Many powerful ideas were shared over the course of those ten weeks- commitment to service, inequity of educational opportunity, cooperative learning, the power of words- but none resonated more clearly than the importance of multicultural education; as a member of that inaugural corps, I participated in countless workshops designed to address this principle. New teachers were encouraged to move beyond Black History Month and to validate both the struggle for recognition and the accomplishments of writers, mathematicians, scientists and artists of all ethnicities, particularly, given Beacon Academy’s school district's ethnic profile, the African American examples; every Edison reference would be accompanied by a substantive mention of Benjamin Banneker, or George Washington Carver, etc. (As one of a just over a handful of Black students who attended my independent boarding school in the mid eighties, I remember feeling fortunate and appreciative of the existence of the Afro-Latin Association. Black people in this country hadn’t yet fully embraced the term “African-Americans”; I continue to be fascinated by the evolution of the lexicon of race. And, while my alma mater has come incredibly far in recent years in terms of both admissions and curriculum, in the days when I attended, a sprinkling of Langston Hughes and two weeks spent with Ellison were the extent of my exposure to Black American writers). At TFA, we were expertly led through the process of creating engaging lesson plans imbued with elements of multiculturalism, a focus that greatly informed my approach during the subsequent two and a half years spent teaching in Compton, CA and continues, to a great extent to influence my teaching today.
Several
years later, while a member of the faculty at a Massachusetts independent
school, I participated in an extensive professional development program that
focused incorporating into the culture of the school a new emphasis in the
academic arena: diversity. Diversity and the celebration of its virtue and
salience in the school community had, by the mid nineties, supplanted
“multiculturalism.” Following hours of purposeful committee meetings, the
school’s mission statement was revisited and now includes strong language in
support of the institution’s ardent commitment to establishing a healthy and
diverse community; the school now “celebrates the diversity of our community
which enriches our daily experience.” The school’s responsibility to addressing
the diversity agenda expanded to include religious and sexual identity
considerations. What had once been the school’s single cultural support group,
the Multicultural Student Alliance, a haven for the school’s small number of
African American students and one or two of its students of Asian descent, was
soon joined by the Asian Cultural Society, the Gay-Straight Alliance, the
Islamic Society and many other student affinity groups.
In
the classroom, the new focus on diversity was primarily demonstrated through
the incorporation of a diversity
co-curriculum, a series of academic blocks designed to, as stated in the
new mission statement, “celebrate” the community’s diversity. Lesson plans
dealing with homophobia, bullying and religious tolerance were devised and
presented; with some controversy, Christmas vacation and specific references to
the iconography of the season were largely proscribed as students began to
learn about Ramadan, Kwanzaa and Chanukah in non-religious multi-faith
assemblies. Students and faculty alike began attending powerful workshops led
by support groups such as GLSEN, the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education
Network. Anti-racist education was broadly addressed as students
participated in numerous Teaching Tolerance modules generated by the Southern
Poverty Law Center. This school and countless other institutions around the
country had plainly moved beyond the outdated and largely superficial Black
History Month model. As the diversity movement in education has grown and flourished
in our schools, what had once been a campaign for recognition has evolved into
a celebration.
Irrefutably,
the focus on diversity in our schools has enhanced many aspects of our
students’ lives. Where diversity is emphasized, Jewish and Muslim students feel
far less marginalized as their classrooms and hallways are no longer festooned
with the kitsch of Christmas; many gay or questioning children now make
coming-out statements or form on-campus Gay/Straight Alliance groups with far
less fear of an intolerant community response; student organizations providing
support for students of Asian descent help children struggling with issues
pertaining to assimilation and cultural maintenance.
As
a further consequence to the advancement of the diversity agenda, an
interesting phenomenon began to take place among students of African descent,
one that confronts our teachers, particularly White teachers, with exceptional
though largely veiled challenges. In addition to its undeniable aforementioned
benefits, the universality of the diversity initiative in schools makes it an
inherently more accessible conversation for students and teachers, people of
all stripes. In majority White environments, immersion in the diversity
curriculum may, however contribute to a culture of denial; a disavowal of
institutionalized racism concurrent with an adoption of a ubiquitous
celebratory identity and a reluctance to address the state and fate of Blacks
in this country. The difficult issues about race and prejudice in America were
formerly raised around late January and summarily managed with a few episodes
of Eyes On the Prize. These already challenging themes have been
integrated with other relevant cultural topics and progressive approaches.
In
this environment, the Black students, particularly those whose forebears were
raised in the civil rights era, often suppress their responses to the impact
that racism continues to have on their own lives or they seek support from
others with shared experiences. The inevitable result is a truly progressive
community that enthusiastically celebrates its own diversity but is powerless
to make sense of the Black table in the cafeteria.
The
importance of the continued discussion of race in America cannot be over
stated. In a society grown weary with the issue, we would do well to continue
to address the condition of the Black in America-- if only to further a larger
appreciation of the growing diversity within Americans of African descent; the
growing class chasm within the race; the decimation of the young Black male
population; the rising intensity of both the struggle and startling achievement
gap between African Americans and the growing number of recent West Indian and
African immigrants.
These
are hard but essential issues, and their exploration must continue in our
classrooms. Simply replacing discussions of racism in our country with the
broader diversity debate may ultimately serve to drive a deeper chasm between
many Americans. Due in no small part to the participation of parents in my
school’s diversity initiative, many parents and teachers alike have been
convinced of their own color-blindness. At the independent school where I
taught, the faculty was given a thick blue co-curricular binder filled with
activities, lessons, role-playing exercises and readings, all designed to ease
us into the diversity program of studies and stimulate conversations with our
students. Parents were encouraged to continue these conversations in their
homes where, given the results of the parent organization’s feedback, they met
with a fair amount of success. Importantly though not surprisingly, many Black
families described numerous unambiguous discussions about racism and
discrimination that regularly took place in their homes; many of the White parents
expressed concern over the difficulties they faced when the topic of racism was
raised. Why the difficulty or resistance? Some parents proudly point to their
own color-blindness or claim they are raising children who do not see color.
The difficulty may involve shame, guilt or mere disinterest, and the impact
continues to resonate at classrooms across America.
In
schools our students must be encouraged to focus on the causes of their
behaviors and those of other groups, today and in the past. Our teachers must
be strong enough to fight the reluctance to tackle the difficulty and intricacy
of race in America. Discussions of racism and prejudice evoke passion, anger
and shame and can be frightening--they are, however, essential. As educators,
we can reach out to parents and hope they will support our initiatives, but our
primary responsibility is to our students.
Educator and writer Herbert Kohl says that teachers who avoid
confronting racism risk losing students’ respect and turning them into
passionate “not learners.” I agree.
--Mervan F. Osborne, Dean of Beacon Academy, Boston