The book The Other Wes Moore show you can live with nothing, live with no father and in a run down neighborhood, run the street with your crew, and stop going to school and be a dropout selling drug and still change and be the better of who you. Wes Moore (1) was sent to going to military school by his mother for try to be a drop out and trying to do nothing with his life. Wes Moore (2) didn’t have the support he need to change his life for the better of who he is. His Mother was to busy to be there for Wes to see he was struggling with school and going down the wrong path and the path he choose to go down was to follow his brother Tony. Tony was selling drug so Wes Moore want to be like his brother but from that he lost his brother bc Tony
In chapter 8, the final chapter in The Other Wes Moore by Wes Moore both of the boy's lives are now dramatically different. Wes the author is finishing up school and has an internship with the mayor. The mayor encouraged Wes to apply for the Rhodes Scholarship, which he was awarded. He had also decided to study abroad in Africa. Wes stayed in a small village where the houses were shack like.
Carol Dweck’s Brainology sets forth the “growth mindset” as the only factor in a student’s success. However, Alfie Kohn’s The Perils of ‘Growth Mindset’ Education: Why We’re Trying to Fix our Kids When We Should Be Fixing the System, proposes another view. Also, Home Life is a third factor that impacts a student’s success. I believe all three of these are integral to a student’s accomplishments.
Both Weses had several circumstances in common that happened early on in their lives. Moore narrates that he lost his father at a young age due to a medical misdiagnosis. The author says that with the loss of his father, his family had to move to the Bronx to live with his grandparents. The author Wes was the second of three children, and with the absence of his father, his mother Joy had to work multiple jobs to send him and his siblings to school. Moore adds that he was enrolled in a private school but skipped his classes often and was put on academic probation. On the other hand, the
Over time, Moore became a product of the system by being raised in a single-parent household while “he had never met his father” (Moore 16) and his mother “was left with two alcoholic, abusive men who shared the DNA of her two children but no husband or dad for her boys” (Moore 17). Moore was raised in the best way possible that his mother knew how to raise him, however it didn’t cut it. Mary, Moore’s mother, was an extremely hard worker and was working long hours to support her family but that meant she was not around to parent Wes as much as she should’ve. With Moore’s lack of a father figure, his brother Tony steps in to help guide him because “he felt his brother’s life could be saved” (Moore 27) and Tony wanted Wes to try and escape the cycle of systematic oppression within their environment. The domestic aspect of Moore’s environment strongly influenced the decisions he made on a day to day basis because his home life was non-existent and there was a severe lack of parenting. In the end, Moore became a product of how he was raised and the troubles that existed within his household because of Tony’s confusing messages of staying out of trouble and doing the right thing while he goes and sells drugs, his mother’s lack of attention to Wes, and the lack of a father figure that would guide him in a better direction. These aspects of his home environment add up to the end result of Moore’s life and the tragedy that Tony pushed for him to stay away
The author Wes Moore went off to military school where negative environmental influences were cut off and he was able to receive an education, which he himself considers a turning point in his life. His entire atmosphere and the dynamics of the schools he was accustomed to were altered. Although he attempted to run away several times, there was a point after speaking with his mother that he made the decision to stop running and embrace the experience and it helped make him the person he is today. The imprisoned Moore dropped out of school and like the overwhelming majority of African American male drop outs, ended up in the system. While the imprisoned Wes may have not had access to private or military schools, he could have finished school and decided to make an honest living. Later in his life he did decided to earn a GED and learn a trade, but he didn’t make the decision to dedicate himself to turning his life around and as soon as things got difficult turned back to what he knew instead of taking path toward something more positive. He gained mentors working under Mayor Kurt Schmoke of Baltimore, and a friend in his former Captain, Ty Hill at the military school. His decision to pursue a life full of criminal activity was his alone.
In Wes Moore’s 2010 book “The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates,” two men with the same name, born blocks apart who are raised in an identical poverty and drug plagued neighborhood are examined. What author Wes Moore discovers in his conversations with inmate Wes Moore, is that their lives were remarkably similar growing up. Given their current situations in life, their paths to get there take shape through a series of interchangeable decisions and life events. One Wes through mentorship in decision-making ends up a Rhodes Scholar and decorated war veteran, while the other Wes minus the mentoring ends up in prison serving a life sentence. The age-old cry, “It takes a village,” resonates in Moore’s examination of his mirrored upbringing.
Humans have come to a conclusion that all lives are different, but all go through many hardships and tragedies. The impact from a slight difference can vary to be very huge to very small, such a slight difference however, can change a person’s life as a whole. In the book, The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates by Wes Moore there is a difference that can be identified between the author’s life and that of the other Wes. This difference though, can be very critical and is ultimately able to lead to a path of triumph or failure for an individual. The lack of involvement a mother has for their child can fundamentally deprive them from succeeding, and parent involvement has the opportunity to play a huge role in college success by giving
he perspective presented in the book "The Other Wes Moore" was economic injustice. Both Wes Moores were somewhat poor. They both didn't live in the nicest homes and couldn't afford the nicest things. This particularly affected Wes when him, Mary, and Tony moved schools to go to a much nicer one, where kids had much nicer things. Wes' old school had a 70% drop out rate, Tony being part of that percentage. Wes saw some headphones he really liked one day. He asked the boy how he got them and the boy introduced Wes to the drug game. Selling drugs offered a way for Wes to afford the luxuries his family couldn't afford, like headphones and new nikes. Wes' poverty lead him to sell drugs and later lead him to murders and robberies. The other Wes Moore's
Humans have come to a conclusion that all lives are different, but all go through many hardships and tragedies. The impact from a slight difference can vary to be very vast to very small, such a slight difference, however, can change a person’s life as a whole. In the book, The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates by Wes Moore there is a difference that can be identified between the author’s life and that of the other Wes. This difference, though can be very critical and is ultimately able to lead to a path of triumph or failure for an individual. The lack of involvement a mother has for their child can fundamentally deprive them from succeeding, and parent involvement has the opportunity to
While Wes Moore was able to change his situation and begin to make better decisions, the other Wes Moore was never able to accomplish such task. During one of their conversations, the incarcerated Wes said, "From everything you told me, both of us did some pretty wrong stuff when we were younger. And both of us had second chances. But if the situation or the context where you make the decisions don't change, then second chances don't mean much, huh?" (66). In the same conversation, about ¼ of the way into the book Moore realized an important aspect in life, "I sat back, allowing Wes's words to sink in. Then I responded, 'I guess it's hard sometimes to distinguish between second chances and last chances.'" (Moore 67).
“The chilling truth is that his story could have been mine. The tragedy is that my story could have been his.” In the story The Other Wes Moore there is two men named Wes Moore, they both grew up during the same time and lived just a couple blocks away from one another. The book talks about both Wes Moores one being in prison the other being a writer. The environment in which they lived could have change the path each boy took, also the relationships each boy had. Anyone can end up in each position but its is all based on how they handled the situation given at hand. I think the quote means that he could have easily been in his shoes facing prison charges as he could have been reading it in the news paper. When the writer found out that they
At a different point in each of our lives, we understand the benefit of family and friend systems. Kids begin playing the sports their parents suggested; they wear the same style of clothing as their siblings, or continue their academics in hopes of pleasing their relatives. In the book The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates, the author Wes Moore examines his life in comparison to another boy raised in the same conditions with the same name in similar Baltimore neighborhoods. The author grew up to be a Rhodes Scholar, decorated veteran, White House Fellow and business leader while the other Wes Moore became a convicted murderer and is now serving a life sentence in prison. While most ponder what the true cause for the difference in these two men’s life, I believe the primary reason was a lack of a strong family support system.
“The Other Wes Moore” an amazing book, and worth reading. This book tells a story of a young boy born and grown up on the streets of West Baltimore. Threw his bad decisions, he is lead down a bad road which ends him up in prison, at a young age of 23 years old. What was the cause of Wes's actions? Was it his absent father that had nothing to do with Wes's life?
In the book, The Other Wes Moore, the author, Wes Moore talks about his connection to family and how strongly they have impacted his life. Also, the other Wes Moore talks about his connection to his family and how his actions strongly reflect the actions of his older brother. In the book the author Wes Moore shares his own life story and the story of the other Wes Moore. Growing up the author Wes was very close to his family. His father died at a young age and he lived with his mother and older sister, Nikki, who had a different father. Nikki’s father and their mother had a very toxic abusive, relationship that their mom luckily got away from but parts of the relationship still affected her. One day Wes and Nikki got in a small argument and
In the chapter 7 and 8 of the book “ The Other Wes Moore” written by Wes Moore, they are mainly about how both of them had chose their path the end of the story and how it fulfilled to their expectations. It was such a tragic ending to the other Wes as he ended his life in prison. Others would probably feel that he deserved the penalty, but not me. I am not saying that I supported his action that led his life to a dark path. It is just that I found him unfortunate for being born in such place.