Photograph; Q99.info
By Liz Dwyer | Originally Published at Good. February 29, 2012
In a bold comparative analysis of The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, Jada Williams, a 13-year old eighth grader at School #3 in Rochester, New York, asserted that in her experience, today’s education system is a modern-day version of slavery. According to the Fredrick Douglass Foundation of New York, the schools’ teachers and administrators were so offended by Williams’ essay that they began a campaign of harassment—kicking her out of class and trying to suspend her—that ultimately forced her parents to withdraw her from the school. In her essay, which was written for a contest, Williams reflected on what Douglass heard his slave master, Mr. Auld, telling his wife after catching her teaching Douglass how to read. “If you teach that ni**er (speaking of myself) how to read, there will be no keeping him,” Auld says. “It will forever unfit him to be a slave. He would at once become unmanageable, and of no value to his master.”
Williams wrote that overcrowded, poorly managed classrooms prevent real learning from happening and thus produces the same results as Mr. Auld’s outright ban. She wrote that her white teachers—the vast majority of Rochester students are black and Hispanic, but very few teachers are people of color—are in a “position of power to dictate what I can, cannot, and will learn, only desiring that I may get bored because of the inconsistency and the mismanagement of the classroom.”
Instead of truly teaching, most teachers simply “pass out pamphlets and packets” and then expect students to complete them independently, Williams wrote. But this approach fails, she concluded, because “most of my peers cannot read and or comprehend the material that has been provided.” As a result, she continued, not much has changed since the time of Douglass, “just different people, different era” and “the same old discrimination still resides in the hearts of the white man.” Williams called for her fellow students to “start making these white teachers accountable for instructing you” and challenged teachers to do their jobs. “What merit is there,” she asked, if teachers have knowledge and are “not willing to share because of the color of my skin?”
According to the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle, Williams’ parents transferred her to another school, then withdrew her altogether. The conservative Frederick Douglass Foundation gave Williams a special award, saying that her essay “actually demonstrates that she understood the autobiography.” They have also reached out to the school for an explanation of the 13-year-old’s treatment.
While the issues Williams raises are controversial, even Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has acknowledged that closing the achievement gap requires more black educators in the classroom. But because the large majority of current teachers are white, they have a responsibility to figure out how to be effective with children of color.
Given that only 19 percent of School #3’s eighth graders were proficient in language arts last year (and just 13 percent in math)—well below the state average of 60 percent—it’s clear that the school and its teachers need to change their approach. Attempting to silence Williams by branding her a troublemaker and driving her off campus isn’t the answer. Now she is walking away from this controversy convinced that white teachers don’t want to educate black students at all.
As the parent of two black boys I know firsthand that white teachers can excel at teaching black children. What set those outstanding teachers apart was their genuine desire to see my boys succeed and hard work to build relationships with them and with our family. What if Williams’ English teacher had used her essay to turn a critical eye on her teaching practice and her expectations for black students? What if the school had used it as a jumping-off point to start a student-centered dialogue about what everyone—teachers, students, and parents—must do to improve the struggling school? Until that happens in our schools, America’s achievement gap will endure.
To See and Hear Miss Jada Williams Reflection Please Travel to In Her Own Words; Connect Frederick Douglass Narrative to Today’s Education System click here
Will we see more of this as TFA continues to grow? What are the consequences of using VAM as a measure to rank teachers and fire the ones with the least growth? Studies have shown minority teachers are disproportionately affected by this policy because they choose to teach in hard to staff school with students of the same background.
That student has her eyes open and was telling it like it is. It is our job as teachers to empower students, not shut them up. If what is reported is indeed true, then that was one teachable moment whose opportunity was missed.
Dearest Martha Infante …
Fractionally, I understand why the article and Jada’s action took you where it did; still, my mind went in a very different direction. I think of how people in pain frequently pour their anguish out onto others. It has long been my belief that this need not be. Empathy educates. My Grandpa said it best for me, Two wrongs do not make a right.” Nor does silence stifle the “fight.” [I use the word in quotes for I do not believe [verbal] violence begets a solution.] In Jada’s words I see the struggle of racism and how it continues. In recent years Caucasians have embraced the notion and nomenclature of colorblindness. Parents say that their children are unlike we; they see no color.
Yet, racism thrives. Silence survives. As a society we sanction colormuteness. Think of how many facebook groups forbid conversations on the subject. We pretend that we do not see, that we let people be – we claim the to be connected. Yet….We feel no pain. A child cries out and we blame the victim. We make excuses…were it not for how the system treats its Teachers?
How do we treat each other? Sadly, people deride. We hide. We haveSecret Daughters, sons too. We associate with our kind, Many Americans Have No Friends of Another Race: Poll. We deny what we deliver. Oh, how Educators might bemoan the School-To-Prison-Pipeline, but for me, Jada Williams asks another question. What will be for you, for her, and for me when Employers Prefer White Felons Over Blacks With No Criminal Record.
I read Jada’s words and I do not think of my life as a Teacher. I think of how we might help society reach her and all those who live in a world where whites claim colorblindness and live colormuteness. I sigh. I cry. For me, Jada Williams speaks to a broader truth! Victimization, exploitation, and ways in which we might realize a shared salvation. People in pain, be these Teachers or students, are affected by racism!!!
May life bring you peace, prosperity, pleasant dreams being the best and your reality…Betsy
Jada, come to my classroom and brighten my humble little corner of the world with your brilliance! You presented an essay that clearly demonstrated fabulous critical thinking and analysis of the current situation which is obviously very important to you–and rightly so. Run, as fast as you can, from that school and those “educators” because you can do better elsewhere.
As a veteran teacher this makes me so sad. But I do know it is true; I\’ve experienced it. When I was new to my school my department chairs said things like not to expect the same from black students (as if they were doing them a favor) and that the things I was teaching my middle schoolers was only supposed to be taught to the students going to college.However, things are changing. Lately, as a teacher who has always set high expectations for my students, I\’ve also been accused of being a racist when students don\’t want to work and I continue to push them.
Excellent essay! I wonder, however, how Jada performs on standardized tests? Is she part of the small minority in her school who are deemed proficient? Wouldn\\’t this essay be a better indicator of her ability than test scores?
I understand Jada’s point. It’s the same point I made when I was in high school in Philadelphia, PA. My Social Studies teacher became angry with me several times when I raised the same questions as Jada. My English teacher cringed daily as I entered the classroom because she knew I would have a glare in my eye as she struggled to control the classroom. Since I wanted to become a teacher myself back then, I knew how important it was for me to do well in English. I wrote a news article about the conditions in my classrooms and sent it in to the local news papers, The Daily News and the Philadelphia Inquire. It was published in both, to my surprise. My uncle was a reporter for the Philadelphia Inquire at the time and when he saw my article he came racing over to my house to congratulate me for being so forthcoming. My teachers, on the other hand, had a hard time with me being in their classroom. I remember the principal coming into my English classroom to observe my teacher. He reprimanded the teacher and told her to “get her act together” and gain control over her classroom. She never really did. I didn’t let it deter my desire to become a teacher though. I studied the textbook on my own and completed all of the exercises on my own time. In essence, I taught myself.
It’s a shame that the public school systems in this country continues to fail it’s students on a daily basis. I have never met Jada but I am so proud of her. She is a courageous leader and will succeed in spire of her teacher’s failures. Congratulations Jada!
Dearest Dona…
We cannot thank you enough for your comment! We have never read a narrative that resonates so fully with our beliefs. You embody our vision. ‘Tis true; empathy educates.
If perchance you choose to see and hear Jada, In Her Own Words, Jada Williams Connects Frederick Douglass Narrative to Today’s Education [Video] we share.
Again, may we express our abundant appreciation for the comment and more so, for you being you! We are grateful.
Dearest Dona…
Oh my gosh! Your words, your wisdom and your story. I am grateful. I more than appreciate your sharing. May I congratulate you! You too trusted that it is better to think and not blink; you and Jada each escaped the constraints placed upon you. I think of how the world might be if we were actively honored for being insightful, open, and deep. My hope is that someday everyone feels free to be. Perhaps, that might be, or become our standard?
I often hear my Mom’s words. “Teach the children to be autonomous.” If only….
My hope is that one day “education” will be an expression of empathy. Might it be that we embrace the notion that to learn is to explore, not to ignore? May our young never walk on eggshells. May punishment not be our guide. May we each be our own Teacher and trust that truth cannot be confined.
Dona, I wonder; how many of us teach ourselves. I suspect we all do. Our Teachers, I believe, are the persons who, for good or bad, inspire and encourage us.
I am grateful that you are you and trusted your being. Jada too. The two of you are magnificent.
May we honor our strength and stay forever young…
May life bring you peace, prosperity, pleasant dreams being the best and your reality…Betsy