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Progression of Black Education at a Standstill

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Panel of educators cite issues with teachers, students and the system

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Ill-equipped teachers, a failure to recognize history and the inability to understand students are some of the issues affecting America鈥檚 lack of progression within black education. That鈥檚 according to a panel of educators who recently took part in a discussion titled听

The discussion, which took place in observance of Black History Month, was hosted by the 91桃色鈥檚听听and was moderated by听, senior advisor to the chancellor and provost on diversity and inclusion.

During its discussion, the five-person panel talked about a number of factors negatively affecting black education. Those factors, the experts said, are not ones that have just recently come to light, but rather ones that have existed for some time, for the most part without resolve.

鈥淲hen have we not been in crisis?鈥 asked听, assistant professor in 91桃色鈥檚听. 鈥淥ne factor is the devaluing of the black educator.鈥 Tabron expressed concern over the fact that many qualified black educators face a glass ceiling when it comes to promotion. Additionally, she said, teachers are ill-equipped to understand black students and in many cases, fear black students. To address these concerns, Tabron said, educators must be transformational leaders.

Sharon Bailey, program manager for diversity, equity and inclusion for Denver Public Schools (DPS) and a former DPS board member, said we shouldn鈥檛 be surprised by the education crisis, especially in Colorado, due to the lack of importance placed on education for all students. Bailey authored a听听that details how black students, teachers and administrators within the DPS system remain at a disadvantage compared to their white counterparts.

鈥淎s a community, there鈥檚 more that we can do,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like the weather 鈥 we only talk about it when there鈥檚 a storm coming.鈥

The failure to aggressively and proactively discuss the problem within black education is due to a lack of engagement with the black community, according to Landri Taylor, CEO of the听听and former DPS board member. Taylor grew up in the poverty-stricken area of South Dallas, where it was common for people like his grandmother to have jobs working as maids for white people. It wasn鈥檛 until his family moved to Oakland, Calif., that he experienced what it was like to be in a classroom of mixed races.

鈥淲e have devalued how important education is across this country. For me, it comes down to what are we going to do about it,鈥 said Taylor, who acknowledged that the nation has evolved in many ways. He added that in order to effectively address the situation, educators must start over. The educational gap, he said, won鈥檛 be eliminated until we tear down the system and put something else in its place. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 leave anyone sinking at the bottom,鈥 Taylor said.

, executive director of the听, and听, assistant dean in the Department of Education at Michigan State University, both acknowledged that part of the problem is history itself 鈥 whether it鈥檚 a failure to recognize it or a tendency to repeat it.

鈥淧eople don鈥檛 get it. They don鈥檛 study history. We don鈥檛 even see ourselves as being leaders,鈥 Easley said. 鈥淟earn your history and put it in context.鈥

Part of that history, according to Carter Andrews, involves the whitewashing of curriculum and the failure to realize that 鈥渂lack history is our history.鈥 In order to have progress, she said, educators need to discuss not just racism but anti-black racism. She added that educators and leaders need to change the cultural norms in education.

鈥淟iteracy has been white property from the beginning. Black history is not taught the way it should be taught," she said. 鈥淲e have to raise our consciousness if we want change.鈥