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“The Struggle to be an All-American Girl” by: Elizabeth Wong

“The Struggle to be an All-American Girl” by: Elizabeth Wong. English I ECHS C. Edge. Vocabulary. indifferently; calmly stoically show respect by kneeling and touching the ground with the forehead kowtow written symbols representing objects or ideas ideographs

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“The Struggle to be an All-American Girl” by: Elizabeth Wong

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  1. “The Struggle to be an All-American Girl”by: Elizabeth Wong English I ECHS C. Edge

  2. Vocabulary • indifferently; calmly • stoically • show respect by kneeling and touching the ground with the forehead • kowtow • written symbols representing objects or ideas • ideographs • completely confused in total disorder • chaotic

  3. practices that are handed down from the past by tradition • Heritage • impelled by physical force especially against resistance • Forcible • recite with musical intonation;utter monotonously and repetitively and rhythmically • Chant

  4. characterized by extreme care and great effort • Painstaking • separate , part • Disassociate • excessively enthusiastic or unreasonable • Fanatical • make someone extremely angry • Infuriate, frenzy

  5. with strength and soundness • Solidly • boldly resisting authority or an opposing force • Defiant • the main good female character in a work of fiction • Heroine • shout louder than • Outshout

  6. a small number or amount • Smattering • force a person or an animal into a position from which he cannot escape • Corner • a sudden muscle spasm • Twitching • wildly disordered • maniacal , maniac(TEM8)

  7. a highly developed state of perfection; having a flawless or impeccable quality • Refinement • miss a step and fall or nearly fall • Trip • to cause to separate and go in different directions • scatter

  8. Literary Elements • audience – who the story is intended to be read or heard by

  9. main idea – the message, opinion, or idea that a writer wants to communicate • What is the main idea of this selection? • The main idea seems to be that her mother wanted her to find value and pride in her native culture and language, but she refused and feels remorse.

  10. supporting details – details that support the main idea of a selection • List two supporting details for the main idea. • She describes the exercise of politeness that the students display to their teachers everyday which lends support that perhaps being polite is a good quality. She also describes her mother’s attempts to speak English and her brother’s unrelenting criticism of their mother’s attempts which later helps to reveal the remorse she most likely feels for their cruelty.

  11. Bias – prejudiced, close-minded. • What bias exists in this story? • The bias that exists is from the view point of the writer. She is Chinese American and reveals the prejudice she felt against her Chinese heritage as a young girl because of her desire to fit in with other Americans. Her denouncement of this decision at the end shows a bias towards Chinese culture as superior after having experienced both.

  12. Objectivity – an unbiased account that relies mainly on facts

  13. Subjectivity – an account that is based on emotions and feelings, not necessarily on factual information • Is this selection more objective or subjective? Why? • This selection is more subjective because it is based on her personal emotions, feelings, and experiences, not on factual information.

  14. memoir – a personal account of a shared event

  15. essay – a writer’s thoughts and feelings about a certain topic

  16. Study GuideSelection Questions#1 • Why do you think the school was newly painted? As the Chinese school is rather old, its outside must have been discolored and dirty. To make it look attractive, the school was newly painted as a kind of face-lift.

  17. 2.What does the existence of the old school imply • The Chinese school is still there, which implies that still there are many Chinese children attending Chinese lessons in the school. Although they live abroad, Chinese parents never forget their own culture and their own language and require that their children learn their mother tongue.

  18. Where does the narrator go with her brother everyday at 5 p.m.? • The narrator and her brother go to the Chinese school on Yale Street.

  19. #2 • How do they feel about having to go? What evidence is there to support your conclusion? • They do not want to go, but “no amount of kicking, screaming, or pleading” (p. 344) could change their mother’s mind.

  20. #3 • What is their purpose for going? • Their mother wants them to go to the school in order to learn the language of their heritage.

  21. #4 • What vision does the narrator have about the principal? • To the narrator, the principal is a stern man who sways back and forth on his heels with his impatient, twitching hands clasped behind his back. She envisions the principal as a maniacal child killer.

  22. #5 • Describe the sensory details used to describe the smell of the auditorium. • The auditorium smells like Chinese medicine, an imported faraway mustiness, ancient mothballs, or dirty closets.

  23. #6 • What scents does the narrator prefer? What does this preference reveal about her? • The narrator favors crisp new scents like soft French perfume that her American teacher wears at the public school. This reveals that she sees her culture as stale and inferior to the superiority of American culture.

  24. #7 • How did the students greet their teachers every day? Why? • The students practice politeness by kowtowing and saying “Sing san ho,” or “How are you, teacher?” whenever the teacher entered the room. This showed great respect.

  25. What else was stressed in the Chinese school besides the emphasis on speaking, reading and writing? • Politeness was also emphasized in the school. The lessons always began with an exercise in politeness. With the entrance of the teacher, the best student would tap a bell and all the children would get up, kowtow, and chant, "Sing san ho, " the phonetic for "How are you, teacher?"

  26. What things did the writer consider to be more important and more useful than learning Chinese? • She considered the following things to be more important and more useful: doing multiplication tables, naming the satellites of Mars, writing reports on Little Women and Black Beauty.

  27. #8 • How does the narrator feel about the Chinese language and her grandmother? • She is embarrassed by her grandmother and the language of her culture. She feels that her grandmother is loud and raunchy and that the language is quick, loud, and unbeautiful.

  28. What do you know about the author's English proficiency? • She spoke English very fast and very well so that she was able to keep up with the world outside Chinatown.

  29. #9 • What does the narrator’s view of her native Chinese culture reveal about her view of American culture? • The narrator seems to view American culture as superior to her Chinese culture. To her, the Chinese culture and language is too common and lacked the beauty and refinement of other languages like French and English.

  30. How was the author's mother's level of English? • She was not able to speak English well. She spoke pidgin English, and she had trouble pronouncing some words, particularly words with the "r" sound.

  31. #10 • What is “pidgin speech”? • Pidgin speech describes when the narrator’s mother tries to speak English, but keeps slipping Chinese words or phrasings into her conversation.

  32. What do you know about the author's brother? • Her brother was even more fanatical about speaking English. He was especially hard on his mother, criticizing her, often cruelly, for her pidgin speech. Sometimes his mother might leave out an occasional "the" or "a", or perhaps a verb of being. He would stop her in mid-sentence: "Say it again, Mom. Say it right." However, when he tripped over his own tongue, he'd blame it on her: "See, Mom, it's all your fault. You set a bad example." Clearly, her brother spoke very good English. He was very strict with his mother when she made grammatical errors.

  33. #11 • Why do you think that their mother wants them to learn the Chinese language and culture? • She wants them to be proud of their heritage and where they come from.

  34. #12 • Explain what the narrator means by a “cultural divorce”? • She was allowed to separate herself from the Chinese culture completely in order to immerse herself in the culture of America.

  35. #13 • Who is the narrator’s audience? • The narrator’s audience seems to be the American people since she wants so desperately to be like Americans throughout the selection and states at the end that “At last, I was one of you; I wasn’t one of them” (p. 346).

  36. #14 • What is implied by the last sentence? • The last line “Sadly, I still am” implies that she ultimately isn’t happy that she divorced her native culture. The word sadly seems to indicate regret that perhaps her chosen culture didn’t turn out to be as superior as she had imagined.

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