“The
answer is in the room.” The members of
our Aspiring Principals Academy cohort heard this expression frequently from
the APA faculty when we were growing through (that’s right I said “growing
through” instead of “going through”) our three-week summer intensive
experience. We learned quickly that we
couldn’t look for the answer in a book, or seek it from a person of
authority. We, as Principal-Residents,
had to find the answer through the work, in collaboration with our colleagues,
and, most importantly, inside of ourselves.
When
I attended the 1st Annual Equity in Education Conference, organized
by the Center for the Education and Equity of African American Students, I
thought about this expression – “The answer is in the room” – especially after listening
to the keynote address given by Dr. H. Richard Milner. Dr. Milner shared with
us points about equity that affect all students of color, especially
African-American students. “Our talk
matters,” and “When the music changes, so must the dance,” easily could be clichés;
Dr. Milner supported the the points he was making, though, with quantitative
data, challenging the attendees to consider what biases and prejudices could be
holding educators back from supporting children of color in ways that they need
to be supported to learn, to be successful. (I understand that the discipline data
that Dr. Milner showed was troubling to some of the people from the districts
whose numbers were shared. Frankly, it was my wish that Dr. Milner had created
a table with the discipline data from all of the Midlands’ districts, including
ours, so that we could all get those cards on the table.) I did not expect to
leave that powerful keynote with THE answer, a clear course of action to write
the wrongs of inequity. But Dr. Milner achieved his purpose; I was thinking.
Two
third-year Social Studies teachers - one white, one black – who teach in a
high-poverty, high-minority middle school in downtown Columbia, conducted the first
session I attended, entitled, “Critically Conscious and Engaging Social Studies
Instruction.” I could tell that these
two young teachers were very nervous, but the content of their session gave me
the opportunity to consider what it looks like/sounds like to ask students to
be “critically conscious” – not just to accept the stories that traditionally
have been told or the histories that have been passed generationally as
TRUTH. The answer I found in that room
wasn’t about strategy or terminology in teaching students of color to examine
how society defines them. The answer I
found in that room was in how these two amazing teachers viewed their children
– as thinkers, as doers, as change-agents, as scholars who could do the
research, ask the hard questions, find their own truths and define themselves
in their own terms. I left wishing that the children in their classes would
only ever feel as valued as they are by those two teachers as they progress
through their education, but knowing that, in all likelihood, that would not be
the case.
After
the conference was over, I found myself reflecting, no, seeking an answer – I couldn’t
help myself - for how educators must not only address inequities, but change
them so the education, the lives of students of color are valued. What can I DO? I needed only to look as far
as the theme of the conference, “Start Where You Are, but Don’t Stay There.” The gauntlet was thrown. The conference itself was the challenge. The members of the cohort and the faculty of
the APA probably left the Equity Conference and have generated through our own
work more questions than answers centered on equity, but none of us are content
with just having a conversation anymore. Now is time for action; we can’t stand
still. The power is in the room.
Julie, I continued to be challenged personally by your work through the APA program. By asking yourself to put on the lens of the student and thinking about what effect we can have on them, you are valuing different perspectives (Standard 1.4). Trying to be a better leader by more deeply understanding our students is powerful. I challenge you to find your specific call to action in this work, which I know you will. And then as Chad Morris, head football coach at the University of Arkansas, says, "Put it in the left lane and hammer down!"
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your thoughts on the Equity Conference. I have found myself in that same phase of reflection and need for action. I liked how you modeled learning and growth throughout the post (Standard 6.2).
ReplyDeleteI also noticed that you have been weaving that thought of "Start where you are, but don't stay there" into your writing and into your professional conversation. It is obvious that this has become a personal call to action and I look forward to being beside you on this journey (Standard 1.2).