Outrage: Black Kids Are Dumb, Poor and Incapable of Success
Do y’all remember the line from
“The Color Purple,” “I’m poor, I’m Black...I may even be ugly. But dear God, I’m here”? Well, replace “ugly” with “dumb” and we have the rhetoric that our schools have force-fed Black kids for ages. And even after some of us make it to college, we still feel that way. Because, let’s face it, Black kids can’t excel academically if the system doesn’t cheat for them, right? https://twitter.com/nhannahjones/status/1068501207713488896 That’s why administrators were changing students’ test scores, attendance records and grades in
Atlanta,
D.C. and
Memphis so they could graduate from high school and why teachers give kids coursework
way below their grade-level. And that has to be the reason why
T.M. Landry College Preparatory School made their students lie and tell stereotypical sob stories on their college applications. But [pullquote position="left"]we know that Black kids are indeed very capable of achieving and excelling.[/pullquote] Anyone who has survived a poorly performing school knows this. Anyone who has suffered a teacher who didn’t give a damn about them knows this. Anyone who got to college and
figured out that they haven’t been set up for success but still graduated knows this. Anyone who is working to change that trajectory for the kids navigating the system knows that. But this narrative perpetuated in the school system has people believing that Black kids need a shortcut, handouts, pity and mercy. And it’s especially sad when the perpetrators in these situations are Black. Zora Neale Hurston was right—
all skinfolk ain’t kinfolk. If you aren’t pissed off, you should be. Because these people and these stereotypes are the reasons why our kids are victims of the
belief gap.
Hope: We Can Win
Have you ever heard of a school district wanting to close a high performing, fully enrolled school with a predominantly low-income student body? No? Well, it was happening here in Chicago—the
school-bulldozing capital of the world. But,
parents stopped it from happening. https://twitter.com/WeAreNTA/status/1050180416135725058 ICYMI,
National Teachers Academy, on the South Side of Chicago, was on the brink of being
converted into a high school. The parents, students, teachers and community members and even
Chance the Rapper began an
advocacy campaign that fought CPS and the other communities seeking to turn the elementary school into a high school. After a year of organizing, advocacy and legal battles, not only did they win a court injunction granting a reversal of the closing but CPS completely
abandoned plans to convert the school. https://twitter.com/PerezJr/status/1069758036447805440 This is a huge win for the NTA family, and also a win for parents all across the country who are fighting for their child’s education. Here’s the takeaway: https://www.facebook.com/neshrae16/posts/10106014256299269 Last week I wrote a piece about how the
Black education movement is growing. It’s true and NTA is a piece of that movement. We are using our
voices and
power. There’s evidence of
wins all around the country. We have to use this momentum. There’s no more room for excuses. This should not only give us hope—it should ignite a fire. This is our time.