Have you ever faced a turning point or a life-changing experience that impacted society? A turning point can be described as a life-changing event that teaches someone about themselves or the world around him/her. People who endure a life-changing event respond positively or negatively. The autobiography “I Never Had It Made”, by Jackie Robinson, the memoir “Warriors Don’t Cry”, from Melba Pattillo Beals, and the article “The Father of Chinese Aviation”, by Rebecca Maksel, each of the individuals faced turning points. Jackie Robinson, Melba Pattillo Beals, and Feng Ru faced life-changing experiences that altered both their lives and their countries. Jackie Robinson was chosen to integrate Major League baseball during a time in history …show more content…
Like Jackie Robinson, Melba Patillo Beals broke the color barrier by attending an all white-school. A life-changing experience that Beals faced was being the first African American to attend an all white-school. According to the text in paragraph 28, it stated, “We stepped up the front door of Central High School.” This means that Beals was walking in front of an all white school. The events challenged Beals because a lot of soldiers were forbidding the Beals from Central High. In paragraph 15, the paragraph states,” ...They surrounded us like a protective cocoon.” This reveals that the soldiers were forbidding them. These events caused her to grow and develop by making herself more confident. In paragraph 16, the text states,” If these guys just go with us this first time, everything’s going to be ok.” This means she was confident that everything was going to be ok.” These events changed Beals society since she was the first black person to attend Central High, now other blacks can attend Central High too. This is how Melba Pattillo Beals broke the color barrier. Like Jackie Robinson and Melba Pattillo Beals, Feng Ru is also one of the first. Feng Ru was the first Chinese Aviator in China and the U.S. The life-changing experience that Feng Ru faced was being the first Chinese Aviator in China and America. In paragraph 13, the text states,”...the words, “Chinese Aviation Pioneer” were engraved upon Feng’s tombstone.”
Ruby Bridges was the first black child to attend an all white school in the biography there are many evidence that explains how and why Ruby was heroic. In the text it illustrates “I remember climbing into the back seat of the marshal's car with my mother,but I don’t remember feeling frightened”. Ruby Bridges was heroic because she wasn’t afraid to go to all white school. We can connect her examples into the real word to the kids who get scared when they go to unfamiliar places. Ruby’s biography taught us to be confident and
veryone in this world has a turning point, big or small. But three people named Jackie Robinson, Feng Ru, and Melba Beals all had life changing experiences that changed their whole country.Jackie Robinson from the autobiography I Never Had It Made was the first black in the major leagues, while Melba Pattillo Beals from the book Warriors Don’t Cry was one of the first African-Americans to go to an all-white high school. Feng Ru from the biography by Rebecca Maksel “The Father Of Chinese Aviation” was the one who elevated the field aviation. These people put a lot of things to risks like their family, friends, house, and even their lives, but was determined to do it, and in doing so, changed our country.
“Jackie Robinson is perhaps the most historically significant baseball player ever, ranking with Babe Ruth in terms of his impact on the national pastime. Ruth changed the way baseball was played; Jackie Robinson changed the way Americans thought. When Robinson took the field for the Brooklyn Dodgers on April 15, 1947, more than sixty years of racial segregation in major-league baseball came to an end. He was the first acknowledged black player to perform in the Major Leagues in the twentieth century and went on to be the first to win a batting title, the first to win the Most Valuable Player award, and the first to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. He won major-league baseball's first official Rookie of the Year award and was the first baseball player, black or white, to be featured on a United States postage stamp”(swaine,
“For example, Ruby Bridges an African American at the age of six went to a white school, the first African American to go to a white school.” Ruby was on the Oprah show and in a magazine named The Problem We All Live With(“Ruby Bridges”). After Ruby went through white school she became a civil rights activist to help problems like Ruby went through(“Ruby Bridges”). As a result ruby has changed the world and risen to fame and is admired by not only African American people but white people too.
“The way I figured it, I was even with baseball and baseball with me. The game had done much for me, and I had done much for it.” This influential quote was expressed by the late great Jackie Robinson. The man who broke the color barrier. An eminent man, Jackie displayed his true potential in baseball by excelling at the second base position. Jackie played in the Negro Leagues before debuting in the Major Leagues to play for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Over a century before this prominent event blacks and whites could play baseball together. Teams were brought about in several different ways. Nearly a century later, baseball became segregated. Blacks were forced to form their own leagues to continue to perform their passion of baseball. The
faced turning points, Jackie Robinson, Melba Pattillo Beals, and Feng Ru all faced life-changing experiences that changed both their lives and their country.
4) How would you relate “the law of the few” to a transition management team?
Jules Tygiel, a sports historian and author once said, “Upon Robinson’s husky, inexperienced shoulders rested the fate of desegregation in baseball”(Tygiel 4). Jackie Robinson was not just the first black man to play in the MLB. Jackie Robinson opened up the door for all black baseball players, and athletes of all different sports. America needed a black man to show them that it was okay for blacks and whites to be together, to play baseball together. Jackie did exactly that. Although Jackie loved the professional baseball, professional baseball did not always love him. Jackie and the MLB did not always go well. Many teams didn’t like a negro sharing a field with them, in fact, the St. Louis Cardinals even went on strike for a short time(“Jackie Robinson”). Jackie’s presence made some teams forfeit games. However, the Dodgers did not care, they were just trying to win baseball games. Jackie knew when he came into the league it was going to be a struggle. He knew it was going to be hard, not only to help the Dodgers win games, but to stay level headed and not let off-field distractions affect his game. Jackie was once quoted saying “I think I am the right man for the test. There is no possible chance that I will flunk it or quit before the end for any other reason other than that I am not a good enough ballplayer.”(“Jackie Robinson”) It was going to take a special man to break the color barrier, and Jackie knew
Growing up as an African American during a time of discrimination and segregation in the United States took a lot of bravery. Blacks who grew up during this era were constantly pushed around, patiently awaiting the day they could use the same bathroom as a White man. One of the first men to help break this barrier is Jackie Robinson. Unlike the great MLK, Robinson was able to fight for change with something other than his words; he broke down segregation in America with a bat and a glove.
This showed that segregation was slowly fading. One of the most important systems in society is the education system. So when this changed so did many other things. African Americans were given more opportunities for jobs and careers. This gave them the chance to become just as important or “big” as white people. “Negroes do not wish to be branded as inferiors by being segregated, and they want to walk the earth as human beings with dignity” (The Atlantic). The process of integration has started to bring equality and is closer to making it so that the black man is not looked down upon by the white
What is a turning point in life? And how does it change and impact on others’ lives? A turning point can be described as a dramatic change in life that might change someone’s life forever by letting them face a life-changing event. In the autobiography “I Never Had It Made” by Jackie Robinson, the memoir “Warriors Don’t Cry” by Melba Pattillo Beals, and the article “The Father of Chinese Aviation” by Rebecca Maksel, the people introduced in the stories all faced turning points in their lives that had impacted on them greatly. In all these three pieces of text, the people introduced in the stories had fought through racial tension and worked hard in order to accomplish their success and faced the life-changing experiences in their lives. They not only impacted on themselves, but also on their country and society.
In Spite of the devastating history of segregation in the United States. A lot has changed in the past fifty years since segregation ended. The United States shifted from arresting African Americans for using “white only” facilities to integrated schools all over the country. Influential individuals such as Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr helped pave the way for African Americans to live as equals to along with their white counterparts in the United States of America.
Starting her second education, she was forced to drop out to care for her ailing grandmother. With Jim Crow’s Law, heavily in affect, her childhood was greatly influenced by the segregation between white people and black people in almost every part of their lives.
In the book Warriors Don't Cry by Melba Pattillo Beals, the author describes what her reactions and feelings are to the racial hatred and discrimination she and eight other African-American teenagers received in Little Rock, Arkansas during the desegregation period in 1957. She tells the story of the nine students from the time she turned sixteen years old and began keeping a diary until her final days at Central High School in Little Rock. The story begins by Melba talking about the anger, hatred, and sadness that is brought up upon her first return to Central High for a reunion with her eight other classmates. As she walks through the halls and rooms of the old school, she recalls the
gorgeous and from the moment I set my eyes on her I fell in love with