Education
Related: About this forumTeachers reimagine US history lessons with eye on diversity
Sit down. Be quiet. Follow instructions.
Brandon Brown followed these rules when he started teaching, seeking order in a classroom setting he was all too familiar with growing up. But he quickly realized that was not working for his students and that they were just regurgitating what he told them. So, he decided to get creative.
Brown, a former history teacher and assistant high school principal, is now a Billboard-charting educational rapper who performs around the U.S. He founded School Yard Rap, a California-based company that produces music about historical Black, Latino and Indigenous people often not found in traditional textbooks.
By state standards, my students had to learn about old white slave owners, but they were young Black kids, and it wasnt connecting, said Brown, who released his latest album under his stage name, Griot B. This education system is whitewashed completely. But doing what I do, Im able to introduce and refocus on people of color so students are getting the full range of American history.
Teachers have long sought ways to deliver a complete version of U.S. history that engages their students and includes contributions by people of color. They have been reenergized after the 2020 police killing of George Floyd to take different approaches in the classroom that would challenge an education system many believe doesnt allow for critical thinking and forces a narrow worldview.
https://apnews.com/article/entertainment-music-arts-and-entertainment-education-race-and-ethnicity-921fe6ba9e58e3f510efcd3084a7b006
WiVoter
(1,126 posts)I know this article is from 2008, but there are states with legislation requiring the teaching of Native American culture and history. Wisconsin, my state, is one of them, but there are others. I would hope that this could become a "domino" for our whole country. Thank you for posting this!
https://www.edweek.org/leadership/native-american-history-culture-gaining-traction-in-state-curricula/2008/11
Response to Jilly_in_VA (Original post)
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Jilly_in_VA
(10,889 posts)Some are great. One I could mention is Emerald Academy in Knoxville, which is kind of an outgrowth of the Emerald Youth Foundation, which is kind of an outgrowth of Emerald Avenue Methodist Church and the Boys and Girls Club in that area. Others, OTOH, are disgusting excuses for private schools. So lumping ALL charter schools into one pot is not a good idea.
I'm not a great fan of charter schools either, especially where they take money from public schools. I'm a product of public schools, as are my kids, with the exception of my daughter who spent 4 years in a parochial high school. I would prefer to see charter schools be supported by other than public money. But let's please not dump them all in the same pile.
Response to Jilly_in_VA (Reply #3)
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