Berry
Berry
Berry
Public schools have increasing numbers of its teachers fitting into one demographic, white
and female, while the numbers of African American teachers decrease (Ladson-Billings,
Crossing over to Canaan: The Journey of New Teachers in Diverse Classrooms. San
Francisco: Josey-Bass [2001]). Furthermore, African American collegiates who decide to
enter teaching may face a chilly climate as a result of their cultural and educational
experiences as they encounter devaluation in the classroom (Delpit, Other People’s
Children: Cultural Conflict in the Class room. New York: The New Press [1995]).
As a result, African American pre-service teachers may question the validity of the formal
curriculum presented in college as it conflicts with their perceptions of school, thereby,
leaving teacher-educators largely responsible for the quality of life and subsequent
devotion to profession of these students. Critical autoethnography, using
fieldnotes/research journaling, and student memoirs all through a theoretical backdrop of
critical race feminism provide a glimpse into the teaching and learning experiences and
dilemmas of one African American female teacher educator utilizing what I call personally
engaged pedagogy as a means of enhancing the quality of the learning experiences of
her African American pre-service teachers.
KEY WORDS: African American pre-service teachers; memoir; pedagogy; teacher education.
INTRODUCTION
As a member of society journeying through this new 21st century, I see
that public schools have increasing numbers of its teachers fitting into one
demographic: white and female (National Center of Education Statistics,
Who I Am
What I Believe
‘‘writings of women and men who are not legal scholars’’ (Wing, p. 5, 1997)
as evidenced in the social and political writings of Collins (1990; 1998),
Hooks (1990) and James (1999).
CRF is supportive of and concerned with theory and practice. As an
adherent of the CRF movement, I believe abstract theorizing must be
supported with actual concerns of the community. Here, I not only want to
support engaged pedagogy (which will be discussed later) as a theory but
also as a practice within the context of teacher education, a significant place
for pedagogy to live. More importantly, my desire is to have hooks’ engaged
pedagogy live as a means of improving the quality of experiences of an
important sector of the African American community: African American
teachers. As an advocate of CRF, I support a discourse of resistance such as
that found in engaged pedagogy (which will be discussed later).
CRF suits my sensibilities as it addresses all of my intersecting beings:
African American, woman, teacher-educator, researcher, scholar, sister,
friend, and more. By permitting myself to engage in the ideology of critical
race feminism, I can be more free to bring all of who I am into the class-
room. By doing so, I can disregard the monolithic discourse of the universal
Black woman and acknowledge the multi-dimensionality of my personhood.
But, why is critical race feminism important to teaching African Amer-
ican pre-service teachers? CRF encourages me to acknowledge and accept of
my multi-dimensionality as an African American woman who is a teacher-
educator, among other things. As such, I must understand that I bring my
whole self and all connected experiences, into the classroom. By under-
standing this, I also understand that my students bring all of their experi-
ences and knowledge into the classroom. What I intend to teach to them
gets filtered through these experiences. CRF also acknowledges the impor-
tance of storytelling. Students’ stories, including their stories of school, are
important to know in the context of their development as teachers because
these stories, these experiences, may influence what they learn and how they
learn it as well as what they choose to teach and how they choose to teach as
emerging teachers. Making their stories important to the teaching and
learning experience also centers, rather than marginalizes, their personhood.
CRF advocates for such centering. Through the lenses of CRF, I could ‘see’
my complexities. By viewing the world through such lenses, I can ‘see’ more
of the complexities of ‘‘others’’.
How I Made It
Life experiences, when permitted into the classroom and given voice, can
call to task the established of official knowledge (Apple, 2000) generated,
supported, and perpetuated in education. These life experiences, as the
foreground toward addressing issues within the curriculum, serve as one
significant component in engaged pedagogy. Hooks (1994) speaks elegantly
about the process of teaching students ‘‘in a manner that respects and cares
for ‘‘ (p. 13) their souls as opposed to ‘‘a rote, assembly line approach’’
(p. 13). As a contrast to the ‘safe’ place of lecture and invited response,
Hooks (1994) moves to a place of resistance as she espouses ‘‘a progressive,
holistic education . . . more demanding than critical or feminist pedagogy’’
(p. 15). hooks advocates an education that goes beyond the classroom
(Florence, 1998) and relates to them as whole human beings. Beyer (as cited
in Florence, 1998) suggests that this may mean including elements of pop-
ular culture in the classroom experience. In this study, I incorporated stu-
dents’ schooling lives in the classroom experience. Such valuation
38 THE URBAN REVIEW
Starting Out
I introduced myself to the class. ‘‘I just moved here from the Chicago
area, and I’m learning things about this area and the university. So, if I
make some mistakes, just bear with me and help me out a little’’. One
African American student asked, ‘‘Are you from Chicago’’ ‘‘No’’, I replied.
‘‘I’m from Philadelphia. But I haven’t lived there since I finished high
school’’. ‘‘Did you go to college in Chicago’’, another African American
female student asked. ‘‘No. I moved to Chicago to attend graduate school’’.
One African American male student offered a barrage of other questions
and I answered all that I felt were appropriate for response; some, such as
‘‘Do you have a boyfriend’’, I felt were too personal. I just didn’t know
BLACK ON BLACK EDUCATION 39
them well enough to share that much of me. At this point, I revealed part of
my story.
After graduating from college, I moved to the Boston area to take a
position in the higher education administration field. Two years later, I
moved to the Washington, DC area where I lived for four and a half years.
This was where I started working for the US Department of Defense. I
transferred my job from the Pentagon to the DoD European Theater of
Operations in Germany where I worked in three different cities during the
six and a half year I spent there: Frankfurt, Wiesbaden, and Mannheim.
However, after my first year in Germany, I decided I wanted to get back into
education. And for every year longer I spent in Germany, I longed deeper to
be an educator. Finally, I left to attend graduate school.
One White female student asked what I wanted to do when I was in
college. ‘‘I had a double major in music and communications and wanted to
go into sound engineering’’, I replied. ‘‘What instruments did you play’’,
asked an African American male. ‘‘I was a voice major in music and a
newspaper and radio major in communications’’, I replied. Following my
response, there were several requests for me to sing something. I politely
declined. Like a true prima donna, I just didn’t feel prepared to perform in
front of an audience. ‘‘So, what made you want to teach’’. . .
When I reflect on this question, I think about all of the teachers who were
positive role models in my life. I think about the teacher who taught me to
read. I think about the teacher who taught me to sing. I think about the
teacher who encouraged me to write. I also think about all of the experiences
I had inside and outside of school. When I wasn’t singing, I was teaching.
Teaching and learning have been a large part of my life. I suppose that is
why I longed for it so.
Students walked into the room and found their seats as they chatted
excitedly about a myriad of things of which I could not keep track. I started
the class session by having the students organize themselves in groups of
four to discuss the assigned reading for the day’s session and develop a
listing with explanations of metaphors and similes of schooling. In my
explanation of the task, I provided my own metaphor.
‘‘School is like a garden, the teacher is the gardener, the students are the
flowers and plants, and the principal is garden specialist or florist who
provides resources to care for the plants and flowers and guidance to care
for them properly. If the principal or the teacher lack something, the stu-
dents suffer. However, the care and nurturance they both provide help the
students to grow. Students can gain care and nurturance from outside
40 THE URBAN REVIEW
sources as well, such as parents and community members who are like rain
and sunshine to the plants and flowers’’.
The students applauded. One White female student raised her hand.
‘‘Does it have to be that complex’’? ‘‘No, but I’m sure you can find many
ways to make connections to the metaphors and similes you would like to
present with the help of the members of your group’’, I responded. Nancy
(I have changed all the names) asked, ‘‘Was school really that good for
you’’? Some students started to giggle. Nancy turned around in her seat and
looked at them harshly. ‘‘You know what I mean’’, she scolded. I explained
that the adults in my K-12 schooling experiences did, indeed, make school a
nurturing, caring place for me, most of the time. I didn’t have good peer
relationships in school until high school because my peers saw me as odd
and different. ‘‘I was the skinny, dark-skinned, smart girl with braces’’, I
explained. ‘‘But, you chose to use a positive metaphor’’, the White female
student responded. I explained to the class that they could use and/or share
any metaphor they wanted, positive or negative.
‘‘School is like a jail, the students are like prisoners, the teachers are
prison guards and the principal is the warden’’, one student I’ll call D.
Students were assigned to read a chapter of the text entitled Metaphors of
Schooling and I was in the midst of facilitating a discussion based on an
in-class small group assignment to develop metaphors and similes of school.
When D provided his response, the class responded in thunderous applause,
some students standing while clapping. I couldn’t help but to believe that
many of these students did not often experience school in positive ways.
Reminded me of D’s story of silence.
After our first week of classes, D indicated to me and students within
earshot that he thought this was going to be a good class. ‘‘How do you know
that? We just got started here’’, one African American female student pro-
claimed. ‘‘Because, man, she lets me talk. All these other professors ‘round
here always talkin’ about how bad I talk and tellin’ me to be quiet and stuff. I’m
a history ed major an’ I know my stuff; I jus’ don’ say nuthin’ cause they don’t
like me’’, D explained in a slow, deliberate manner. ‘‘He’s right, Professor
Berry. He doesn’t talk much in his other classes; he talks more in your class
than any of the other classes we have together’’, the African American female
student responded. ‘‘I guess this will be a good class’’.
‘‘Dr. Miss Berry’’, D called out. ‘‘Who was the worst teacher you ever
had’’? I shared with him and the rest of the class my experience with my
second grade teacher. Mrs. O was the only White teacher I had in
elementary school. After surviving and thriving through a very difficult first
BLACK ON BLACK EDUCATION 41
Test Anxiety
When I reviewed the syllabus with the class at the beginning of the
semester, I explained that rather than give long, arduous tests I would give a
short, narrative response quizzes each week based on the weekly reading
assignment. Some of the students questioned the purpose for the design of
42 THE URBAN REVIEW
the quizzes, stating they would prefer a multiple choice design. I explained
that this designed served two purposes. First, I would be able to listen to
their thoughts and opinions on the assigned topic. Second, essay (narrative)
style assessments would model the Praxis II teacher certification exams these
students would be required to take. Many students’ stories spoke of their
disdain for tests and testing, in class and in their memoirs. I could sense their
stress. As much as I wanted to just do away with the concept, this form of
assessment was an expectation within the School of Education. As a junior
faculty member, I didn’t want to fight a battle for something I could simply
modify. But how would I address the needs of my students? How could I
help them relieve some stress, if only a little, about the idea of taking a test? I
incorporated a choir exercise learned in high school.
On the very first quiz day, students entered the room looking quite
anxious and somewhat distressed. You could cut the tension in the room
with a knife. As they entered the room, I handed each student a quiz
paper. Since the quizzes were short (one or two questions), I allotted
25 min, half the class session, to complete the quiz. Most of the students
had completed the quiz and handed in their papers before the allotted
time had expired. When the quiz time had expired, I announced to the
class that we were about to engage in a physical exercise that required
touching another person; if they did not feel comfortable with this idea,
they were not required to participate. I then asked those students who
desired to participate to stand up and line up in a single file, facing
another person’s back. Students were then asked to massage the shoul-
ders of the person standing in front of them. The room immediately
erupted in laughter and conversation as the massaging began. I allowed
the students to continue in this manner for approximately one minute; at
this point, I asked to the students to turn around so as to face the back
of the person who was previously standing behind them and massage the
shoulders of that person.
When the minute expired, I asked the students to take their seats. ‘‘Why
did you think about the exercise?’’, I asked. Most students commented that
they enjoyed the experience and felt much better after taking the quiz. One
African American female stated that she felt uncomfortable but wanted to
try it to see what was going to happen. ‘‘I don’t think I’ll do that next time’’,
she added. ‘‘That’s okay’’, I responded. You don’t have to’’.
ENGAGING TENSIONS
Ethical Dilemmas
The dilemma of the written versus the non-written stories between tea-
cher-educator and her students was great. I did not provide a written
BLACK ON BLACK EDUCATION 43
To tell one story is to surpress other stories. Kelly (1997) believes that
what one recalls may be different from what one chooses to reveal from the
recalled. These choices may be influenced by (1) who is the recipient of the
information (2) the trust relationship between the informant and the
informed and (3) the context under which the information is being revealed.
Ellsworth’s (1989) concerns regarding the ‘‘asymmetrical positions . . . of
difference and privilege’’ (p. 315) held true here.
Through the process of personally engaged pedagogy, educational
autobiographies for engaged pedagogy, I realized that regardless of the
commonality of race I maintained the power position traditionally reserved
for the teacher. This is where the master narrative paradigm and issues of
recall and revealment intersect. I created the assignment, determined when it
would be ‘‘finished’’, and determined how it would be used. I followed the
traditional and expected role of the teacher. Therefore, what was revealed to
me in the students’ memoirs was filtered through this role. An assignment
intended to give voice to students’ experiences maintained the political
singularity found in critical pedagogy, as identified by Ellsworth. The
assignment produced empowerment coming from me, as teacher-educator,
not my students. Based on her (1989) writing, Ellsworth would be opposed
to such transactions in pedagogy. The ‘‘asymmetrical positions . . . of dif-
ference and privilege’’ (p. 315) played out in the initial assignment and not in
44 THE URBAN REVIEW
of ‘Round
Midnight,
Alright,
Out-of-sight,
Turn of the lights,
Fight
the power,
Tower of Power, and Lauryn Hill’s
The Final Hour.
To learn Black
is food so sweet
like cornbread and stewed chicken meat,
pigs’ feet
sweet
potatoes,
mangoes,
milk flowing
over sweetened sticky rice,
pies,
and cake
that make
you shake, like jelly ‘‘cause jam don’t shake like that.
To learn Black
in love
because
your man
or your woman
is all that,
got your back,
will pick up your slack
and understands that
when you’re feeling low
you can go
to him
to her
and he
and she
will know
without words.
I am learning Black, everyday.
As mentioned earlier, few African American students pursuing college
degrees select teaching as a profession for various reason too numerous to
mention. And those who do may not enter into the classroom if their teacher
BLACK ON BLACK EDUCATION 47
tion from which to address instruction may increase successful learning and
aid in the closing of the achievement gap for African American children.
These teachers may be preparing future teachers who could be instrumental
in eradicating standardized curriculums, high-stakes testing, master narra-
tives, and impositions of ideals and beliefs in public education. And, some of
these African American teachers may have counterstories for educational
uplifting of their students.
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