blue collar brilliance essay

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    article “Blue-Collar Brilliance” that working-class citizens have often been overlooked in terms of intelligence, but that they hold a great deal of skills and ideas they gain from their respective lines of work. Rose describes several jobs considered to be clue-collar and evaluates and describes the intelligence that is required and also how they apply it. Rose assesses each job and explains to readers why each job holds a level of cognitive sense. Though it is commonly thought that blue collar workers

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    In his essay, “Blue Collar Brilliance” Mike Rose claims that “competence was synonymous with physical work.” He addressed this subject because working class citizens were often looked down on for not having a college education. His mother was a waitress at a busy restaurant and from a young age he and his father often watched her at work. He learned his mother had the ability to multitask, manage her time at work and also observe the psychological needs of the people she both worked for and with

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    Define Smart In the essay “Blue Collar Brilliance” written by Mike Rose, he discusses the meaning of these blue collar jobs, and how they are viewed by himself, as well as by society. He recalls memories from his childhood, watching his mother, a waitress, call out abbreviations while hustling around the restaurant to fulfill her duties. He recognized even at a young age that she had a long list of responsibilities, in addition to the requirement of pleasant customer service. He recalls that by the

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    In the essay “Blue Collar Brilliance” written by Mike Rose, he ponders the meaning of these blue collar jobs, how he views them, as well as how they are viewed by society. Rose recalls memories from his childhood, observing his mother, a waitress, call out abbreviations while hustling around the restaurant to fulfill her duties. In addition at a young age he could recognize that she had a seemingly endless list of responsibilities, along with the requirement of pleasant customer service. By the end

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    Alexa DeJean Danielle Leubbe English 1020 8 March 2015 Intelligence in Blue-Collar Jobs In his essay titled “Blue Collar Brilliance”, Professor Mike Rose reports on society’s narrow-minded views on the intellectual resources of people performing jobs that entail manual or service labor. Rose criticizes that stories about blue-collar workers generally miss the focus on the intellectual demand their jobs require. Rose proclaims that the type of work a person does or belonging to a certain social class

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    Author of “Blue-Collar Brilliance,” Mike Rose, writes about observing his mother and uncle working while he is a child. His mother, a waitress, and his uncle, a foreman, both have a career considered “blue-collar.” In the magazine Newsweek, Bob Muldoon writes “White-Collar Man in a Blue-Collar World,” and explains his journey from a white-collar to a blue-collar job. Throughout the essay, while defending against the assumptions of blue-collar employees, the authors discuss the importance of blue-collar

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    The story “Blue-Collar Brilliance” by Mike Rose, was originally published in the American Scholar, in 2009. Rose is an American education scholar and was born in 1944. Rose has written several articles on literacy matters. He studied the struggle of the working-class America. Throughout the article, Rose used personal stories to persuade the reader blue-collar workers are very intelligent despite having a formal education. Rose’s agenda could be compared to that of Aristotle regarding their similar

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    authors employ the use of rhetorical analysis to articulate their main points and ideas. Mike Rose’s essay, “Blue Collar Brilliance,” focuses on the fact that looking down on blue-collar workers is a common occurrence in America and people fail to understand how a person can be intelligent if they had dropped out of school. Throughout the essay, he refutes this notion and explains why blue-collar intelligence may be different from the intelligence gained by years of schooling but it is of the equal stature

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    discussed in Gerald Graff’s “Hidden Intellectualism” and Mike Rose’s “Blue-Collar Brilliance”. These people are known as blue collar workers.Although, white collar jobs require a degree and intelligence blue collar workers are just as if not more intelligent than white collar workers because they are street smart rather than book smart , have more experience, and have good social skills. For starters it is known that most blue collar jobs do not require any sort of college degree. For example a construction

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    Mike Rose describes his personal childhood observations about his mother and uncle in his essay titled "Blue collar Brilliance". Rosie, the authors ' mother, was a waitress in several coffee shops and family restaurants over the span of Rose 's childhood. Joe Meraglio is Roses ' uncle who worked over a thirty-three year career at General Motors after being in the Navy and working on the railroad. Neither Joe, nor Rosie had a formal education. Rose describes his childhood as years of sitting in the

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