203 Matching Annotations
  1. Nov 2022
    1. it takes White wealth and money to makea neighborhood “good.

      This resonates with the ideas of "white is right" and white saviorism. But this is an ideology based in the deficit perspective that needs to be shattered. Sprinkling whiteness to an issue is like putting a band-aid on a viral infection, the problem is deeper and not surface-level. And if it is not stopped, it will quickly spread.

    2. And yet “these kids” could out argue me abouteverything under the sun: the inherent problems withschool policies, the merits of long lunches, why weshould hold class outside, and about local issues thatreverberated through the building like desegregationand school closures. When they wrote, they had spellingerrors and grammar issues, despite—or because of—theWarriner drills or my lack of knowledge about AfricanAmerican Vernacular English, but their logic andevidence spun circles around me

      This section reminds me of "Linguistic Justice Black Language, Literacy, Identity, and Pedagogy" by April Baker-Bell when she discusses the importance of Black students understanding Black English and it's history, and the nuances of "flava" in speaking AAVE that do not exist in White Standard English.

    1. They will do so raising their voices, theirhands, their pens, and their smartphone

      This is a strong statement showing that students will continue to be there, no matter how technology changes or what new methods are created, they will write their stories, share their thoughts, and be heard.

    1. Infact, all three are creation stories, but the Christianstory is treated differently. This difference in howNative and Christian creation stories are treatedprivileges Christianity, perpetuating institutional-ized racism that keeps in place the ideologies of asociety that is predominantly Christian. One groupof creation stories is categorized and treated asfiction while the other group of creation stories isaccepted as truth. Despite efforts by Native peopleto get their stories accurately categorized, therehas been little or no movement, which raises criti-cal questions: Whose voice is not heard in the waythat stories are categorized? Whose ideologies areimplicitly valued by categorical labels?

      We generally hear how history books are often told from the perspective of the "winner" and how they see the other party as lacking something or being uncivilized. However, in this comparison, it is interesting that a Bible story can have the same end result of perpetuating racism and be seen as a "truth."

    1. Black girls who are“missing” from literature orare not the main characters,young adolescents can see who is valued in the class-room and how that value is assessed based on raceand gender classification

      This is why I always try to find stories that include characters who reflect my students AND characters who do not reflect them. There are many different people outside of the classroom and it's important for young learners to know that yes our classroom is a community, but outside of the school walls and beyond the borders of their country, people come in all shapes, shades, and sizes.

    2. When the only images that Blackgirls see of themselves in the classroom are rootedin their dehumanization, it sends messages of dis-affirmation and educational neglect that may neverbe emancipated

      A strong claim, yet highly accurate! The damage this can cause is deep-rooted.

    3. literacy instruction should be re-sponsive to students’ identities (e.g., race, ethnicity,gender expression, age, appearance, ability, spiri-tual belief, sexual orientation, socioeconomic sta-tus, and community environment) and languages/dialects as they affect students’ opportunities tolearn

      Again, I argue that it should reflect the world and society at large, not just the classroom. If a class is limited in its racial/cultural make-up, they need to be aware of what exists outside their classroom as to not build a sense of superiority or inferiority to others who they have yet to encounter.

    4. remind usthat an enslaved status (whether physically, intel-lectually, creatively, or culturally) not only restrainsindividuals from being engaged in acts of resis-tance but also seeks to dismantle the developmentof “freedom dreams” that can cause an individualto critically challenge bondage.

      This is an example of the "modern weaponry" mentioned earlier in this section. Weapons have evolved past the limits of physical abuse and into the mental and psychological realm of creating damage. The inclusion of Disney movies has my mind running to how the enslaved status of the princesses took a physical form (Belle and Rapunzel), a symbolic form (Snow White, Aurora, Ariel), or was inhibited by their sex and the roles deemed appropriate by society (Mulan and Jasmine).

    1. where adolescents engage in literacy (space and place) is intricatelylinked to how they construct specific literate identities.

      This is an interesting argument to make, one that I would like to dive into. I would also want to argue that WHEN is an important factor as well.

    2. dealing with Souls and notwith Dollars

      Easier said than implemented.

    3. Education is the great equalizerin a democratic society, and if people are not given access to a quality education,then what we are doing is creating an underclass of people who will challenge ourvery way of life”

      I have recently gotten into the idea of social reproduction and how certain factors influence education and curriculum leading to the question if we are truly in a democratic society as the core principles of a democratic society are in direct competition with a capitalistic society.

    4. Solórzano and Yosso (2002) define them as a “method of telling thestories of those people whose experiences are not often told” in order to “shattercomplacency, challenge the dominant discourse on race, and further the strugglefor racial reform” (p. 32)

      Counterstories are under utilized within the schools and can greatly help students gain perspective and deeper understanding on issues or events.

  2. Nov 2021
    1. Teachers must cultivate spaces for students to write.

      Based on what I learned in other books, this is something that we cannot force upon our students. We simply extend the invite for them to share their experiences through literacy (reading, writing. story-telling, etc.), and it's the students' choice to witness, then create their own testimony/testimonios.

    2. “I am a [blank] writer.” This exercise presumes their writing competence and assumes that all youth are writers.

      I love this! Students are still developing their identities as they enter our classrooms, so this demonstrates an effective way to get students to add to their identities as writers, and students in general.

    3. I wanted to create spaces where youth writers define, understand, challenge, and use writing in and out of school and where they are critical ethnographers of their own writing lives.

      This also relates to the book I read for class - The Vulnerable Heart of Literacy. Writing is used as a doorway to testimony and witness for our students' traumas, as well as our own.

    4. Parents and community members understood writing to be the timed writing tasks for standardized exams or the demonstration of the conventions of writing on school assignments,

      This is how I viewed writing throughout most of my life until I took education classes in college. If I felt this way, I can't imagine how other parents or community members felt, especially if their child was doing poorly. Throughout my high school years, we were trained to write in a particular fashion to adhere to certain styles, but not necessarily from a radical standpoint.

    1. I finish this chapter of class by asking students to write a piece of historical fiction.

      I think this is a great idea. Growing up, I always had a weakness in history, but if I was offered the chance to tie in my past experiences with my learning, I would have made much more progress.

    2. I bring in students’ lives in two ways. First, the unit itself is about their lives and the unfolding narrative of how racial inequality, displacement, economic disparity, as well as resistance and resilience are currently playing out in their neighborhood. And second, I ask them to write a narrative about a time their homes were lost, stolen, or restored.

      This relates to the book I just read: *The Vulnerable Heart of Critical Literacy where students are extended the invitation to discuss their experiences and traumas, which allows us as teachers and their fellow peers to be critical witnesses.

    3. When I started paying attention to the larger themes that brought the world into our classroom, my students (mostly) stopped rebelling. Dirk—and others—taught me that teaching language arts means plumbing my students’ lives to bring their stories and voices into the classroom as we examine racial injustice, class exploitation, gender expectations, sexual identity, gentrification, solidarity, and more.

      This made me connect to the movie Freedom Writers. Once Erin Gruwell stopped teaching by certain objectives and standards, and tended to the support and needs of her students, they started to care about their own learning.

    4. My students’ voices and lives didn’t need “housekeeping”; they didn’t need to be told to “hush.” They needed a teacher who could unleash their beauty on the page and their capacity to discuss and argue in the classroom. When I stopped attending to test scores and started listening to the music of my students’ voices and seeing them as “more than a score,” I increased my capacity to engage them. I knew what didn’t work, but I still didn’t know what did work.

      As educators, how can we make this possible when we are depended on to follow the standards and meet certain expectations ourselves?

  3. Dec 2020
    1. civic disobedience

      The movie, The Great Debaters, is a excellent example of this.

    2. Each of these industries is interconnected with students’ lives,

      In a connection to "Cultivating Urban Literacies on Chicago’s South Side through a Pedagogy of Spatial Justice," I never considered creating a unit based on the industries in a student's community. Chicago, yes, but never about the explicit context and setting of our neighborhood. This would be a great way to engage students and help foster a sense of agency.

    3. ardy Sweep policy,

      I wonder if the administration ever looked at the data to see if their policy was working or not? Did tardies go down after they began to implement this policy? If not, what else did they do?

    4. a problem- solving stance through rhetorical litera-cies

      This is an example of critical literacy and also literacy across disciplines. I wish more curriculum included this stance.

    5. problem

      This reminds me Engineering design process!

    1. addiction

      This unit would coincide really well with Social Emotional Learning lessons!

    2. considered the global forces contributing to their local spaces and asserted agency by counter narrating

      I like this idea of counter narrating. Too often I feel like I am giving my students my narrative instead of fostering their sense of agency. Journaling could used much more purposefully in this way.

    3. The Omnivore’s Dilemma

      I love that we have a nonfiction text as well as a multimedia component. I found this to be a very engaging teaching strategy that also aligns to the standards. Just ordered this book!

    4. quality food

      I wonder what the specifics of quality food is? Are we taking into account cultural foods? Does this unit touch on the emotional connections we have to food or cross examine mental health with obesity trends? I love the range and endless possibility this unit has.

  4. Nov 2020
    1. the reading of a dominant, oppressive narrative along with the need for a liberating counternarrative to tell more about young people experiencing the name of the tardy policy through their eyes and perceptions.

      This frames the students' counternarratives as valuable knowledge and expertise.

    2. whose account is most accountable, accurate, and truthful.

      And, in school environments, whose accounts are believed and upheld? Whose positions hold value?

    3. The effects of the collective plan of action be-came evident when the school principal and staff members responded to their book publication and submission for review.

      I can imagine this was a very rewarding feeling for the students that partook in this collective action plan. One of the many things I am taking away from our work this semester is how important it is for students to see their work come to life--whether their work results in social change and transformation or is published or shared across various contexts and platforms. Just as students' learning processes should connect their experiences both at and out of school, so should the culmination of their learning.

    4. The feeling of voicelessness creates a sense of internalized powerlessness for students in their schooling and preparation for learning and success.

      Yes, and for many students, particularly students of color, this feeling of voicelessness may already exist and be rooted in various contexts. As Pedraza and Rodriguez state, many students have relatives that are incarcerated or work under unsafe and unfair working conditions. We should keep this in mind when working with our students...yes, they are experiencing this at school right now, does this connect to their experiences outside of school? How can we best support them?

    5. Their sharing in the Inside- Outside Circle became the launch of their rallying cries for change and a new language of naming.

      This reading as a whole demonstrates the power and impact of language. As Pedraza and Rodriguez mention throughout, the word "sweep" has different connotations and functions, evident in their text examples by Julia Alvarez, Sandra Cisneros, and others. For these reasons, we as educators should be extremely mindful of the language we use--with our students, to describe our students or our classes, and more.

    6. I began to learn about how systems worked against working communities.

      The irony! Instead of working with working communities, to meet and address needs, we have systems that purposely work against them.

    7. students could engage in their own re-search for change in the present as they considered students who would follow them in secondary- level studies.

      The value here is in the students' recognizing their potential to have a positive impact on a policy that affects not only themselves, but others.

    8. This resonated with me as a teacher

      This is very real. I teach at an urban high school and I can see all too often that students will graduate and often be right back in their neighborhoods they grew up in struggling to obtain or maintain social mobility. I talked to one student that is at the community college and he is working a full time as stock worker for Wal Mart and a part time job for the high school. He has school from 8AM-2PM, then comes to the school to work from 3-5:30 and then has work from 9 PM til 5 AM. This schedule does not include time for him to work on school, let alone sleep. He is just one example of many low-income non-white students.

    9. All students who were tardy were escorted by staff to their first period. Such practices reflected policing in youth lives

      Interesting at my school, we still call them "Hall Sweeps." However if a student is swept, then they can get held for processing and potentially miss the entire class period. Many times I have had students miss entire periods of instruction because they were a minute or two late.

    10. Students’ awareness of their absence of voice and agency in naming and making a policy further mo-tivated them into describing the situation and the possibility of addressing it

      This is what I believe many teachers want from the students we teach. We want students to find their voice to address their needs and wants as they are on their journey of life. The manner in which we go about it is different and the ways we try to create student agency may be different upon the context but I believe the goals many students have is the same.

    11. presence of an on- campus police station further adds a law

      I worked in two elementary schools (k-8) in the Chicago Public School system, both schools were on the south side in predominantly Black neighborhoods. Both schools had uniformed Chicago Police officers working security. Kids were terrified of getting arrested and the officers were used as a threat by teachers who lacked appropriate classroom management skills. My children attended two Chicago Public Elementary Schools in predominantly white and Latinx neighborhoods where there was no security, let alone a police officer. This practice is a waste of money and sends all the wrong messages that children should be receiving from their teachers. The negative impact on the communities due to the practice is unsurmountable.

    12. For students interested in gaining a voice and agency, especially in their school, it became essential to question and disrupt the name of an administrative policy negatively affecting adolescent life

      Students who are able to gain a voice in the school can fix stestemic or problematic policies. Students can get a voice in how to change something to make them more culturally relevant. This could be something like restorative justice polices.

    13. , histories, and future (Palos et al.).The concerns expressed by students of Latinx, Southeast Asian, and Punjabi descent mirrored what H. Samy Alim and Django Paris describe as a “saga of cultural and linguistic assault [that] has had and continues to have devastating effects on the access, achievement, and well- being of students of color in public schools”

      This is all cultural groups who are not white. Especially in the huge influx of immigrants during the 20-40s They were forced to speak English so many of these future generations lost their home language. Hundreds of languages have gone extinct since the 1900s. Especially in the United States a students achignvemt can be drastically effected if they don not speak English

    14. same tragedy and offer opposing accounts, whose version is the most accurate? In this case, perception is truth.

      History can often have two different interpretations of what happened. EX. The War of 1812 and The Civil War. Often because history is written by the victor. The losing side may feel like they won or misinterpret the facts of what started/ fighting for. Thus potentially changing what students learn and how they interpret what happened in history

    15. he news blared about the riots in response to law enforcement brutality and racial injustice toward Rodney King in an unjust world. The images of human violence were fresh on our minds as readers and viewers of media.

      This is similar to the BLM protests were some of them ended riots. Those protesters were met with riot police. Which had a larger portion of African American participants. This is stark contrast to the shutdown protests which had a larger white portion of participants. Even though some of those protesters had assault rifles and stormed the Michigan capital. They were allowed to protest and were not met by police. In the media they tended to show the riots more than the peaceful protests that happened. Creating a sense of fear and chaos even when 99.9% of the BLM protests were peaceful.

    16. problem

      These steps are really helpful in beginning to think about how to implement YPAR in the classroom. I remember reading about this method in the Hansfield book, but this article clarifies it for me.

    17. judgment

      This is a good example of a teacher changing what they are teaching based on meaningful conversations with students. Students often question school policies, but usually don't get an answer. This demonstrates how powerful a lesson can be when student voices are listened to.

    18. change

      One thing that I really liked about the unit that this teacher created was how students were able to directly see how their actions resulted in the name being changed. This is a good example of civics in action in the school environment. These students can take this lesson and use it in the future when there is a policy or name they disagree with.

    19. A justice orientation can begin from within our classrooms by inviting and affirming students’ prior and background knowledge about their experiences with injustice in the schools and communities they inhabit and from which they learn firsthand

      We as teachers, and also schools have so much to learn from our students. They bring a wealth of expert knowledge to the classroom and we need to celebrate it, not silence it.

    20. Precious Knowl-edge

      This documentary was very eye opening. The students in the film were incredibly engaged in their learning and it just emphasized the importance and need for kids to learn about their own backgrounds in school, instead of just the dominant narratives we regularly get in school. We live in such a diverse society, and this should spill over into our education more and with intent.

    21. the name itself, “Tardy Sweep,” which they found insulting and degrading.

      A common theme I have noticed in the readings and readings from other classes is how harmful the way we label things in schools can be. An example that comes to mind is how important it is to use the term" Emergent bilingual" in place of "English language learner".

    22. The students stood up, formed a circle, and documented their perceptions and feelings about the name in their journals. Then, they shared aloud their thoughts.

      This reminds me a lot of practice we use at my school called restorative justice circles.

    23. Critical Pedagogy in Practice

      It is so fun seeing everything come together through all the units. Here we can see a connection to Unit 1.

    24. Next, the students took three steps in a clock-wise manner,

      I am intrigued by the Inside-Outside Circle. I needed another example, so I found one online

      http://www.theteachertoolkit.com/index.php/tool/inside-outside-circles

    25. we helpThem to get up earlier

      This is so important. The Tardy sweeps assumes students as disposable and that they must not care about school which is why they are late. Offering solutions considers the fact that they are still kids learning how to time manage! I love this line because the goal should be to help kids not punish them.

    26. The feeling of voicelessness creates a sense of internalized powerlessness for students in their schooling and preparation for learning and success.

      I feel that this really connects to the "Precious Knowledge" documentary connection mentioned above where the point between students having a dysfunctional relationship to school vs. students having a dysfunctional relationship to learning was made; students love learning. It is the harmful structures and feeling of voicelessness they are left with that causes them to have a dysfunctional relationship with school, not learning.

    1. In addition to the information about the availability of healthy food in their communities, this challenged the idea that obese and/or overweight people are just lazy: they may be responding to larger forces outside their control.

      This is critical for students to consider because it demonstrates the impact that social structures and systemic racism, among other oppressive systems, impact different areas of one's life, including healthy foods, their accessibility or lack of, and consumption.

    2. Kara built on her students’ knowledge of larger sociopolitical contexts in order to counter prevailing notions about place, food, and obesity

      I really appreciate how she designed this entire unit to encourage her students to think and act critically. This is how we can not only make the world a better place in present time but also in the future as they grow into responsible young adults who will continue to look at their world critically. Having participated in this class, these young people now know how to be change agents for more positive future.

    3. explore food options available in a one-mile radius around their school to determine whether they were part of a food desert.

      One of the amazing things to come out of the pandemic is the Love Fridges on the west and south sides. These refrigerators are set up to provide free healthy choices such as fruits and vegetables in areas that have been determined to be food desserts. Check out the website and consider helping out. Also, make sure to let students and families know especially if they may be experiencing food insecurity. https://www.thelovefridge.com/

    4. “totally out of control”)

      The example of how perception is reality.

    5. counter narratives through their culminating project: a position paper in which they synthesized information throughout the unit and proposed ways to address obesity in the African American community.

      This is a great example of student led and student centered writing. This project is designed to get students to think critically about their surroundings and then write about this from personal experience on top of synthesized information.

    6. I think this helps them with their critical consciousness. I don’t think they’ll walk away saying ‘I won’t eat McDonald’s anymore,’ but I want them to be able to challenge social structures, I want them to understand systemic racism, and I want them to be able to see themselves as change agents.”

      Having students switch their perspectives about themselves and their role in our world is critical.

    7. Spatial justice can be understood as being premised on the idea that “justice, however it might be defined, has a consequential geography, a spatial expression that is more than just a background reflection or set of physical attributes to be descriptively mapped” (

      Can anyone further explain this definition? I think this is describing the idea that context matters and determines spatial justice.

    8. context

      I really like how this lesson connects local and global issues. It makes me think of how in Pose, Wobble, Flow, the authors challenge teachers to reflect on if their lessons allow students to engage critically with the world as they experience it. This unit is a good example of that.

    9. food desert.

      There is a great organization in Chicago called the Urban Growers Collective that is focused on the South Side and is a "Black- and women-led non profit...working to build a just and equitable local food system." I thought about them as I was reading this piece. https://urbangrowerscollective.org/

    10. counter narrative

      Counter narratives are something my group is really excited to use for our final practice.

    11. I want them to be able to see themselves as change agents.

      Students as agents of change has been a common and inspiring theme I have recognized throughout this entire semester.

    12. including community knowledge that may not be valued in schools or as part of the official curriculum.

      This phrase reminded me of a lot of conversations I had with my Unit 2 group about how bias a lot of curriculum is. It reminds me of how important it is for educators to recognize this.

    13. Throughout this unit, Kara asked her students to make use of their knowledge of their own neighborhoods, positioning them as experts about the places they inhabit.

      This phrase makes me really excited for developing our practice, as students using their knowledge of their own neighborhoods is a positive theme I have seen across readings. This is something we will also be using for our final project.

    14. draw from their local knowledge and situate that local knowledge in broader contexts, they make visible the unseen historic and systemic forces that produce places and determine access to resources within them

      This can be really powerful for students. They can see how maybe the increase in violence in their neighborhoods could be attributed to the lack of resources or having to fight for them.

    15. Kara also required her students to explore food options available in a one-mile radius around their school to determine whether they were part of a food dese

      This can get students to realize what food places are around them. It can get them to think deeper about what healthy food is or is not around them.

    16. want them to be able to see themselves as change agents.

      She is helping students realize that they can make an impact within their community. This is crucial for students to realize they can be change makers within their communities as well as in broader spaces. Doing this can help them change their communities

    17. n one of the first activities of the unit, students wrote and performed spoken word poems about their neighborhoods (e.g., important/noteworthy intersections). However, they also complicated negative stereotypes of the South Side; for example, one student, Malcolm, wrote

      This is fantastic that students are getting to think critically about a topic. She gave them an opportunity not only to write something but also to preform it. This can help to give ownership of their written The students have the ability to express feeling or thoughts they have about the community. The students feelings seem similar to the perceptions that they get from media and from other people in the city.

    18. A pervasive negative national rhetoric has been constructed about Chicago’s South Side and the people who live there as dangerous and violent (e.g., Donald

      Video: I thought it was really powerful how Kara spoke about this portrayal of the south as trauma inflicted on her students. She spoke about their spoken word and their personal appreciation of place narrative projects as avenues to collective healing and repositioning. While they also did town halls, petitions, spoke with stakeholders, etc. I definitely agree that the discourse and personal appreciation of place as a means of healing is just as important, if not more, than that immediate action step.

    19. Urban spaces, for example, are dense ecologies with complex networks of materials (both “natural” and human-made) and histories of race, class, and power dynamics (e.g., changing neighborhood demographics, systemic housing discrimination).

      I think this really rings true for Chicago and its varying neighborhoods. Each neighborhood really is its own complex system. From an outsider's perspective, they can be lumped together when they are really quite different and have unique needs, histories, and inequities.

    1. Unfortunately, more than 60 years after the Brown v. Board of Education decision, educational outcomes for many students of color in our nation’s public schools are still directly connected to a system of inequality.

      The issue of equity in schools has been brought to the courts many times. People have fought over equitable financing of the schools, language equality (Lau v. Nichols), and racial equality (Westminster v. Mendez and of course Brown v. Board of Education). It is appalling the number of times these issues have been brought to the courts and still, our education system is still unequal. Check out this list of landmark cases related to education equality https://edeq.stanford.edu/sections/landmark-us-cases-related-equality-opportunity-education It is sobering to think we are still in this position after all of these fights.

    2. students will be encouraged to generate counternarratives regarding the reproduc-tion of power asymmetries and deficit stereotypes applied to many Black youth.

      This reminds me of the Young Chicago Authors' annual poetry festival, Louder Than a Bomb, which features student voices which often challenge mainstream narratives about Black youth and their literacies. https://youngchicagoauthors.org/programs/education-partnerships

    3. how, what, when, and why Black youth participate in literacy

      These should be foundation questions that should guide teachers in their practice

    4. historically disenfran-chised people must tell their stories to “shatter complacency [and] challenge the dominant discourse on race”

      This kind of answers my thought to the DuBois quote earlier in the article. It is only when marginalized people tell their stories that then it begins to challenge the people in power (or that is the way I am interpreting it).

    5. When school is not enough, how might students learn to cultivate their literacies, nurture their spirits, and chart their own trajectories within out-of-school spaces?

      We have an opportunity and a responsibility to encourage and support our students' greater engagement in their communities, especially if our goal is to help students successfully navigate the world outside of school.

    6. Hence, where adolescents engage in literacy (space and place) is intricately linked to how they construct specific literate identities.

      Yes, I completely agree and could not emphasize this enough. This is something all educators should keep in mind as they cultivate their classroom space and environment, alongside their students.

    7. Khaleeq replied, “Our maps are stories. Signs of writing, literacy. That’s literacy. How we making sense of our world by writing . . . mapping the community, getting in a room with strangers, listening, presenting stories.” To this, Phillip added, “You a Black male doing that, too.”

      This is powerful. It demonstrates the multimodality of literacy and the different ways in which one may already be engaging with literacy, especially those that may be deemed as "non-traditional" because they are not occurring in the classroom.

    8. he was racially positioned as “the Black boy” who wasn’t “smart enough.”

      This made me think of Black Boy by Richard Wright, an autobiography in which Wright details his upbringing and experience as a Black man in the Jim Crow South. Similarly to Khaleeq, and consequently to racism and oppression, Wright details the ways in which he positions himself within society and how/where others position him.

    9. get blamed on Black youth rather than on the structural inequalities endemic to US society.

      This reminds me of a scene from the documentary "Precious Knowledge," which I highly recommend. The school's teachers are in a meeting and one of the school's white teachers states that the students are damaged, "culturally damaged" and describes how learning has become irrelevant in their lives. Another teacher in the meeting, a Latinx man, responds by describing how students have a dysfunctional relationship with school and not learning, primarily because of the ways in which the educational system (and the structural inequalities in place, as stated in this reading) do NOT serve Black and Brown students.

      Both the scene from the documentary and this statement demonstrate how the blame is put on the students and not the racist and oppressive systems that push them out.

      "Precious Knowledge"

    10. the master narratives about Black adolescent males typically center on educational failure and “perpetuate deficit views of Black male culture, that erroneously portray Black males as lack-ing normative intellectual and behavioral qualities needed to be successful”

      This is so real for me. There are so many articles and statistics so support this but on a personal and practical level I rarely see Black men in my Advanced Placement and Honors classes and the narrative around a lot of Black adolescent males (if it is not centered around their athleticism) is centered around the lack of qualities they have to "make it in the real world."

    11. “Education must keep broad ideals

      I am curious in what DuBois meant when he said "keep broad ideals?"

    12. “Education is the great equalizer in a democratic society, and if people are not given access to a quality education, then what we are doing is creating an underclass of people who will challenge our very way of life

      This quote is very powerful to me. It gives the obvious statement of the power of education, but it argues that the lack of quality education to all will challenge our very way of life. I feel like this is not true in some aspects because the lack of quality education is designed ignorance and controlled social mobility. However, on the other hand, it is through the inequality and inequity that we see misrepresented people fighting to challenge and dismantle the unfair education system.

    13. .

      This was demonstrated so well in the Christensen article. In the community that she taught in, she used examples of gentrification to teach critical literacy and show students how they can change the story that is told about their community. If more schools recognized that school is not enough, students would learn more and have more opportunities to explore areas that they might be interested in.

    14. stake

      Some of the resources listed in the other articles for this week (the Reese and Young articles) could be a good place to start to begin create a counter-narrative in classrooms through books that students read.

    15. 78

      This is a good reminder of how teachers need keep the way they define literacy and learning in mind when they plan lessons and curriculum. Most teachers would argue that literacy goes beyond decoding and simply understanding what a text says; learning is a socially constructed, active process. Curriculums don't always match this belief and this is one reason why many students are not able to demonstrate the full range of their literacy skills.

    16. talk back to narratives of failure

      I love this phrase and will continue to research and apply this. This also reminds me of a text to media connection, these boys who challenge the school to prison pipeline in the Netflix show Grand Army.

    17. When school is not enough, how might students learn to cultivate their literacies, nurture their spirits, and chart their own trajectories within out-of-school spaces?

      In reflecting on my own experiences, I don't think school was enough for me even as a middle class white person. By the time I was a junior in high school, all I wanted to do was get out and be in the "real" world. The extra curriculars, the sense of community and leadership, the exposure to cultures outside my bubble is what kept me going. My cohesive family unit also kept me on the straight and narrow, for the most part, along with white privilege. More than ever schools need to focus on creating an inclusive community with partnerships and programs, leaders and options.

    18. Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education of 1954

      My students just read articles about this case and speeches from Chief Justice Earl Warren in 1954. He stated education was, "a principal instrument in awakening the child to cultural values, in preparing him for later professional training, and in helping him to adjust normally to his environment." That lesson turned into a teachable moment about pronouns. Then looking at a photograph of the Little Rock Nine, my students referred to the screaming white women in the background as Karens. If we really want to disrupt the school to prison pipeline and liberate our students, they need to know the history in order to confront our situation today.

    19. [The] civil rights question of our nation today is that of access to a quality education” (Gonzalez, 2001, p. 2)—the type of education, we believe, that must embrace cultural equality, cultural pluralism, social justice, and community-engaged pedagogies

      I feel like I could talk for days about access to quality education as a teacher in a Chicago Public School, who nannies and tutors children from the private school of Parker, and who worked at a private international school in Honduras. I have seen education across a spectrum, so I agree, this is the civil rights question of our time and it frustrates me to no end.

    20. The service-learning project. I

      This makes me think of civic literacies and how it can be an example of those ideological literacies often missing from school.

    21. feelin’ like I’m smart. That’s how I always wanna feel. I be in school and get tired being labeled the Black boy who don’t know somethin’, who ain’t smart enough.

      This is a very powerful statement that captures how school can be a place of disconnect where students feel suffocated vs. empowered or liberated.

    1. Some classrooms take part in reenactments, with kids dressing up like Pilgrims and Indians

      I realize that there are still some teachers out there doing this, I sincerely hope they are getting pressured to stop. I have not personally seen this since my oldest was in kindergarten which was in the mid 1990s, that being said - it is much too late in our country's history to still be depicting these false narratives. On the flip side, there is a definite lack of authentic, honest education about Indigenous people. Therefore, the goal should be to replace this insulting practice with actual education. Schools, administrators, parents, and teachers need to push everyone in the education community to do better.

    2. #OwnVoices

      This is so helpful! I foresee myself using this in much the same way I use the Coretta Scott King award - as a litmus test of what is a good book that authentically depicts that culture.

    3. To go even further, use the provocative but accurate word “invaded” instead of “arrived.”

      YES--language is powerful and the language we use matters!

    4. #OwnVoices stories— a hashtag created by Corinne Duyvis to describe a book that is written by someone who is of the particular culture being depicted. The idea is that the quality of a story is improved when the person creating that story is an insider who knows what to share and how to share it with outsiders.

      We must introduce and teach texts that are written by the "insiders." These stories should be written by individuals who form part of the culture that is written about. As educators, we need to be critical of texts we introduce to our students--who are they written by, what are they about, and who are they written for?

    5. Critical literacy encourages children to read between the lines and ask questions when engaging with literature: Whose story is this? Who benefits from this story? Whose voices are not being heard?

      This reminds me of Paulo Friere's "read the word and the world."

    6. Whose story is this? Who benefits from this story? Whose voices are not being heard?

      These questions can be used in all aspects of literacy. In a lot of instances, it shows a white mainstream Euro-centric perspective. This is why the history of many minority cultures (and specifically tribal nations) do not exceed a chapter in the history books.

    7. we do not view them as folktales.

      I found this very interesting, as I had just read the chapter on Folktales and Folklore in "The Bloomsbury Introduction to Children's and Young Adult Literature" by Karen Coats. The chapter spoke to the ideologies surrounding what folktales are and who "decides" . This part of Reese's article really stood out to me, because I never really realized that most books/stories written by/about Native people are only considered as "folktales" when in reality these stories are also creation stories (for example). It has made me want to take some time to really look into the ideologies surrounding what constitutes as a folktale and what doesn't and why European literature is often afforded different "titles" then those of other groups of people.

    8. se books by Native writers all year round.

      I dont think this is just the case for Native writers. This should be for all culturally relevant writers. Having those authors within the classroom gives them a sense of ownership. It is important for those cultures to be represented within their classrooms

    9. eachers can make choices that do justice to Native stories by choosing books written by Native writers.

      Teachers and schools should make every effort to have culturally relevant text written by authors from that culture. This gives a more accurate representation of the culture and the people within in.

    10. 500 federally recognized tribal nations in the United States today, each with distinct systems of governance, languages, locations, material cultures, religions, and, of course, stories!

      and yet most classrooms curriculums do not recognize or rarely acknowledge Indigenous tribal history. In history if it is taught, it usually starts around the time the settlers arrive. Most people do not know if there is any tribes near them.

    11. being specific helps non- Native people learn that we are far more diverse than what the terms “American Indian” or “Native American” evoke.

      Yes. Individuals need to know and be aware of the vastness of indigenous people across the United States. The term "Indian" was created around the time of Columbus because he though that he landed in India and wanted to quantify the people that he saw. We need to refer to Indigenous people by there tribal name and not as one solid group. Since there are differences between each tribe.

    12. A middle grade teacher doing a unit on lyrics in pop music might consider using Eric Gansworth’s (2013) If I Ever Get Out of Here.

      Adding this to my list of resources!

    13. Native people are shown in feathered headdresses and fringed clothing— items worn by Plains Indians rather than anything the Wampa-noag people would have worn.

      The American Museum of Natural History in New York has an exhibit that challenges how Native Americans were represented in paintings by placing them along side historical documents and pointing out errors to rectify misrepresentations.

    14. Folklore

      I never thought about how libraries, in their organizational patterns, could contribute to misrepresentations and promote a dominant culture in this way.

    15. (re)presenting Indigenous communitie

      I wish there was a professional development called "What I Do You Really Want To Teach." I would spend days looking for text, visuals, and artifacts, then align them to standards and making them accessible to my students' diverse range of reading levels. I would teach about the indigenous people I met in Honduras - the Garifunas, the women of Peru, and the Cholitas of Bolivia. If anyone has any middle school resources, please share. Thanks!

    16. )

      I have bookmarked this site (and the books suggested in the article) to use as a first step in using books by Native writers all year round. I really appreciate having reviewed book lists to when adding books to my classroom library.

    17. .

      These suggestions are so helpful when curating texts to use in the classroom. It can be difficult to select texts that are valuable and representative from so many choices, and I will use this as a way to evaluate native stories used in the classroom. In situations where a classroom might have problematic texts, these ideas can be taught to students so they can see why that text is harmful.

    18. There are more than 500 federally recognized tribal nations in the United States today, each with distinct systems of governance, languages, locations, material cultures, religions, and, of course, stories!

      this is incredible. We need to be way better about bringing and honoring these tribal nations in schools!

    19. Whose story is this? Who benefits from this story? Whose voices are not being heard?

      This a question we as adults need to be asking ourselves about the stories we consume as well, whether it be literature, tv/film, news, etc. We tend to accept narratives that reflect our own experiences and opinions. We must therefore actively seek out voices and stories that aren't a part of the mainstream. The more we are able to do this personally, the more we'll be able to do it for/with our students.

    20. heard

      These questions are so important because they provide a useful strategy in deciding if a narrative is accurate or harmful. I wrote these down to also use with my students in their readings about immigrant experiences.

    21. Choose books that are tribally specific.

      I think this specificity is important because it allows students to be critical in indigenous literacies which can then enable them to be critical in other pursuits and literacies as well when questioning why people, places, etc get "lumped" together in the first place.

    22. When teachers use Thanksgiving as the vehicle for their instruction about Native peoples, they are inadvertently locat-ing Native lives in the past.

      I feel this inadvertent locating of Native Lives in the past also happens on Indigenous peoples day unless intentionally planned to break past that mistake. For example, if we merely do a land acknowledgement and mention the land in Chicago that has Native origins, or was lived on primarily by native peoples, without paying mind to the struggles of indigenous communities today, then aren't we just situating natives in the past? What happens if we don't speak about reparations or current issues and actions we should take? Their lives are here today, and this something that comes as a surprise to some students.

    23. the larger culture needs to unlearn and rethink how the identities of Indigenous peoples are represented and taught.

      One valuable resource in diversifying the representation of Native peoples in classrooms could be Matika Wilbur's Project 562. From the website: "Project 562 is a multi-year national photography project dedicated to photographing over 562 federally recognized tribes in The United States resulting in an unprecedented repository of imagery and oral histories that accurately portrays contemporary Native Americans." http://www.project562.com

    1. counter fairy tales (CFT)

      I get where they are going with this name and I've seen similar projects with similar names in other texts, however, The word counter feels negative - why not corrected fairy tales? The definition of counter as an adverb is: in the opposite direction of; in conflict with. The conflict lies within the original fairy tales. People should not have to engage in creating conflict in order to see themselves in literature.

    2. These literary works af-firm Black girls and expand the perspectives of all students.

      I recall reading I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings in high school in the 1980s. As one of only a couple of white kids in the class, I missed the significance it must have held for my classmates - especially those that were female and Black. Looking back, I see my privilege in play long before there was a term for it. I connected to the book and appreciated the story immensely because of my own life experiences. Now, all these years later, I am thankful that a teacher was so thoughtful to provide my classmates with such a great literary experience. As a point of comparison, all of the other books we read in that class had been written by old dead white men (Shakespeare, Hemingway, etc)

    3. Collaboratives and non-profit organizations including the Black Girl Lit-eracy Collective, BlackGirlsRock!, and 12- year- old Black girl Marley Dias’s #1000BlackGirlBooks have worked to decriminalize lit-eracy for Black girls.

      This makes me think of student choice and voice. For example, in order to decriminalize literacy for Black girls, it would be great to give students the opportunity compile a collection of literacies by and for Black girls. Just as Marley Dias created the resource guide #1000BlackGirlBooks, what can our students do to decriminalize literacy and claim/reclaim their narratives?

    4. All of these mediums of writing lend themselves to personal expressions and con-nections that are often not being made with mainly predominately White authors and characters.

      As part of CFT and CRF, this would also serve as excellent opportunity for storytelling in the classroom between the students. Are there intersections between the students' stories? Do they reflect their lived experiences? How do they counter or respond to the dominant and privileged White narratives?

    5. Consequently, these forms of literary work are often not included within English education or are seen within a White superiority framework, are misguided, or void the significance of race, racism, and sexism in literature.

      Not only should we include these authors and texts in our classroom, but we also need to be critical about the lens through which we approach and teach them.

    6. remind us that an enslaved status (whether physically, intel-lectually, creatively, or culturally) not only restrains individuals from being engaged in acts of resis-tance but also seeks to dismantle the development of “freedom dreams” that can cause an individual to critically challenge bondage.

      This is so real. When you crush and distort the dreams of an enslaved person...their dreams and ideas of freedom will also become crushed and distorted. What they will fight for, believe in, and resist will be changed as well.

    7. we acknowledge that the term “English” education or “English” language arts is in itself a White pa-triarchal term that is foregrounded in the oppres-sion of marginalized groups across race, ethnicity, national origin, language, and immigration status).

      In the high school where I teach, people refer to the class as "English" and the official title of the Language Arts classes are "English." This immediately gives superiority to those who can master White Mainstream english or are familiar with grammatical terms according to white mainstream English.

    8. Black girls are often character-ized as Jezebels, Sapphires, aggressive, or sexualized to the point that they are deprived of having any in-tellectual currency and curiosity

      One example: When reading the book about the Salem witch trials. Often the story is taught from the lense of blissfully ignorant white girls who accuse other white women of witchcraft which resulted in their executions even though they were innocent. However when the story brings up Tituba, a slave accused of witchcraft, she is portrayed as a women who is potentially evil, dangerously mysterious, and promiscuous so the taking of her life seemed more justified.

    9. From Black Codes that were passed in southern states in 1864 to acts of police brutality and zero tolerance policing in 2017, Black people have lived in a society that has long loathed their existence and that has engaged in a collective societal lynching of Black women and girls who sit at the intersections of racism and sexism (as well as other identity categories including nationality, language, colorism, and social class).

      This is another reminder that the stripping of language and culture has happened to Black people for centuries. Society and education has continuously invented (and reinvented) ways to dehumanize Black people and specifically Black women.

    10. literacy instruction should be re-sponsive to students’ identities (e.g., race, ethnicity, gender expression, age, appearance, ability, spiri-tual belief, sexual orientation, socioeconomic sta-tus, and community environment) and languages/dialects as they affect students’ opportunities to learn.

      This helps students connect to their learning. It can empower them as well because they feel that their culture and themselves are valued/ represented. Representation is important because it makes the students feel like their voices are heard.

    11. leverage

      Currently, we are focused on bringing in student culture by studying Black and Latinx authors, scientists, mathematicians, and influential figures that are “breaking barriers” in our society. However, we do not spend a lot of time focusing on communication, or language barriers rather, that we have traversed. Maybe now more than ever, teachers are presented with either a burden, as some would see it, or an opportunity, as we should take it, to address students’ written language as well as the oral tradition of story telling.

    12. Venn diagram

      I was wondering if the CFT model would be relevant in middle school for 7th or 8th graders. This strategy reminded me that we used venn diagrams to compare and contrast the book to movie of The Outsiders, which is an all white male cast. Although my students related to these characters' socio-economic status, I was aware of the lack of representation in race. This reminded me that we could do re-writes with this model, even if it's not a fairy tale, it's still a classic. We could even add a research component to find out how minoritized groups were played a role in the culture of 1960s Oklahoma.

    13. Black girls in particular

      Today we read an article about how Black Women were not allowed to contribute to the Civil Rights Movement to the extent that men were. In addition, we also study speeches by Black women about the intersectionality of race and gender, which I think both need to be discussed and read about in the classroom.

      https://www.commonlit.org/en/texts/women-in-the-civil-rights-movement#line-2

    14. Black girls are often character-ized as Jezebels, Sapphires, aggressive, or sexualized to the point that they are deprived of having any in-tellectual currency and curiosity

      I think Starr from The Hate U Give is a great example of changing the narrative here, while still allowing Black girls to connect with her pain and restoration.

    15. plays

      This connects well with the Haddix article because it shows how school curriculums often limit the talents that students can demonstrate. The combination of students being taught a limited view of what writing is with texts that don't include them, really shows me how classroom literacy practices are falling short.

    16. girls

      This makes me think of Pose, Wobble, Flow and how the authors emphasized how teachers really need to be reflective of what texts they give attention to. Resources like this can help teachers create collections of books that affirm the identities of their black female students and help build classroom conversations around books with black, female protagonists.

    17. fairy tales were selected because they represent a set of narratives that most young children are exposed to in early literary interactions or through educational chil-dren’s programs

      The ubiquity of fairy tales and the use of the oral storytelling model mean that this activity could be introduced to significantly younger students as well. I could see a version of this being successful for early elementary school students.

    18. educators and their curricular materials often show a greater degree of illiteracy to the racial and cultural wealth that Black female students like Marley bring into the classroom.

      Powerful framing of awareness as a form of literacy. Are we as educators really teaching and engaging with literacy if our curriculum only allows a narrow definition of knowledge/value, especially if the curriculum ignores the experiences and identities of our students?

    19. English language arts provides a space for Black women and girls to express themselves or to find solace in the shared lived experiences of Black women and girls. However, this is impossible if the texts used to ed-ucate Black women and girls are void of their lived experiences, beliefs, and cultural norms.

      Educators need to be intentional about providing that space and providing opportunity in literature to give these women and girls texts that share their lived experience. Curriculum needs to be reevaluated and the texts and stories as well.

    20. Black women writ-ers and poets, including Maya Angelou’s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and Toni Morrison’s Be-loved,provide Black female students a purview into the narratives of pain, restoration, and Black suffer-ing from the voices of Black women.

      I believe these author's need to be elevated we need more diversity in author's, books, poetry and literature in the classroom that reflects the students in front of us.

    21. And in what ways would the character’s traits, the setting, or the author’s point of view become different if the Goldilocks was an 11- year- old Black girl from your neighborhood?”

      This is a great question that can be posed by the teacher that enforces skills and reading strategies while validating the reader's experience. It also makes space for being critical of the original story.

    22. “English” language arts is in itself a White pa-triarchal term that is foregrounded in the oppres-sion of marginalized groups across race, ethnicity, national origin, language, and immigration status).

      I really appreciate this because it sums up a major shift I have made in my approach to teaching language arts this year. I no longer refer to it as ELA or English Language Arts because my bilingual students are pulling from multiple literacies and language repertoires, so why would I refer to something so complex as just english language arts? I agree that it is a white patriarchal term.

    23. Counter Fairy Tales in Practice: A Teacher’s Reflection

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdabgOGEm8s&feature=youtu.be

      The Marginal Syllabus conversation with the authors was very eye opening. One thing that was really stressed in the conversation was the fact that students (specifically young black girls) come to school with stories to tell, and we really need to tap into those stories.

    24. Early literacy experiences have enduring effects on the perceptions and aspirations of children.

      While this article is mostly geared towards literacy in adolescents, I feel that there is a lot to learn from it for those of us who are elementary teachers. Having books in our classrooms that students can see their own lived experiences in is important.I think we can all take an active role as teachers in growing our classroom libraries (and our mentor texts) to represent a much broader variety of people.

    1. sporting events and festivities.

      I've often wondered about the double standard associated with riots after sporting events as opposed to civil unrest related to injustice. This definitely clears up my understanding of this hypocrisy, I thought is was just me that was irritated by this double standard.

    2. The lone wolf narrative attempts to shift our attention away from how these acts are part of a legacy

      I never realized this, but it makes sense. This type of metacognition is what I hope to teach my students, but I'm worried that I don't practice this analysis skill enough.

    3. mainstream media

      Are we including social media in the distinction of "mainstream?"

    4. devastated by the ubiquitous assault against Black people

      To further understand this sentiment, I recommend reading Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by Bryan Stevenson, or watching the movie Just Mercy.

    5. mainstream media reinscribe and reinforce white supremacy,

      Currently, mainstream media is approximately 77% white in Chicago, and that is is the audience they are playing to. I think "reinforce white supremacy" is a hyperbole, and "have a white bias" would be more accurate.

    6. as educators, we must understand that we will not always have the answers. We will not always feel brave while doing this work. We will sometimes feel vulnerable, and this is OK

      What a powerful and necessary acknowledgement. And what an example this provides for our students, to admit that we are not experts in everything and don't have all the answers, and that our students' knowledge is insightful and deserving of respect as well.

    7. the same racist brutality toward Black citizens that we see happening on the streets across the United States mirrors the violence toward Black students that is happening in our nation’s academic streets.

      As Dr. Baker-Bell argues in "Linguistic Justice," anti-Black racism both infiltrates and affects the classroom as well as American society in general. The two cannot be separated, and we cannot adequately address racism in one area without also considering and affecting change in the other.

    8. .

      I can definitely see this as a way to add onto a curriculum and make it more personal for students. Students analyze language when reading novels and teachers can supplement curriculums with news clips and articles to show what language reveals in everyday life. I think if parts of these lessons appeared regularly in classroom lessons, students would continually be critical of media and engage regularly in responding to it.

    9. stories

      This is so important. I think back to Haddix article and how she described school writing vs. out of school writing. Writing as a form of social activism can change what it means to be a writer for students while helping them challenge media narratives.

    10. .

      I kept thinking about Pose, Wobble, Flow as I was reading this piece too! This research and writing suggestion would really contribute to a participatory culture in the classroom where students are actively responding to what they read and see. I think an authentic example like this would really demonstrate media bias and how passively consuming media is not be an option.

    11. One example of involving Black youth in this work is by having them design protest signs. By doing so, they can create and draw from their own language(s) to create loving and accurate portrayals of their experiences.

      I really like this idea, and it reminds me of a point that is made in Pose, Wobble, Flow by Antero Garcia and Cindy O'Donnell-Allen. How we can encourage our students to take their work to the next step? What are ways in which their work in the classroom can lead to change in the classroom and beyond? For example, the students could hold a school assembly to present their protest signs or post them on a social media platform. That way, their voices and work are able to reach others beyond the classroom and keep the conversation going.

    12. In the struggle for racial justice, critical media literacy can be a powerful tool that Black youth can use to deconstruct and rewrite the troubling and damaging narratives that mainstream media use to construct and oppress them.

      I completely agree with this statement and do think critical media literacy should be viewed as a tool that Black youth can use to do just that--deconstruct and rewrite narratives. Additionally, I think critical media literacy would also support students in their critical thinking of the media they consume and produce. What is the intended message? Who is the targeted audience? Who created this piece of media? Is this piece credible? As mentioned throughout, the media that is shared with the public, particularly the media that to pertains to the Black community, is framed very strategically and intentionally to harm, stereotype, and criminalize, and this is something we should all be extremely mindful of.

    13. (1) a motivational quote that inspires the activity, (2) a motivational question that guides the activity,

      I love the idea of starting these lessons with a motivational quote and also a motivational question. I think both are great tools to engage students in an inquiry mindset when doing critical literacy work.

    14. Being transparent with students about these feelings and involving them in this critical classroom work are crucial to social transformation.

      I believe this is important for us as educators to be transparent. If we can talk about the way that we grew up, what affected us growing up, ways we struggled or excelled in school (literacy autobiographies) as well as be open to where we are now then that will help deconstruct bias that students have about the teacher and help them understand their surroundings in racial inequality more.

    15. Undoubtedly, these dehumanizing portrayals of Black people in media are part of a historical lineage that continues to support a white supremacist agenda that leads to anti-blackness.

      This is a example of coherence theory where showing dehumanizing portrayals of Black people to be organized around the assumption of what really matters how Black people have (not) mattered.

    16. Long before white supremacists ever reached the shores of what we now call the United States, they constructed images of blackness and Black people to uphold and affirm their notions of racial superiority, their political imperialism, their will to dominate and enslave.

      This taps into many peoples funds of knowledge. We have been fed by these notions of racial superiority for so long that it has been tied to peoples cultural experiences and the way that they look at other cultures (specifically Black people).

    17. Many of the headlines in the media described the killers as “quiet,” “smart,” “nice,” and “typical American Boy[s].”

      It is interesting how the United States has a fascination with serial killers (who throughout recent history are mostly white) but look down upon gangs, gang members and gang violence. There are so many serial killer TV show series and documentaries but yet we do not have the same fascination and interest in African Americans who are murderers.

    18. “If that girl got out of the seat when she was told, there’d be no problem. But apparently she had no respect for the school, no respect for her teacher, probably has no respect at home or on the street, and that’s why she acted the way she did”

      This may be controversial but I think think there should be a perspective citing both her actions and how she was victimized but placing emphasis on the way she was victimized as a result. If she would have gotten out of her seat, there would have been a strong likelihood we would have never heard about this story. However, due to the fact that she did not and the officer used excessive force to remove her, clearly making her a victim in the situation.

      I could equate it to driving. If you stop at a stop sign for less than three seconds, that's against the law. Say one stops at a stop sign for less than three seconds but due that action they get involved in a hit-and-run accident that leaves them inquired. Could stopping at that stop sign for the full three seconds changed the outcome? Possibly, but being involved in the accident doesn't make them any less of a victim.

    19. We will sometimes feel vulnerable

      An important note as we are life long learners.

    20. rt youth in using new media genres to produce and distribute their own countermedia texts.

      How can we incorporate this thinking into our practice/project paper for CI450? Is this something that could be authentic and based on lives experiences of students/families?

    21. To do this critical work, educators must see themselves as human rights workers (Kirkland, 2015), activists, and intellectuals and imagine their classrooms as spaces for healing, love, and justice.

      This right here. This is definitely the charge educators have. This strays from the behaviorism theories that focus more on isolated skills that lack critical thinking or an expansion into different literacies. I think before even being able to see themselves this way, educators need to take time to understand the inherently sociopolitical nature of being an educator and look beyond our roles as authority figures imparting knowledge and into facilitators and co collaborators of these healing and transformative spaces.

    1. many colleagues in schools were struggling to help students of all ages unpack the questions and uncertainties they had learned in the hours since the election was called for Trump.

      I recall waking up the next day after the election was called in Trump's favor and walking into the school full of children who were already visibly traumatized and worried about what the future held for themselves and their parents. Myself and the paraprofessional that worked in my room at the time decided that rather than ignore the elephant in the room, we would hold a community circle so everyone could share their feelings. She and I had no training in this sort of thing, we just winged it and did our best. We cried with the kids that day. Four years later I can't say things are better, in fact, I'm sure they are worse. We need training to help us help our students through this collective traumatization brought on by politics. This editorial on how Trump has uses his rhetoric as a strategy and how if effects all of us was interesting and enlightening https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/trump-trauma-family-separation/

    2. but to recognize the increased stakes for students and families who were already marginalized in the United States and to address the needs of all students in our English classrooms today.

      Even today in 2020, kids are still suffering from the politics of our country. In my SEL block the week of the election, my students (half of which are Dreamers) were nervous, upset, and completely stressed. Twelve-year-olds should not have to worry about politics this much.

    3. shaped

      I completely agree with this. I think in order to continue to have classrooms that address trauma, healing and politics, teachers need opportunities for ongoing professional development to prepare them. Students would have a much more positive school experience if they had a curriculum that encouraged healing.

    4. schools

      This is so important. From my experience, SEL skills are often taught as an isolated concept. I think it would be so much more powerful if SEL skills were purposefully ingrained into the existing curriculum, across all content areas.

    5. Hurricane Katrina

      The instant access we have to information globally, allows students to not only be concerned with domestic natural disasters but hurricanes in other countries as well. Whereas the media can choose to exclude other narratives from places like Ghana and Honduras, young people through social media can be informed of global disasters and contribute to the relief efforts.

    6. viewed as a collective imperative

      At what point should one students trauma not impede others in the classroom?

    7. an act of denying the full humanity of students in schools.

      So often teachers feel the pressure to teach the standards, but in critical literacy theory, we should be focusing on bringing out our students identity through our teaching. Taking the time to acknowledge real world events and our reaction to them makes our learning experiences authentic.

    8. acknowledging our personal dismay with the outcome of the election, even as we also recognize that some readers did and, perhaps, still do support President

      Acknowledging bias - text to self connection - my students talked about the candidates for this years election in my virtual classroom yesterday. It was a difficult conversation being virtually in the homes of families through Google Meet, and having to acknowledge family beliefs instead of students forming their own within a physical classroom space outside of the home.

    9. Rather, such work must be framed in English education as a continual process that is never “done.”

      Yes, this is a great reminder. Healing isn't quite a destination, nor is it a singular journey, as the reading mentions. It is ongoing, continual, and more challenging at some times than others. This is something we must remind ourselves and our students of.

    10. The nuances of a “safe space” for SEL in our classrooms requires looking across social, political, and cultural factors for all members of a school community.

      I completely agree with this statement, and it reminds me of a critical point made in Pose, Wobble, Flow by Antero Garcia and Cindy O'Donnell-Allen that teachers cannot be apolitical in the classroom. In order to create a safe space in the classroom, we need to recognize who we are creating this safe space for and from who/what, and why we are creating a safe space. We cannot do this without acknowledging the social, political, and cultural factors that impact our students' lives--something that can be very much political, and for some, even controversial.

    11. the election spotlighted the ever-present and different ways vulnerability affects particular members of classroom communities who are already positioned precariously in the inequitable structures and histories of oppression within and outside of schools

      This is a great definition/exploration of privilege; are classrooms safe spaces, and to whom? How did the 2016 election change this and/or bring it to the forefront?

    12. Testimony, Witness, and Trauma as a Lens on Healing

      I am reminded of the book "The Vulnerable Heart of Literacy" by Dutro as well. Where testimony and witness are practiced to reframe what we know about trauma.

    13. more than simply passing up a missed pedagogical opportunity. Rather, not discussing the social fallout after the election is an act of denying the full humanity of students in schools.

      I think this happens a lot because teachers at times feel ill equipped to do this.

    14. At the same time, rec-ognizing the potential limits of teachers creating safe environments is also important: The sociopolitical systems beyond our schools press messages on students that cause harm even as teachers try to repair it.

      Can someone explain the last part of this sentence?

    15. but students and teachers carry those losses and disruptions into classrooms in ways that must then be viewed as a collective imperative, not only for the particular classroom community but also for the ways individual challenges are often connected to political systems and shared oppressions such as local, state, and governments’ responses.

      This also goes into transactional reader theory. Each student can experience the same trauma but how they write and talk about that event will be different.

    16. he longing of the child to matter in the world” (Shriver & Buffett, 2015, p. xv). The fundamental role that SEL plays in classrooms hints at a broader consideration: What does it mean to matter (or #matter) in this world?

      This practice appears to be rooted in emergent literacy theory and transactional reader theory. It focuses how students understand reading and writing processes and how they use these literacy skills in meaningful and contextualized ways of how they matter. This is also is having students bring their own schemata to bear meaning they construct from texts.

    17. English educators need support in addressing the emotional dimensions of teaching and learning in punctual moments like these, but also in the day to day of classroom routines and relationships.

      Many teachers are unequipped to deal with trauma leading up to and following elections for a number of reasons. They have to understand the events they are experiencing, their own biases and feelings regarding the same events, their students viewpoints and the community they serve, as well as understand how history has played a role in influencing peoples ideas. This very complex to understand to deliver to students over a some days or weeks.

    18. t is the oppressive and symbolically violent use of the essentials of our discipline—words, rhetoric, and modes of communica-tion—that sticks to us most in the ongoing aftermath of the election

      The way loose and symbolic rhetoric built on the schema of individuals, I had never experienced as a teacher or individual. The communication and rhetoric specifically by our current President made it hard to communicate with students clearly on the messages that were being conveyed. He skillfully used tapped into peoples schema of racism, homophobia, elitism, sexism and many other concepts that people were either drawn to or despised.

    19. questions about the mean-ing of this win and an uneasiness about its immediate effects in classrooms began spreading across our various networks—online and face-to-face con-versations, text messages, and emails.

      I remember when this happened four years ago. I was in my third year teaching and that Wednesday I had no idea what to do or say with my students. I was not ready for the conversations and questions they would bring as well as I was fighting my own feelings. Not only did I not know what to say that day but I also felt lost in how I would teach moving forward as well.

    20. youth’s politicized identities

      Based on my interactions with other teachers, I think first what needs to happen is teachers simply understanding that students identities ARE politicized. In addition, they need to realize their own identities are politicized as well in different ways...what I have found is that many educators believe in the meritocratic narrative, and if students aren't performing it is because of their own deficits and not an external influence. Many teachers don't want to bring these political conversations into the classroom because they do not yet recognize the sociopolitical and sociocultural context of schooling and classrooms. It can be an uncomfortable thing to do, but it is necessary.

    21. remake

      I think this is a really important and critical stance on SEL. Social emotional learning needs to be cultivated in the classroom, but if there is no action step or means of "repair", then it is lacking and it might be more of a decoration or ornament vs. a vehicle for change.

    1. was characterized by some of his teachers as a disengaged learner and a “struggling” writer, created and maintained three websites and blogs each day. From his bedroom to his neighborhood streets, he wrote and composed music lyrics, uploaded audio files, and directed music videos.

      This to me shows the danger of labeling students. There could be many underlying reasons why the student was disengaged. Instead of focusing on the deficits perhaps focusing on the strengths of this student's blog, and music lyrics could be harnessed to empower his/her writing.

    2. What I know for sure is that young people are affected by the social and political issues in their communities, locally and globally, and that they have opinions, questions, and concerns.

      Once again, this reminds me of Dutro's emphasis on the importance of a teacher having a critical understanding of how these issues affect the lives of our students in ways they may or may not affect our own. Young people are affected by these issues, and we need to create opportunities to be critical of these issues in literacy.

    3. Teachers must be writers.

      Yes! It is imperative for students to see their teachers as writers and even witness or take part in some of their writing practices. By doing so, these writing practices may appear more accessible and less intimidating to students. This may also challenge the students' idea of who a writer is and what they look like, encouraging them to embrace their writer identity and use this representation as a driving force.

    4. “I am a [blank] writer.”

      This is a great way to begin exploring one's identity as a writer, especially for youth who simply may not see themselves as one. For students who may not see themselves as writers, we can then ask, "How do you define writing? What kinds of writing practices do you engage in everyday?" By posing these questions, we are also challenging their perceptions of writing and encouraging them to view writing as something that also happens outside the classroom.

    5. I wanted to create spaces where youth writers define, understand, challenge, and use writing in and out of school and where they are critical ethnographers of their own writing lives.

      As educators, we should definitely work towards creating these spaces for our students in the classroom, but we should also recognize that these spaces may already exist for our students outside of the classroom. With this in mind, students should be granted agency in creating and designing this space--one that meets their needs, allows them to explore their identity as a writer, and more. This could be a collaborative effort between the teacher and students.

    6. “For me, writing is like breathing. I need it to survive.”

      I think this is extremely powerful and demonstrates the role that writing played in his life. It would be interesting to learn why or which part of the writing process led him to feel this way about writing.

    7. Teachers must be writers.

      Seeing yourself as a writer- you would think would be intrinsic, however I do not think it always is. This guiding principle brought me back to one of my first years of teaching when we had a Writers Workshop PD (in elementary), and we had to brainstorm ideas that we could use as "seeds" for modeling in the classroom. I remember it being really difficult, but once I got in the swing of it, it actually made my teaching better- because I was using MY stories, and not just the example story that was in the book. I think we need to constantly be pushing ourselves to remember we are all writers.

    1. Becoming the kind of teacher I wanted to become meant banging my head against the wall of the wrong choices I continued to make about teaching literature and writing.

      I think as teachers we need to be reflective and understand that we are lifelong learners as well. In order to best serve the kids in front of us we need to reflect on our practice constantly.

    2. My error—and the error of the department that hired me—was to see these students as “disadvantaged” instead of seeing their brilliance.

      Many students have so many stories and experiences to share. I think it is dangerous to focus on the label of "disadvantage" instead of looking at the whole child

    3. Voices from the Middle■ volume 24■ number 3■ march 201716Critical Literacy and Our Students’ LivesLinda ChristensenIreceived the US West Outstanding Teacher of the Western United States award in 1990. I treasured the award, not because I was the best teacher, but because after fifteen years in the classroom with two children at home, I was tired. The award came with a sabbatical. But it also came with humiliation and outrage. First, the award itself was boastful. I was a good teacher, but the best? No way. I wasn’t even the best in my school much less the entire western United States. But I was the one who had applied, pulled together a résumé with the help of my colleagues, and apparently answered their questions in the right way No one who gave me the award even watched me teach. So I felt pompous and overreaching with the title. But the worst part came later when my photo appeared in the local paper stating that I taught “disadvantaged” students.

      What does this term mean "disadvantaged students". Are we creating a harsh label or acknowledging there are students that have circumstances beyond their control. What do we as teachers do with this label? Do we get hung up on a label?

    4. As students read, we laugh, cry, and create community, but we also teach and learn from each other.

      In other words, as out in the vulnerable heart of literacy, they bare critical witness and testimony to one another while learning skills. Love this.

    5. I want my students to be able to “talk back” when they encounter anything that glorifies one race, one culture, one social class, one gender, one language over another:

      I really appreciate this "Want" for students. This is a powerful example of critical race theory as a means for students to identify and challenge these power imbalances that are often discreet in literature. Students should talk back about about books and the monoliths and stereotypes they often reproduce.

    6. I increased my capacity to engage them.

      This is a really powerful sentence. There are so many ways we can increase our capacities to better engage students; if students are not engaged, then there is a high chance it is something the teacher needs to change or adjust. This reminds me of the Vulnerable Heart of Literacy and how Dutro asks educators to increase our capacity to be vulnerable and bare critical witness and testimony in the classroom in order to use student testimony as an entry point and tool for literacy. This is a way we can work on ourselves as educators.

    7. The read-around is the living room of our classroom.

      I appreciate that the author frames the read-around in the classroom as a living room. It makes the classroom sound and, as I can imagine, feel like a safe space for students to learn, grow, and share their stores. This is extremely important, especially when students are sharing such personal and influential moments from their life.

    8. Dirk and his classmates didn’t care just about themselves, their neighborhood, and their city, they cared about other people’s lives too.

      This reminds me of the "mirror-window" element that multicultural literature may bring into the classroom. Students are given the opportunity to see themselves represented in a text while learning about the lives of others. This would allow students to identify the intersections between their lives and stories to those of others, as this reading mentions.

    9. I moved in the right direction when I stopped believing that I was the one who knew and they were the ones who needed to know.

      As educators, we need to view ourselves as learners. The exchange of ideas, opinions, and perspectives that occurs in the classroom should be a collaborative effort between the teacher and students. When we've made this realization and enact such collaborative efforts, only then will we be able to view our students as capable to produce and share knowledge.