Karina Ramsey
Dr. Carrie Hall
English 1121
April 30, 2019
Not as Seen on TV
Coming from a small island into this big country with so many moving parts it was very intimidating; not to mention attending school in America for the first time. School, where I come from, is very religious and really strict. We had our own stuff that made it fun. However, when I watched TV as a kid, school is America just seemed like so much fun. So, itâs my first day of school in America, and I was super excited but nervous as well. I walked in not knowing that uniform was required because on TV they never wore uniforms. I met my teacher and he was kind and welcoming. To my surprise he was also from the Caribbean, but he spoke âproperâ. I walked into the classroom, and the first thing I said to myself, in my head was, âthis doesnât look like what was on tv.â
The kids on TV had lockers, cool book bags, didnât wear a uniform, they seemed very free-spirited, the food in the cafeteria looked good, they had classes like music and dance, and it just didnât look like school was a lot of work in America. However, in reality, the students looked bored, everyone was wearing uniforms, and the teacher was actually teaching. The food was terrible, there were no lockers, we were locked in a building like we were in a prison. Even the windows had bars. One thing I liked about my school in the islands was the fact it was near to a beach, so I would sit in my classroom with the windows open and feeling the gentle breeze passing seamlessly through my hair. I didnât expect a school in America to be such a rip off from what I saw on tv, or maybe thatâs just schools in Brooklyn.
I took my seat next to the radiator with my back facing the window and sitting next to me was a young lady by the name of Khadijah. Khadijah was very welcoming. She instantly said hi to me and told me what topic we were on. What stood out to me the most was when ask me what my name was. I was surprised because I had a preconceived notion that everyone was going to be mean, you know, because Iâm the âNew Kidâ. Oh, and did I mention she was black. Iâve always thought that I would be in a classroom with a bunch of white kids but, to my surprise, my class was predominately black. For some reason my nerves calmed because everyone looked like me. Darker skin tone, kinky hair, and almost everyone was in uniform.
The teacher got in front of the class and began to teach math, my favorite subject by the way, and then he asked a question. Me, being me and knowing the answer to the question, I raised my hand with no hesitation. He called on me, and I answered. Instantly I felt different. It wasnât because my answer was wrong. It was because it didnât dawn on me that I was different from everyone else until I spoke and didnât sound like my fellow classmates. I didnât have an American accent. Then I felt the eyes. Almost all the students in the classroom were looking at me. I felt out of place like I didnât belong. I looked like everyone else, we were all blackâŚ. but yet a bit different.
My brother also started school that same day as me but was put in a higher grade. His experience was very different from mine. That afternoon when we were talking about how our first day went, I noticed that the way he spoke changed. His dialect was different. He started to sound and speak like my fellow students and my teacher. Me being me I said to him âwha you talking in style for.â I said this because to me home was our safe haven, where we all spoke the same way, and I didnât have to be the orange chip is a bag full of yellow chips, because at home we were all orange chips. However, it seemed like I was the only one having a hard time adjusting. To my entire family, I just needed to start speaking âproper.â
My family, who mostly speaks the same exact way as I do, is telling me that I need to talk âproper.â I knew what they meant by proper, they wanted me to speak like my American peers. I didnât need to look like the kids on TV, but more so sound and speak like them. âProperâ to my family is speaking English with correct grammar and change of accent. Granted my grammar was horrible and to this day still needs improvement, hearing them use the word proper didnât sit right with me. It didnât because to me, they were implying that the way I spoke wasnât right and that wasnât ok. It made me feel like they forgot that in our home country mostly everyone spoke this way. At this point in was wondering to myself âshould I stop being who I am?â
I am a person who takes the time to think about what people say and take it into consideration. The issue was that, I wasnât purposely speaking with my accent, I just couldnât turn it off and switch to talking like an American, like I guess my brother could do. I literally couldnât because I genuinely tried to. I tried because I didnât want to feel out of place in a place where I would be spending a lot of my time. Then I meet the librarian at my school. When I met her and started speaking the first thing she told me was that she loved my accent. That was something I have never heard before, and I didnât know if I should say thank you or not. She went on to say, âyou should never lose your accent, it makes you very unique.â After she said that to me, I went home and thought to myself, âsheâs right, I should be proud of my accent. No one else in this place speaks like me.â
Over the years I have come to embrace my accent, and I love the way it comes out when Iâm happy, sad, or mad. My education was never flawed because of the way I speak so, I will continue speaking with my accent, but in a professional setting I will speak âproper.â As a kid, watching TV and admiring how awesome school in American would be, I was naive to the differences that set me apart for those kids on TV. It did not help that TV shows didnât do a good job of promoting diversity. It should have showed that students who donât look alike and donât speak the same way coexist. Especially in a school setting.