citizen complaints decreased by 88 percent after their distribution. Though it is commendable that the Ypsilanti Police Department and other law enforcement agencies are taking these preventative measures, the use of these body cameras must be accompanied by legislative guidelines to ensure that the cameras are an effective measure. The department has mandated that officers turn their cameras on upon coming into contact with a citizen. While there are both pros and cons to this policy, legislators must create aspecific, uniform policy providing strict guidelines regarding when cameras should be on and how they should be utilized. According to The Atlantic, there is very little conclusive and consistent evidence, research or testing regarding the use of body cameras. With President Barack Obama asking for $263 million in federal funding for the purchase and training of body camera use, it's imperative that these devices' role in the justice systembe closely monitored. It's important to note that body cameras will not completely solve the problems that exist between citizens and law enforcement. As Obama stated after the Ferguson decision, "This is a problem that is national." The road to a solution must include providing police personnel with better and more extensive training. Police departmentsacross the nation should reevaluate their practices and hold their officers to a higherstandard. Nonviolent measures should always be encouraged whenever possible and officers should be better trained to handle civilians of all identities,"including those with mental disabilities and other cognitive impairments. Being aware of differing cultural identities will lead police officers to become more sensitive to the different issues facing groups within our diverse society. It's becoming increasingly evident that there is a deep and extremely problematic divide between some police forces in the United States and the communities they police. In helping to close this divide, body cameras are a piece of the puzzle, but only that. To attempt to move toward remedying this divide, improved legislation and training must be put into place in order to aid police forces in their understanding and policing of their respective communities. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Edvinas Berzanskis, Devin Eggert; David Harris, Rachel JohnJordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Michael Paul, Allison Raeck, Melissa Scholke, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Mary Kate Winn, Jenny Wang, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe LINDSEY LAIRD How can we achieve friendly diplomacy 9 MARIS HARMONI | I M Are you satisfied with your undergraduate education? As I am coming up on completing my four years at the University this spring I am starting to wonder- could I have done something to feel more satisfied with my liberal arts education? Why is it that an outcome of my choice to receive a liberal arts education is that I can't quite articulate what I've learned in my classes? Is ita resultof my class choices or my major selection? Or is my lack of satisfaction a product of a system that doesn't really know quite how to teach? PauloFreire, in "Pedagogyof the oppressed," categorizes teaching into two main methods - the banking method and the problem- posing method. In the banking approach, "Narration (with the teacher as narrator) leads the students to memorize mechanically the narrated account. Worse yet, it turns them into 'containers,' into 'receptacles' to be 'filled' by the teachers. The more completely she fills the receptacles, the better a teacher she is. The more meekly the receptacles permit themselves to be filled, the better students they are." From required statistics courses to history classes where I was mandated to memorize lists of terms and capitals, I often felt likea receptacle. I frequently felt trapped within an uncreative paradigm of memorize and regurgitate within classrooms and especially with GSIs. I did not feel this way about all of my classes at all, but the majority of survey courses, history seminars and obligatory requirements fell incredibly short of worthwhile experiences. Each year we pay thousands of dollars to attend each course - why should onlyaselectfewupper-levelcourses really challenge our intellect and force us to truly think? "The banking approach to adult education, for example, will never propose to students that they critically consider reality. It will deal instead with such vital questions as whether Roger gave green grass to the goat, and insist upon the importance oflearning that, on the contrary, Roger gave green grass to the rabbit. The'humanism'ofthe banking approach masks the effort to turn women and men into automatons - the verynegation oftheir ontological vocation to be more fully human." There have been countless instances when I felt I was learning something so inapplicable to the real world that it almost wasn't worth challenging my brain to perform the task at hand. Hundreds of pages of reading a week didn't help me critically think or analyze - it made me into a robot that skimmed some pages of academic garble every night. In problem-posing education, Freire's counter to the banking approach is, "people develop their power to perceive critically the way they exist in the world with which and in which they find themselves; they come to see the world not as a static reality, but as a reality in process, in transformation. Although the dialectical relations of women and men with the world exist independently of how these relations are perceived (or whether or not they are perceived at all), it is also true that the form of action they adoptis to alarge extent a function of how they perceive themselves in the world. Hence, the teacher-student. and the students- teachers reflect simultaneously on themselves and the world without dichotomizing this reflection from action, and thus establish an authentic form of thought and action." Students need to learn how to think as individuals, not as robotic cogs in the academic machine. That's boring and uninspiring. University education has so much potential to create passion and inspire fascination in the minds of students; all of my friends love learning. However, most of my friends do not love school. There is a very big contradiction here that we need to fix. The problem is not that my friends and I are lazy or under-stimulated by the world around us. The problem is that we are at the mercy of teachers who treat us like receptacles into whom they dump their knowledge. A few weeks ago, the famous author and activist Alice Walker pre- sented a lecture for hundreds of peo- ple at Hill Auditorium. Her lecture, which was incredibly moving and thought-provoking, was filled with many feminist/womanist, environ- mentalist and anti-war sentiments. The main theme of her lecture was friendship, which Walker expand- ed to address friendships amongst nations or, as it's most commonly understood, diplomacy. Later in her lecture, Walker asserted the need to unlearn what we have been taught to hold as truth. Many audience members cheered in agreement with this idea. In my opinion, Walker was suggesting that our formal schooling has presented us with a very biased and simplistic view of how things are. While I agree and believe it is necessary to revise exactly what we learn in order to include a greater diversity of experi- ences and viewpoints, I feel an addi- tional degree as to how we learn and how we feel about learning should be addressed in order to achieve Walk- er's vision of friendly diplomacy. Quite obviously, diplomacy revolves around the need to under- stand cultures and ways of life of people from around the world. I feel that, all too often, our society has a superficial as well as blindly biased idea of the way things are in other parts of the world. This is harmful because, without a deeper and more complex understanding of other cul- tures, our society has the potential to make decisions that can cause unin- tended harm to many people. So, I ask the question: why, as a society, have we come to be more comfortable with static, fixed and one-dimensional views of issues, ideas and unfamiliar cultures? My hypothesis is the way in which children are (generally) educated within the public school system. By means of class exams, state- mandated tests and AP/SAT/ACT tests, one cannot argue that the pub- lic school system has come to be pri- marily concerned with exactly what students know. These types of tests and ways of advancing in the public school system are sending the mes- sage to childrenthattheir knowledge and opinions can boil down to being either right or wrong. This is a gross misrepresentation of real life - the very thing education should be pre- paring students for. Additionally, I feel that kids are being taught from a very young age that learning is a one-time deal. Once students take an exam on a particular topic, they often feel they have learned all there is to know, or, even worse, all they need to know on that topic. How many times have you heard asked, or perhaps even asked yourself, "Will we need to know that for the exam?" Test's and exams have trained us not to be comfortable unless we have straightforward and immediate solutions to a problem or question. To tie this back to Walker's idea of friendly diplomacy, our discomfort with complexity becomes problematic on a larger scale when society tries to put major ideas and decisions into tiny boxes labeled "A, B, C and D." (When in doubt, always guess C.) Society should be comfortable with complex and nuanced understandings of issues. Additionally, we need to teach kids from a young age that they will never completely understand every- thing and, as a result, they should have a commitment to continual learning. It is my belief that exams do not foster this attitude toward learning - it merely fosters an atti- tude centered around passing tests that are often devoid of any level of complexity. In addition to a commitment to continual learning, I feel that kids should be taught that they can and should learn from anyone and everyone. All too often our society has underlying assumptions as to who can learn from whom: teacher- student, parent-child, developed nation-developing nation, etc. We need a generation of young people who are humble enough to break this mold of learning. In my opinion, humility is a crucial component to Walker's vision of friendly diplomacy. In conclusion, we need to restruc- ture our public education system to provide students a space in which they can be comfortable with not knowing the correctanswer to every question asked of them. Kids should be made aware of the complexity of issues, cultures and societies. They should be taught to thrive in this complexity and to continually strive for a more nuanced understanding of the world, while always under- standing their own personal limits and biases. It's my belief that all of these solutions should be practiced on a larger scale when our society interacts with other parts of the world. If we combine humility and a commitment to continual learning, Alice Walker's ideal of friendly diplomacy could be achieved. Lindsey Laird is an Music, Theater & Dance junior. 4