Social Justice Project

We were asked the question:
What would you change or add as we build the Social Justice blog for the future?
My answer
Lessen the size of the blog posts because the only people who read them are the people who did the blog (they already know what happened) and the teachers (who hopefully have been told what has happened). But otherwise, I don’t really feel there is much to add, but maybe it can be described a bit more clearly to the children as to what they have to do.

Blog Post

This week my cousins are over from England. They came in late on Saturday and they are leaving during the day on Friday. All week we’ve been visiting Museums and stuff to make their stay fun. Sadly that takes a lot of time away from homework and soccer and any free time so it gets pretty stressful. But I guess it’s really fun to have them over!

My “SYCAMAPQ” poem

Sure You Can Ask Me A Personal Question…
By Konrad Morgan Lehmann

Sure you can ask me a personal question.
Yeah actually I did move here a couple years ago,
Yes, from England and Yes from London.
No I’m not lying I’ve just lost my accent now.

Sure I can go back to my accent from before,
No, I can’t be bothered to say that in an English accent
Don’t ask me again.
Trust me I’m not lying.

Yes I drink tea,
Yes I love cottage pie,
And crumpets, and scones.
But not all English people do,
And no, not lying.

No I don’t like cricket,
And I don’t play rugby.
Yeah I play football,
The real football, that is.
But no, I wouldn’t lie.

Yes I’m an immigrant,
No, not illegal. And actually no one is illegal
Did you mean undocumented?

And yes I’m also German,
Yes I can speak it fluently.
I can’t be bothered to say that in German
No trust me; I’m not lying.

Yes I have family in Germany,
And quite a lot.
No, not I’m not related that man,
He was actually Austrian.
No, I’m not lying.

Yes I like sausage,
Of course I don’t drink beer,
But I couldn’t be bothered to go through this again,
Especially not in German or in an English accent–
And no, I’m not lying.

Inspired by Diane Burns

Photoshop Project

In this project, I have taken the Allianz Arena, the Bayern Münich stadium, and placed many different “things” inside. For example, I have a person tightrope walking over the open roof of the stadium leaning a little back. Then, there are two men walking along the stadium. One of the has been given a Darth Vader mask from star wars with the other looking at him. Then I have Cristiano Ronaldo doing his signature celebration on the empty soccer field. Another addon is Robert Lewandowski doing his signature celebration on the screen at the top right of the photo. The contrast in the piece is how the player and people have been placed into the picture with the right lighting, and the emphasis is how they stand out, especially Ronaldo in the corner in the shadow. Another part of the project is the proportion and balance of how the humans in the picture are the “to scale” size of what they would be in real life. Many of the people are also completing their rhythm and movement throughout the photo, one man is tightrope walking and the other is sliding and walking. The original photo itself has pattern and movement in that it relates to the space around it and the structure itself has many patterns.
Image:

My Artist Statement

Artist Statement
Activism Through Social Media

This monument is dedicated to the activism through social media. I wanted to do something showing the work of people’s voices on twitter, facebook, Instagram ect. due to the fact that they are sometimes overshadowed by the bad, and wrong things that are presented through social media. The monument design I have made are two large cylinders placed on the edge of a street. I wanted to have a piece showing some sort of live feed of activist tweets or posts being sent out at the time. I had the idea of the cylinders because of things I have seen in everyday life. I based these cylinders/poles off of the advertisement poles in Berlin, Germany that are presented in the same way but with advertisement going around it on a round electric board. I wanted it to be in a city like environment to show the multicultural idea of how these posts are designed and monitored in the same way. I originally wanted to have other objects such as the poles, based off of the Berlin advertisements, like a New york subway stop, an English telephone box, a Nigerian mailbox, a Chinese advertisement, and other culturally well known city objects to go around the original piece. This would show the multicultural side of the piece in how everyone affects the social media’s power. This piece is supposed to be easily accessible as it is an ordinary street corner, and I have many small figures placed to look as though they were looking up at the work as the moisture activism tweets go by. This is not a memorial to any passed thing but more a monument to ongoing things, so throughout one’s stay whilst observing the piece nothing is there to mourn anything. I want people to pay attention to the work and just read what they see.

Africans In NY: Creative Assignment

Africans In NY: Creative Assignment:
You Can Call Me Groot

In this assignment, we all received a small bit of information on an enslaved African and then wrote around those small pieces of info to create a biography. While doing this assignment, I learned how to weave in small but real pieces of some facts into a self-made story. I learned that I really like to write about true facts mixed into some fiction or just educational thinking. I also liked having to think about where they might be from and how they got to where they are at the end. I really liked the process of this assignment and I hope we get more like this or maybe the Day In The Life piece that we did in the first trimester of seventh grade.

Konrad’s Crucible Essay

In this essay, I wrote about the connection of vengeance and scapegoating throughout history. The aim of this assignment was to write an essay connecting the Crucible era, the McCarthy era, and current events with a theme. In The Crucible we talked about the Salem Witch Trials and the day to day social life. During the writing of this essay, I learned what a strong impact the Red Scare and the accusations that followed had and how they shaped not only America, but also most of the world. After I turned this essay in I noticed some mistakes I had missed. These mistakes just seemed to be very simple mistakes like spacing and some tense problems. I soon corrected these and realized how I should always double check or even triple check. In future essays or even just some other assignments I will always try my best to go over everything and keep in mind little things like tense problems or capitalization.

Name: Konrad

Humanities
7th Grade
The Crucible

How Vengeance and Scapegoating Have Affected History Until Today
By Konrad Morgan Lehmann

People have used notably cruel tactics to get out of trouble, but one of the most used tactic is scapegoating. Scapegoating is the center of excuses not only today but also in the past people have blamed everyone. From their closest friends to their most hated enemies for things they have done wrong. A scapegoat is a person that is blamed for the failures of others, “A person who is blamed for the wrongdoings, mistakes, or faults of others, especially for reasons of expediency,” (Oxford dictionaries). Gaining power through scapegoating and vengeance happens a lot, and miraculously works most of the time. Through this people have also obtained influence and risen to power in communities and cities. Many people gain authority through vengeance and scapegoating. They would find their weak enemy and then blame them for the things others had done.

In The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, many people are being accused of witchcraft. This leads to many people trying to defend themselves, and a number of them turn to scapegoating. Scapegoating and vengeance play a significant role in The Crucible, and many of the people simply blamed those they did not like. This way they would not be accused themselves, and if everything went their way, the person they didn’t like would be hanged. Abigail Williams did exactly this, blaming Elizabeth Proctor for being a witch, by doing such she hoped to get Elisabeth killed, who is a person she strongly disliked due to the fact that Elisabeth suspected her to be sleeping with her husband. “ABIGAIL: ‘I saw Sarah Good with the Devil! I saw Goody Osburn with the Devil! I saw Bridget Bishop with the Devil!’” (Miller p. 65). The quote shows how Abigail Williams realizes that she, herself has been accused of being a witch and is trying to take pressure of her own accusation by blaming others. She has seen what troubles Tituba, the accused witch, has escaped from by simply scapegoating, and is using this very same tactic to defend herself from Reverend Hale, the reverend of a nearby town’s, attacks on her. She thought by doing this, people will think she is in the same situation as Tituba and is being forced to work for the Devil. By doing this, she is scapegoating others to help herself, but she is also getting vengeance on people like Proctor’s wife for throwing her out. Scapegoating was not only used to defend oneself, it was also used to rise up in the ranks of authority. This is something used even in the twentieth century.

During the 1950s people were extremely concerned about being accused of being a communist. Many people were wrongfully accused and wanted to redirect the pressure towards people they actually thought were communists. Every population has people they dislike, and in this time of fear, most of the citizens of the US wanted peace, and scapegoating was a way to diminish some of that anxiety. They would pick on someone they already didn’t like and blame them to divert oneself from the accusations leveled at them. The same went for Joseph McCarthy who scapegoated members of the cultural sphere. Joseph McCarthy: “I have here in my hand a list of 205 men that were known to the Secretary of State as being members of the Communist party and who, nevertheless, are still working and shaping the policy of the State Department.” (West Virginia, Senator Joseph McCarthy 1950). In this speech Mr. McCarthy gave, he scapegoated members of government that he thought should not be in their positions because they are members of the communist party. He thinks if he puts the pressure on them, it will relieve the strain from the other important matters he has to attend. This means, if he can complete his original goal, to eradicate communism in America, people will respect him. This type of activity carried on throughout history and people are still being falsely accused today.

Throughout history people have reached power in many divergent and extreme ways. Not only do people scapegoat their way into power, but once they have achieved their desired position, they start to take revenge on those who were against them previously, and to help those who supported them before. Donald J Trump has shown how he uses this tactic to his advantage, which left more than half of America and part of the world wondering if he is really an appropriate person for the position of president. “My motto is: Always get even,” he wrote. “When somebody screws you, screw them back in spades.” (http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/10/donald-trump-obsessed-with-revenge). In this quote, Donald Trump clearly gives an example of how he gets revenge on all those who have stood in his way. Trump states that he thinks everyone should get revenge on their past enemies. Does this mean, as president, he feels he should get revenge on all those who have done something bad to America? Though these are very complex matters, in the end it all reflects back to scapegoating and the way people use it.

Scapegoating has not only been around in incidences like getting out of small blames by people you know, but it has even occurred in even more severe times like elections and political issues. Throughout history scapegoating has had a major impact on people and their lives. Not only adults but also children and the communities around them have been affected by these accusations. Even schools and nurseries like LREI have been targeted, “‘How Red Is the Little Red Schoolhouse?’ asked a 1950 booklet. To the National Council for American Education, the publishers of this pamphlet, the answer was obvious—the American public school system was being subverted by communists and their sympathizers,“ (Douglas T. Miller & Marion Nowak, The Fifties: The Way We Really Were, NY 1977 page 248-249). All these factors show how paranoid people were, not only in the McCarthy era but in all other historic moments. How would you feel if you knew your elected leader or even closest friend, cheated their way to power just to avoid blame? What does it feel like to know that maybe some of the people you look up to, are different from who they represented themselves to be?

Mathematical Similarity Summary

True Or False?

Q1: Any two rectangles are similar…
That is not always true, some rectangles could be 3 by 5 and the other is 6 by 7. The second one would have to be 6 by 10, then they have a scale factor.
Q2: Any two equilaterals are similar…
This is true because they will always have a scale factor from one to another. This is because all sides are the same length.