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The Obama Effect

by Toni Coleman , November 27, 2008

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My immediate reaction to U.S. Sen. Barack Obama’s election as the 44th president of the United States was to promptly follow his admonition — turn off the television and read with my daughter.

Make no mistake, this is a child whose idea of fun is solving math problems. However, while I watched Obama’s historic election unfold, I felt my dreams for her didn’t soar as high as they could, that I should be doing more. The Disney Channel had to go.

President-elect Obama’s message should strike a chord with anyone concerned about their future and our country’s future as a world leader. The government can do many things, more for sure, to help increase the chances of today’s young people becoming tomorrow’s great leaders. Improve financial aid and student loan programs, for example. We, as individuals, have to do more too – starting with the television and reading.

For now, the stage is set for parents, teachers, mentors and other volunteers to step it up and help minority children benefit from the inspiration generated by the election of the nation’s first Black president.

Obama’s election “will fill [Black children] with pride. There’s an enormous psychological effect,” says Dr. Alvin F. Poussaint, director of the Media Center of the Judge Baker Children’s Center in Boston and a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.

“If you wake up in the morning, you’re a two-year-old kid, the president is on TV and the president is a Black man, it begins to shape their image of the world and the image inside of what they think they can accomplish, and increases their own feelings of worth. ‘I am somebody. The president, this man, is running the country. I can run something. I can be in charge. I can get good grades.’ That will be an ingredient of their psyche.”

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