Thursday, June 12, 2008

Solidarity With Karen Salazar - Knowledge Equals Power

Last night I was helping a friend with her computer. She asked me to help her find a story about a teacher fired for being too Afro-centric. My fingers went flying and there it was on the Los Angeles Times web site. The writer of the story is Howard Blume and the title of the story is School rallies around teacher fired deemed too Afro-centric.

Los Angeles Unified School District teacher, Karen Salazar, was fired because she taught her students about the words of Langston Hughes and Malcolm-X in her classroom. She tossed in a little Tupac for some flavor. The story appeared on June 12th and is only accessible for seven days before it goes behind the wall of forgettable "It is a shame but what can we do?"

Well, that what would have happened in the past. This is future-time. If you can't see the video please boogie on over to Fire In Watts Other related videos "Protest Jordan High School, We Want Ms. Salazar Back!" "Save Ms. Salazar, Now"

If you can't teach a poet in a high school class I don't want to go to your school. If you cannot teach this poet, this man of letters, then there is something wrong in the LAUSD system that no amount of money can fix.

I, Too, Sing America by Langston Hughes




I, too, sing America.

I am the darker brother.
They send me to eat in the kitchen
When company comes,
But I laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.

Tomorrow,
I'll be at the table
When company comes.
Nobody'll dare
Say to me,
"Eat in the kitchen,"
Then.

Besides,
They'll see how beautiful I am
And be ashamed--

I, too, am America.

Poets.org has a good biographical page on Langston. The Library of Congress has a site called America's Story from America's Library and there is a section on Mr. Hughes. Masterpiece Theater/The American Collection has a bunch of links to help you learn more about Langston Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance.

I am especially riled up about this because I use to sit on the second floor of my local library reading "Jesse B. Semple" stories. I found an audio authorized collection of Jesse B. Semple stories at Town Hall. Mr. Ossie Davis is your guide.

There is a surface meaning and the true meaning. Don't let Jesse fool you. You might want to smack him upside the head but hear the whole piece out and you will gather what Langston is trying to tell you and the world. I would suggest that you use the Quicktime to listen to the .au format. You should be ok if you have Real Player.

Next is a video mash-up of Lansgton Hughes poem "The Weary Blues" and a look at some of our ancestors making with the syncopation.

Somebody explain to me why 21st century kids cannot be exposed to their literary history? Don't we want our students to know that the things that they are feeling have a voice and a connection beyond their immediate world?

Oh, yes. I forgot. Teach to the test. My bad.

Now as far as that other gentleman mentioned, there isn't much more that I can add. I would say that I'd want high school students to understand the context of the video of this roundtable discussion. I'd want them to know that Martin and Malcolm occupied the same space and time. I'd want them to come up with a third option.

And I'd want them to know that seeing the impossible is what forward thinking people do. Now more than ever. Solidarity to Karen Salazar and her students on their new journeys.

4 comments:

  1. Madness. Being an inspiring, passionate teacher, who wants to give your students a fuller sense of the world they're living in, is a dangerous business.
    I know it's a trivial pop-culture reference, but I often think of that scene in Donnie Darko when he's speaking to the young teacher who inspires him... who suddenly says, "I can't continue this conversation" "why?" "because I could lose my job". There was something so chilling about it.
    We don't have a constitution protecting freedom of speech in the UK, but it seems to me our teachers don't face the same censorship that they do in the USA. Ugh.

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  2. While I can understand the creative aspect of this, I did some research and found out the real reason her tenure wasn't renewed--She didn't follow her curriculum. She is an English Teacher--her class wasn't an Ethno-Centric Study class. It seems that she would submit her curriculum and then change it to one that was heavily centered on MODERN literature. That is a specific study that was not the purpose of the class. I agree with the School Board’s decision. English class should heavily rely on the classics. If her purpose was to teach about civil rights, she could have chosen books that taught about slavery from a human perspective rather than an activists view and let the children make up their own minds about how they viewed it from a story perspective. She was also introducing the children to rap music that they shouldn't have access too, because they can't be sold to minors.

    Bottom line--she didn't follow the standard circular for the class she taught. She knew better. She needs to get her Doctorate and teach college if she wants to have such a specific class focused on African American Studies, General English class isn't that class.

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  3. Define "Classics"? If you mean materials from a male,Eurocentric focus? Now wait... hold on.I had to catch myself. We need what those standards contain.

    What I did was to go to the LAUSD website so that we could be accurate in our discussion. I visited the LAUSD Guidelines for Instruction. As of 6/18/08 the only guidelines available was for mathematics and history
    http://www.lausd.k12.ca.us/lausd/offices/instruct/instruction_guidelines/
    The others are being revised.

    I also went to the California State Board of Education, there was a little more meat on those bones
    http://www.cde.ca.gov/be/st/ss/index.asp
    I reviewed the English Language Content Standards for Public Schools.

    8th Grade:
    3.0 Literary Response and Analysis
    Students read and respond to historically or culturally significant works of literature
    that reflect and enhance their studies of history and social science. They clarify the ideas
    and connect them to other literary works. The selections in Recommended Literature,
    Kindergarten Through Grade Twelve illustrate the quality and complexity of the materials
    to be read by students. (page 58)

    I also checked the Reading/Language Arts Framework for grades 9-12, Same thing:
    3.0 Literary Response and Analysis
    Students read and respond to historically or culturally significant works of literature
    that reflect and enhance their studies of history and social science. They clarify the ideas and connect them to other literary works. The selections in Recommended Literature, Kindergarten Through Grade Twelve illustrate the quality and complexity of the materials to be read by students.
    Now I'm still looking for the Recommended Literature list. One of the articles did state that The Autobiography of Malcolm X is an approved text. I need to find out if that was for English as well as History.

    I invite you to share where you found your information and the URL so that we all can take a look and evaluate with full information.

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  4. It is inspiring to see young men and women take a stand for there education. It is inspiring that teachers are fighting to introduce new and thought provoking materials in the classroom. It is inspiring to see students, and other organizations champion causes for change in a deteriorating school system.
    But . . . beware of who you have selected to represent your cause or better said who has selected you to represent his/her own cause.

    Is he or she a person of intergrity, of good report. In the end it will come to light.

    Do your research.

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