Posted on 09/28/2014 1:13:29 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Lessons from Philadelphia's mandatory African American History classes.
This summer, in Missouri, America got an awful tutorial in the realities of racism. We were taughtyet again, through bullets and teargaswhat it means to be black in this country. There is much to be done to prevent future Fergusons, of course. But as a teacher, I find myself wondering what our schools can contribute.
In Philadelphia, where I live and teach high school, we have a course that could help to improve race relations. But some students believe that it doesnt go far enough.
Here in Philly, students are required to take a one-year course in African-American history; if they dont take the class, they wont graduate. The scope of the course is comprehensive, focusing not only on resistance and protest traditions, but also on the cultural history of Africa and the African diaspora. This mandate, the firstand virtually the onlyof its kind, has been around for almost a decade. But its story begins 40 years before that.
In 1967, a coalition of about 4,000 African-American students held a peaceful demonstration before Philadelphias Board of Education building. In tandem with similar movements nationwide, they demanded that the African-American experience be made more visible in their schools. One of their 25 demands was that curricula be expanded beyond the superficial-at-best treatment of African-American history. The protest remained nonviolent until Police Commissioner Frank Rizzo spurred two busloads of his officers to attack the students with teargas and clubs. According to witnesses, Rizzo galvanized his men with a rallying cry of get their black asses!
Rizzo later became Philadelphias mayor and made it his business to undo work toward the Afro-American history curriculum. A few teachers began offering the course at their schools, but it was not officially implemented until 2005.
At the selective, high-performing Philly magnet school where I work, African-American, Pan-African, and Caribbean students make up 31 percent of the student body. In the six years Ive taught English this school, Ive gotten to know and collaborate with brilliant, revolutionary young people of color. These students are relentless in their critical thought, passionate in their pursuit of justicemuch like the young people who protested at the Board of Ed in 1967. Our kids write spoken-word poems about the alienation of African-Americans who perform well academically and the ambivalence of being a light-skinned women deemed beautiful by skewed societal biases. They turn in insightful papers on subjects ranging from Tyler Perry to Zora Neale Hurston to Claude McKay. Last year, students at my school organized a panel discussion on colorism, or intra-racism within communities of color; our schools conference center, which seats over 100 people, was standing room only.
And yet, many of these very students have found themselves disengaged and frustrated in their African-American history classes. I asked a number of former studentsall of whom are in their first or second years of college, all of whom are African-Americanabout where they believe the course falls short. This is what I learned.
When students enter the class eager for higher-level discourse on racea discourse they are often already having on Twitter and Tumblrsome chafe against lessons that often amount to reiterations of their U.S. history texts. This experience is exacerbated for students whove taken Advanced Placement U.S. History, which is both comprehensive and exacting in its demands for memorizing information. One student, spoken-word poet Kai Davis, felt that In a class that spoke about the history of Africans and Black Americans, we did not speak about race sufficiently and that, as a result, most students left with the same mindsets they entered with.
The issue is less the curriculum than the way its sometimes taught. In the class, students study things like African civilizations, the middle passage, and the civil rights movement. The plight of people of color was given a voice, was one students positive summary. But certain teachers choose to present that content almost as artifacts, rather than as parts of a larger, ongoing narrative of oppression and resilience. Gabrielle Richardson told me that although the course expanded her knowledge of African-American history, the way it was taught made it seem that racial injustice was a thing of the past. There was no correlation of historic events with current politics or culture. It was taught in a way that isolated the past and the present. Davis, now a sophomore at Temple University, questioned her classs treatment of Trayvon Martins murderor rather, the fact that the class didnt really engage with the tragedy. The class simply acknowledged that it happened and moved on.
Andrew Wilkins, another of my schools young alumni, said: To this day, I am confused as to what type of emotions this course intended to arise from its students.
Its easy to understand the instinct to keep the class objective. People who oppose having a separate African-American history course in the first place will portray it as an ideological program or divisive propaganda. (This, of course, assumes that any other course in historyworld history or European hstoryis not ideologically driven.) While no one has to fight to legitimize a course in, say, Algebra, proponents of ethnic studies are always put on the defensive. Darlene Clark Hine, the Northwestern professor who adapted a college textbook to create the one taught to Philly high-school students, argued that one of its strengths was that it lays out a history as tight and compelling as possible, without a lot of scholarly debate over interpretations. The stated goal of the text, according to a 2005 Philadelphia Inquirer article, was to instruct students in chronological progression and cause and effect.
But if the class can be vexing for students, its no less so for the people standing at the front of the room, who sometimes fear that introducing current events and encouraging interpretation and debate will lead to controversy or open conflict. Its uncomfortable for white teachers to speak about race, said George Bezanis, who has taught African-American history at my school. Certain ideas, like white privilegesome people dont know how to approach it.
Another of my colleagues, Ken Hung, offered a different theory: Many teachers simply dont have any comparable experiences in their own educations. We teach the way we were taught, and many of us dont remember our teachers covering these types of topics. Thats an interesting point with ethnic studies. Theres a critical mass of people who want to teach these topics, but we dont have the background because we didnt go through it in school, and there arent many resources available.
Yet when African-American history teachers do push themselves outside their comfort zones, the impact on students is incredible. Helena Jeudin, two years after being enrolled in the course, still remembers being introduced to DuBoiss theory of double consciousnessthe recognition she felt, the way DuBois gave voice to her experience. As a person of color, how I am perceived is crucial to my being. I often worry about how I am being perceived by those who are whitewhether I am being too cultural, too radical, too defiant, because I wear my hair naturally instead of assimilating to more European styles. But also, about how I am perceived and valued within my own communityhaving to explain the fact that being Haitian doesnt mean I am not black.
Darien Carter, a sophomore at Howard University, says that dialogue with classmates caused a paradigm shift in his view of race: Before taking the course, I remember being skeptical of the concept that race is important, primarily thinking that race was used as a divisive tool by people who were insidiously racist in order to obtain and exert power over others. However, African-American history taught me, through the curriculum and discussions that would happen throughout my racially diverse class, that there are some experiences that I will have only because of my racesocially accepted racial profiling and stereotyping, to name just two examples.
Its not just African-American students who benefit from these discussions; through this exchange of ideas, students of all races can reevaluate power dynamics and their roles in systemic inequity. Dana King, who wrote the curriculum, notes, I have found that the course has also reshaped the identity of Euro-American students, because of the misinterpretation of their own identities.
At my school, many teachers are making efforts to structure African-American history thematically, rather than chronologically, which gives them the freedom to toggle back and forth between the past and the present, highlighting patterns. Approached that way, Hung contends, the course can tackle issues that cut to the heart of identity and race todaythe development of race as a concept, the tradition of protest, racial constructs, and how these constructs pit one minority group against another. Another teacher requires his students to discuss relevant news articles at least once a weeka component of the course that many students still remembered, years later.
And unlike some teachers, who see the course as an obligation to be endured, Yaasiyn Muhammad asked for an entire rostersix classesof African-American history last year. Last summer, he won a fellowship to study Native American history at Dartmouth College; in addition to integrating the Native American experience into the curriculum, he is also planning to include a unit on the intersection of race and gender. Hung, too, requested the classin his case, an independent study version that correlates African-American history with global studies. His students read and lead discussions on the book The New Jim Crow, which addresses how incarceration brings about systemic disenfranchisement in African-American communities.
No single curriculum or teaching style can prevent Ferguson from becoming history that repeats itself. But classes like Philadelphias African-American history course do have the power to teach one invaluable lesson to students of all races. Its called empathy.
Empathy cant be quantified by a standardized test. But it is central to any discussion of race in Americaand empathy is often the one thing thats missing in such discussions. African-American history did not necessarily help me make sense of my identity as an African-American, Wilkins told me. It did however help me make sense of myself as a human.
Dana King, who has taught numerous African-American history courses, put it a different way: What are the children who grow up to become police officers learning in school, and who are their teachers?
Rachel Toliver is a Philadelphia high school English teacher and education blogger.
Glad I never went to HS in Philly!
Future knockout game victim.
My wife did, but it was at Archbishop Ryan, where, hopefully, they don’t do this.
” We were taughtyet again, through bullets and teargaswhat it means to be black in this country. “
It means admission and tuition assistance to elite colleges.
It means a job in the public sector-—even if you are a low scorer in the exam.
It means you cannot be criticized-——ever.
.
That until Blacks take over everything by force...any crime is justified and and all white cops are sons of Hitler.
If I had to educate my kids again, they would never get near a liberal-infested government school.
I’ll bet you a buck she has a queen of spades tattoo somewhere.
All that matters today is color of skin, not content of character.
Quoting that commie rag, new republic is exactly what you’d expect. The commie outlook. No surprises here.
Picture’s worth a thousand words
I stopped reading this crap after the first two lines.
And that was the most flattering one I could find.
“In the six years Ive taught English this school, Ive gotten to know and collaborate with brilliant, revolutionary young people of color.”
Rachel, do you not proof read your work? Does the New Republic not edit what they publish? You be an english teecher? You might teach in a magnet school and you might be down with the revo, but you will be assaulted. Good luck.
They can march down my block and try. But They won’t get past my house.
LoL
“Andrew Wilkins, another of my schools young alumni, said: To this day, I am confused as to what type of emotions this course intended to arise from its students.”
Arise from? I read that and instantly thought back to when I was in grad school. The program I was in had a token black student. Sorry, if that sounds racist, but it’s true. That student gave me a chapter of his dissertation to read over. It read as if someone who was half educated wrote it. Just think of this and you’ll get the idea: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Izpa9D7c77U
Black history month is now a 1 year mandatory HS course.
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