Social privilege, when certain races or groups attain rights or advantages over other groups. There are small privileges for each individual group or race, and I happen to fall into the Asian American category. My parents were not born in America, so my family did not have much growing up, we did not have many privileges, but the ones we did have we cherished them. In the privilege walk, I learned that I was one of the students on the bottom of privileges. I do not know what group or race my classmates belong in, but they certainly had a lot more privileges than me. As of the time I last looked, I am second to last in privileges out of six other students. The four students ahead of me are above the line that everyone started from, and they are all pretty …show more content…
A student named Amanda and I are the only two below the line, but our avatars are pretty close together. I can assume that the classmates above the line had a wealthier life growing up.
The students who had more privileges may have attended private schools, lived in safer neighborhoods, went on many vacations, and more, but I do not think privileges lead to an automatic easy life. I believe that race had a lot to do with how privileges changed over time. If someone was American, then their family and ancestors would have had more time to develop a stable income and find a suitable place to live. Immigrants on the other hand are brought to a brand new setting with very little currency to get going. My parents spoke of when they reached America, obviously they did not end up in Las Vegas right away, the boat took them to San Francisco, California.