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Arne Duncan, Spike Lee Urge Black Men To Become Teachers

Spike Lee Black Male Teachers

DORIE TURNER   01/31/11 04:54 PM ET   AP

ATLANTA — Filmmaker Spike Lee joined Education Secretary Arne Duncan in issuing a call Monday for more black men to become teachers, making their plea at the country's only all-male historically black college.

The two took part in a town hall meeting at Atlanta's private Morehouse College just a week after President Barack Obama urged more people nationwide to become teachers.

Duncan told an audience that more than 1 million educators are expected to retire in the coming decade and that federal officials are hoping to harness that opportunity to create a more diverse teaching work force, noting that less than 2 percent of the nation's 3 million teachers are black men.

"Everybody can't be a business major," Lee told the auditorium packed with male high school and college students. "We have to educate ourselves. We have to educate our young black men."

Lee, a Morehouse graduate, said he was influenced most – outside of his own family – by two of his Morehouse professors. Both educators attended Monday's gathering and were asked to stand up to be honored.

Duncan used the occasion to promote the federal TEACH campaign. The program was launched in the fall to persuade more minorities – particularly males – to enter education. The federal government has launched the teach.gov website, a one-stop-shop for anyone wanting to enter teaching, including professionals hoping to switch careers.

"If you want to make a difference in the life of our nation, if you want to make a difference in the life of a child, become a teacher," Obama said in a video address taped for Monday's event. "Our country needs you."

The Education Department also recorded TV commercials with Oprah Winfrey, performer John Legend and others to talk about the influence of teachers on their lives. Duncan said he will visit Los Angeles next month, seeking to recruit more Hispanics for teaching.

Duncan said that while many school districts are confronting layoffs and tight budgets, there are many high-need areas such as science, mathematics and special education facing a teacher shortage. School districts nationwide hire between 80,000 and 200,000 new teachers each year, even in tough economic times.

Duncan pointed to 8,500 unfilled teaching jobs listed on the teach.gov website as of Monday.

The government is working to help students obtain more financial aid for college and to create loan-forgiveness programs once they graduate and commit to teaching, Duncan said. He urged private organizations to get involved in recruiting minorities to teaching and supporting them once they're in the classroom.

"The government can't begin to do this alone," he said.

Social activist Jeff Johnson is joining the effort. The MSNBC contributor has launched a task force that aims at putting 80,000 more black male teachers in classrooms across the country in the next four years.

Johnson told the audience that being a teacher isn't considered "cool" in the black community and that perception must change.

"They look at business, engineering and law as professions that will make them better men, but the very profession that determines what the next generation looks like isn't even on their radar," Johnson said.

____

Online:

http://www.teach.gov

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ATLANTA — Filmmaker Spike Lee joined Education Secretary Arne Duncan in issuing a call Monday for more black men to become teachers, making their plea at the country's only all-male historically...
ATLANTA — Filmmaker Spike Lee joined Education Secretary Arne Duncan in issuing a call Monday for more black men to become teachers, making their plea at the country's only all-male historically...
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AmigaMan
Your micro-bio will never meet our guidelines.
05:15 PM on 03/27/2011
How about more men in general? Why does America always have to think about issues with skin color involved?
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AcademicFreedom
Often banned; always factual
05:20 PM on 03/01/2011
While Spike occassionally gets a bit too much Sean Penn in him (or maybe its, Sean Penn gets a bit too much Spike in him) - he is spot-on with his recommendation. Arne, on the other hand is just another sweetheart of the educational system power brokers and a waste. I would suggest that Spike encourage universities to follow his suggestion with some specific action - for example: an AA athlete agrees to attend a university and major in education; if the student-athlete does not go pro, the university must educate him/her until they obtain a degree, with a maximum of 10 years post athletic career. The additional cost to universities is minimal; it is only the variable cost associated with adding another student and books. Just one university stepping up to such a program would cause others to do the same - because of the NCAA vice-grip on D1 schools it may not be possible, however there are a number of well respected D3 and NAIA schools. While not solving the entire problem, there would be hundreds more AA male teachers graduating every year. BTW - there is no need for consultants, or Jesse, or Al to get involved to take their piece of flesh; Spike and one or two people helping a willing university could accomplish a pilot program in less than a year.
09:59 PM on 02/03/2011
This coming from a guy that ran a school system that discriminated against black male teachers.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
12:04 PM on 02/03/2011
"Culture plays a fundamental role in cognitive development."

-- Belinda Williams, The Urban Learner Framework
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Lynn Brown
10:03 PM on 02/03/2011
Undoubtedly. That's part of constructivism.

Do we need more African American teachers? Yes. Do we need more male teachers? I think so. Do we need more diversity in the teaching corps? Yes we do.

But I refuse to cede the ground that a good, centered teacher who is sensitive to and engaged in accessing students lives must be of identical cultural background in order to effect the change that is so essential.

The following quote is from Effects Measure, a public health site, but it illustrates my point of view quite well:
Causation is a judgment about an association, not a discoverable property of a relationship that can be empirically demonstrated, as if some associations had readable labels on them that said "causal." It would be nice if they did. But they don't. "Causation" is an inference from empirical data. It must be based on empirical evidence, but it cannot be reduced to it.

Is there a problem in the system? Yes. Is there a majority race and gender present in the system? Yes. Is the problem the race and gender of teachers alone? That's an inference that demands some pretty strict, rigorous, deep analysis to support. I haven't seen it here. On the contrary, I have seen enough counter proof in NYC classrooms (every imaginable variation of teacher and student cultures) to reject the assertion.

And this quote raises another question for me...Is school the only forum where culture affects learning?"
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01:19 AM on 02/04/2011
LET ME MAKE THIS REAL SIMPLE FOR YOU:

Causation = Slavery (physical & mental)

Mental Slavery ( age 4 - 18) = Curriculum teaches them white people did eveything

Every Subject credits Europeans = produces a lack of confidence in African Am children

Lack of confidence = turned off to education

Turned off to education = Slavery (mental)

Slavery = Causation

ONLY A FOOL WILL LET THE ENEMY EDUCATE HIS CHILDREN. (MALCOLM X)
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
01:20 AM on 02/04/2011
Great post. I agree that a culturally competent teacher need not be of "identical cultural background" to the students taught in order to be effective.

Currently -- 9 out of 10 teachers are White. With an intense, on-going teacher training initiative . . . in ten years . . . we could probably get half of the teacher workforce to appreciate the need for culturally responsive teaching. Of course it's a very personal and self-reflective process that requires confronting one's own prejudices and preconceptions. It can be done, but how would we administer such a national teacher program?

It would be far simpler, and more importantly -- far more beneficial -- to create a teacher workforce that reflects the diversity of the student body. If 90% of the teachers are White . . . the schools are not practicing what they preach. Despite talk of diversity, what's really being communicated is that teaching and learning . . . and school . . . is about White people.

Furthermore, you have to examine the devastating dilemma of cultural disproportionality in our schools' special education programs. The inordinate number of children of color being labeled and tracked for failure is at the root of the achievement gap.
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10:28 PM on 02/02/2011
Spike needs to start a campaign to encourage black men to be husbands and fathers. The majority of black households today are heading by single moms. Families need a male role model in the home. A professional male role model would be even better. That's where to start.
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
10:16 AM on 02/03/2011
That's starting with the symptom and not the cause, the systematic cause that cripples and stigmatizes those Black men outside of their possibilities of being fathers or husbands.
10:32 AM on 02/03/2011
Assuming that a family is not whole unless a man is about (and that's not an assumption I usually make, but simply as a concession to you here and now I'll make it), it's not a matter of "encouragement", but rather it's a matter of structural oppression: 1. There is a high rate of unemployment for blacks generally and for young black men in particular (as in you need money to support or help support a nuclear family); 2. There is a high rate of incarceration for black men specifically (as in men who have been incarcerated have more difficulty securing a living wage and, unfortunately, have a high rate of HIV infection); and 3. It's not as if black men are not "husbands and fathers"--there is significant differences from socioeconomic class to socioeconomic class...the better educated and more secure the individual, the more likely the individual values and is able to maintain an intact family, original or blended.

That said, as a mother of a black son, I would absolutely LOVE for him to have a black male math teacher or coach or something...as it is, he's mostly had white women in teaching roles and white men in boys-extracurricular-roles, and that is wholly unsatisfactory (not knocking white men and women, mind you, but it'd be great to have more black and brown faces in positions of authority IMO).
10:37 AM on 02/03/2011
Correction: "there are significant differences"

...and clarification: my point was that the stereotypical intact nuclear family is alive and well in the black community--the extent to which it presents is contingent upon which socioeconomic subclass within the larger class "African American" you happent to examine. (And it should go without saying, but I'll say it: the incarceration of black males is of a piece with the ongoing structural r@cial oppression of blacks generally.)
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06:23 PM on 02/02/2011
Children learn about themselves and the world around them within the context of culture (Northeast and Islands Regional Educational Laboratory at Brown University, 2002). Students from minority cultures may feel pressured to disavow themselves of their cultural beliefs and norms in order to assimilate into the majority culture. This, however, can interfere with their emotional and cognitive development and result in school failure (Sheets, 1999).

When I moved to a mostly white and asian school district in the 90's, there are no African American teachers (suburb of LA). THEY ARE NOT LETTING OTHERS TEACH THEIR CHILDREN.

Most people don't understand because African Americans are not going into teaching in general, the majority of the teachers in the "Hood" are white women.

If African Americans don't want to teach their own...................who do you think will????....... Billionaires like Bill Gates, the Waltons of WALmart, and Eli Broad former director of AIG are funding the Charter Schools for the inner cities. We don't need more inexperienced, unqualified teachers. The school boards assign teachers and for the past 25+ years LAUSD has been supplying substitute teachers and temporary teachers (mostly white) in these "Hard to Staff" schools (the recent ACLU lawsuit proves this). The school board should be fired for not forcing the best, most qualified teachers to serve in the Black and Brown community. Veteran teachers know these schools are the trainining ground for new (worst) administrators, also.

IF WE DON'T TEACH OUR OWN.................WHO DO YOU THINK IS GOING TO
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06:55 PM on 02/02/2011
forcing? wow. if they are the best and brightest, they are not going to allow themselves to be forced to do anything...therein lies a big part of the problem
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07:05 PM on 02/02/2011
If they are unwilling to work where they are most needed then find another job elsewhere. Most jobs assign workers based upon where they are needed.
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colred
07:35 PM on 02/02/2011
I like your passion and your message. Some of us don't need to be forced. We would go willingly, but for administration. Some need to be inspired. But your point is right, we need African-American teachers. I would argue, however, not just for the "darker" areas. Some of those all white suburbs would do well with a little color. It would help alleviate some of the fear that is so often a basis for racism.
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Della Mae Smith
02:28 PM on 02/02/2011
A couple of my young relatives were contemplating being teachers. But they changed their minds and went into politics and golf. They are are of slight weight and some of these guys are over six feet tall and over 250 pounds. My guys weren't going to get into confrontation with angry students and parents who look to harm them. Some kids don't wan't to be there, but they are just putting in their time, for whatever reason.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
12:50 PM on 02/02/2011
Before anyone argues that we don't need cultural diversity in the teacher workforce, please review HuffPo's article entitled:

"STUDY: 13 Percent Of Public School Biology Teachers Endorse Creationism In The Classroom."

Busting up the mono-cultural (over 90% White) teacher workforce isn't about providing role models and mentors for African American children. This is about preparing children to become responsive and responsible citizens in our culturally pluralistic society.

All of America's public school students are suffering academically due to the hidden curriculum of our mono-cultural teacher workforce.
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08:41 PM on 02/02/2011
"All of America's public school students are suffering academical­ly due to the hidden curriculum of our mono-cultu­ral teacher workforce."

For once I agree with your post..............the Eurocentric curriculum turns African American children off around middle school. The vast majority of the Af Am students need to be taught how they fit in the scheme of things, otherwise they decide since White people discovered America (lie - people were already here), all the founding fathers built America (lie Africans built this country), Jesus is white (lie he was born in middle east, not blonde haired or blue eyed), Santa Claus is white, the history books start with Greece (which Greece borrowed everything from Egypt- Black people of Africa), and on and on and on. Our educational system is a good ole' brain washing........this is why Asians and Jews teach their culture on Saturdays in my community. African Americans should do the same.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
08:21 PM on 02/03/2011
Of all the problems American schools have I would put the dominance of European history at the absolute bottom. You must be joking with this nonsense.
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AmigaMan
Your micro-bio will never meet our guidelines.
05:28 PM on 03/27/2011
Yes. I moved to the US from Canada to be with my new American wife. I decided to become a high school History teacher, because of my love of US History. Yes, I have a hidden agenda because of my being white. :/

That is the stupidest f***ing thing I've ever read. Hint: You may be the racist one here.
10:42 AM on 02/02/2011
the teachers unions will never allow this. - in philly the school district started a program to do exactly what the article proposes - recruit black male professionals from different professions , train them and hire them as teachers. the union threatened to sue on the grounds of racial discrimination and the schoold district wimped out and stopped the program. so the next time a teachers union says "its all about the kids " you know that its b.s. is there anyteachers union supporter that can defend this ? this is the same philly teachers union that went on strike until they got a clause in the contract saying that a teacher can only be fired if they get 3 unsatisfactory ratings AT THE SAME SCHOOL. ie as long as they transfer after an u rating to another school they can get multiple u ratings and never be terminated. yeah, its all about the kids
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Della Mae Smith
02:30 PM on 02/02/2011
In California, a lot of teachers that have incarcerated for sex crimes are shifted to the poor communities because the school could not fire them .
03:00 PM on 02/02/2011
Maybe they weren't fired because they were found not-guilty. There is such a thing as being wrongfully accused.
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colred
07:45 PM on 02/02/2011
Not all teachers unions are the same. Please don't lump us together. My association often works with administrators to move teachers to a more effective level or get them out. The administrators, however, don't do the evaluations and paper work that will allow the contract to work. I haven't been evaluated in 6 years.
10:26 AM on 02/02/2011
We absolutely should be talking to the UAW workers in the auto factories, the teachers in the schools, the federal workers in the government, the state workers,etc. How ridiculous that the press never interviews real working people.

Educator and Union Member and Proud of It
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JusdaTruth
a proud child of the 60's
06:03 AM on 02/02/2011
Somebody should go out and interview black male teachers and get their take on education today. I'm tired of non-educational professionals giving advice.
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SeptimusDSX
Always question the obvious.
09:17 AM on 02/02/2011
Actually, it would not be remiss to ask anybody in college about their opinion on the teaching profession. Almost everybody would agree that it is important...but would be unwilling to do it. :)
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SOD
As kind as possible and as unkind as necessary.
10:06 AM on 02/02/2011
That's analogous to asking a member of UAW about working at GM.
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JusdaTruth
a proud child of the 60's
03:45 PM on 02/06/2011
Which would be a great thing.
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JusdaTruth
a proud child of the 60's
08:43 PM on 02/08/2011
Like your five day work week. Thank the Unions.
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SeptimusDSX
Always question the obvious.
12:24 AM on 02/02/2011
Most of my black friends are in either medicine, science or engineering. I think the problem of perception is not limited to blacks, latinos, whites, asians or whoever...it is almost universal.
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a okafor007
Black Atheist from New Jersey
09:09 AM on 02/02/2011
I tried teaching when I was a T.A. at a local elementary school in Newark, NJ. I quit because I realized that PARENTS were getting in the way of their children's scholastic progress
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SeptimusDSX
Always question the obvious.
09:15 AM on 02/02/2011
I'm not surprised. A student of mine said that a parent put enough pressure to make her quit her job that she had held for eight years. If I may ask, what transpired in your case?
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leftbehind2000
If money = speech, then no speech is free.
11:27 PM on 02/01/2011
The odds against African-American boys who grow up in the inner city are long today, and get even longer with each generation, thanks to the way in which our nation funds its public schools. Many do not know that most of the money a school receives is through property tax, thus ensuring that public schools in affluent neighborhoods will receive far more per student than will those in the inner city. This does nothing but reinforce the widening chasm between the haves and the have-nots, ensuring a permanent underclass peopled largely by the African American men Spike Lee would wish to become teachers.

Arne Duncan has shown absolutely no interest in this issue, preferring instead to focus on education as a business model, relying on standards and testing to inform him, and assuming teachers are to blame when schools fail. Spike Lee has the ability to affect change through his eloquence and talents, should he ever break away from the politics of education and see the problem for what it is.
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
12:40 AM on 02/02/2011
The call for more Black male teachers simply misses the bigger picture. Besides, Black males can be taught by anyone, just like anyone else. That is not the issue. Black areas struggle against a confluence of negative social measures ranging from job discrimination, housing discrimination, to discrimination in criminal justice that isolate, marginalize, stigmatize, brutalize, and sap the life, dignity, and ultimately self-respect of it's residents, particularly Black males. But, again, history notes this is by design. Once those issues are delt with, you will see that these boys will actually begin to excel despite their hardship...and this is possibly what they are afraid of.
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leftbehind2000
If money = speech, then no speech is free.
01:11 AM on 02/02/2011
I do not disagree with your well reasoned and eloquent assertion at all. I do, indeed, believe that good teachers can reach students of any color, gender, etc. And that children can learn, be they Black or White. The point of my post was primarily to chide Spike Lee for casting his lot with the likes of Arne Duncan. The politics of education, as personified by Duncan and championed by "Waiting for Superman" fails to recognize or explose the inherent discrimination in an economic model that provides an excess funding to public schools that don't need it, while denying schools in less affluent neighborhoods that are again required to cut staff and delay drastically needed building maintenance due to forced spending cuts. I truly believe that this willful mismanagement of education funding is another prime example of marginalization by design, and will not change until people with a voice, like Spike Lee, stop drinking the Waiting for Superman punch and start speaking up for these abandoned communities and their dilapidated schools.
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08:29 PM on 02/02/2011
REALLY???

Children learn about themselves and the world around them within the context of culture (Northeast and Islands Regional Educationa­l Laboratory at Brown University­, 2002). Students from minority cultures may feel pressured to disavow themselves of their cultural beliefs and norms in order to assimilate into the majority culture. This, however, can interfere with their emotional and cognitive developmen­t and result in school failure (Sheets, 1999).

When I moved to a mostly white and asian school district in the 90's, there were no African American teachers (suburb of LA). THEY ARE NOT ALLOWING OTHERS TO TEACH THEIR CHILDREN.
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mike dougles
06:35 PM on 02/01/2011
I would say to black males go to college, look at the numbers in each group it is sad how few black male go to college compared to white males and asian males.

Black women go at a much higher rate then black males it is scary we are losing a gereration of black males.

Males in all groups are not going like women but black males are by for the worst.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
10:49 AM on 02/02/2011
black men are conditioned and profiled to be penal institution fodder for funding in our culture. we should not be surprised the the man is recruiting brothers for a profession that is making its most crucial experts scapegoats for all that ails society--and pretending it is a call to honorale service no less.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
01:32 PM on 02/02/2011
Bank shot!

Black men shouldn't go into teaching because that will help Arne Duncan.
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colred
07:39 PM on 02/02/2011
Black women go at a higher rate partly because it usually pays off for them. For black men, it is iffy. They still face silent discrimination in the work force.
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mike dougles
07:48 PM on 02/02/2011
True I am sure dropping out of High School at a rate higher then an other group is a much better way to be a succes late in life.
06:13 PM on 02/01/2011
While I believe more African American teachers would be great, the reality is that we need more qualified teachers. In addition, we need to spend more money paying teachers. Still our government chooses to spend more on defense..which is baffling to me. Soon enough we will be defended one of the most under educated places in the world!
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SOD
As kind as possible and as unkind as necessary.
10:33 AM on 02/02/2011
The only way in which I would consider teachers underpaid is if they didn't have such amazing benefits.

I'm in IT and earn a bit more than an average teacher's salary in my area, but I have to INVEST in my retirement.
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colred
07:42 PM on 02/02/2011
I'm a teacher and I pay for my retirement. In addition, I invest. My benefits are less than many others in the area and now, after nearly 30 years working on one assumption for my retirement, they want to cut it. So I invested at the right rate given the assumptions, but not given the new ones.
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11:54 AM on 02/03/2011
Qualified for whom? And, Qualified for what? Many white teachers assigned to work in the "Hood" have never had any experience with Black and Brown children, other than what they see on the news. They grew up in white suburban areas and attended predominately white universities.............some of them don't even speak to the African Am teachers on staff..........and they are teaching Af Am children. Need to pay rent, car note, and school loans (need to earn a living) is what this $HIT IS ALL ABOUT! These TFA temporary teachers need to learn more about the history and culture of Af Am people and Hispanic culture (study their cultures for at least 5 years) then apply for the job. These are the qulifications I would like to see. Why is it whites don't allow other groups to teach their children at the same rate that they expect to teach others (superiority complex).