Friday, November 13, 2015

Officer Fields Reminds us of our National Failures

Guest Column - Media Version
By Nick Gregory
Michigan Education Voice Fellow


Three weeks ago when School Resource Officer Ben Fields slammed an African-American girl to the floor most people were surprised that could happen in a classroom. What’s not surprising is that Fields has averted criminal charges and the Columbia, SC incident may become another bullet point on a growing list of national failures. 

Instead of tackling important issues like institutional racism or the impact of zero tolerance policies in schools, the conversation was hijacked by people insisting the officer was simply doing his job when he injured a non-violent student and threw her across the classroom. Rather than learning from the incident, we have been implored to focus on a ‘problem’ that’s been in existence as long as backpacks: The entitled and bratty kids plaguing our nation.

Blaming a generation of students in response to the officer’s rage is predictable and sad. Before blaming the victim, a 16-year-old in this case, consider all of the ways the situation could have been handled better by the adults.

An army of critics want to convince you that kids these days are the problem so there’s no need to examine failed policies or the negligence of Fields.

When you hear about the kids these days, it’s often coded language describing kids whose geography, look and race are different from the person offering the critique. Those kids, not your children, of course, are the problem. Critics of today’s youth recount childhood stories resembling Norman Rockwell paintings – when a menacing look from an adult could redirect a child and obedience reigned supreme. The glory days when all the good parents spanked their children have been gone for decades, not weeks.

Children need to learn about accountability, but assuming the best way to reach that end is to body slam the respect out of them is ludicrous. Our charge as a nation is to provide a quality education to every child, even those who text during class or don’t follow directions. If you will agree that we can do better than “legally” permitting physical assault in our classrooms, I will concede that we have some troubled kids making it difficult.

Our meager attempts to examine our national conscience about important issues are being drowned out by loud proclamations about the crumbling morality of society. As a result, the analysis of the Columbia, SC incident has largely missed the point. Addressing inequity in American schools and advancing how we deal with racism in this country are challenges that require courage and focus. Distracting from those challenges with sweeping, presumptive generalizations is timid and useless.

Our children are taking their cues from the adults. We slip into a programmed national debate where emotional arguments turn Officer Fields into a hero or a villain depending on what story you choose to buy. We pick sides and then fill in missing information with a narrative that fits our particular perspective.

What example do we set for children if we keep score on Facebook and Twitter while ignoring a search for solutions to problems we know exist? Being right, no matter how clever our 140-character idea, is not going to solve anything if we're talking about the wrong things in the first place.

Rather than denying problems exist, our energy would be better spent figuring out why so many young people are doubting the promise of America. We are not the first adults to raise a generation of children who are losing faith in our ability to leave them a better world.

This generation of students is not failing us, we as adults are failing them. It is time to own up to our mistakes and learn from the lessons of injustice alongside of our children.

- Nick Gregory

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Nick Gregory has been a social studies and journalism teacher at Fenton High School since 2000 and he has been a National Writing Project Teacher consultant and a junior varsity basketball coach since 2003. Gregory is a Michigan Education Voice Fellow and he has exhibited photography related to Detroit and social justice causes since 2011. Gregory, who has a Masters degree in Educational Leadership, believes that building positive relationships helps students find their passion for learning.

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Stressed? Do Something Productive

This is an open letter addressed to a dozen teachers I normally get to see at lunch during the school year. Our lively lunch topics vary, but inevitably we end up talking big ideas about the culture within our building and our school district. We wonder aloud about the decisions made by our leaders and we sometimes get discouraged by the environment and political process. The underlying conclusion I have drawn is that teachers should stick together and influence their local districts by elevating their collective voice. Ultimately, when we have a collective voice grounded in our professional values we support our students ... and one another. No one is proud to admit it, but sometimes all that stands between good teachers settling for mediocrity are students and colleagues. Our journey in my high school is probably very similar to the journey across staff lounges throughout the country.


“I drank a lot of wine. I lowered my professional standards. And then I left the public school arena.”  
- A teacher in response to how she coped with stress

To My Brothers & Sisters at the Lunch Table,


Although individual options vary about how to manage stress in our careers as educators the piece titled, Stressed Out! What Can Teachers Do About It? will help you see you're not alone ... and there are ways to make it better. With parent-teacher conferences around the corner and the teacher evaluation process underway, the adrenaline of September seems a distant memory now.   


The above option (drinking a lot of wine) is not one I am endorsing, but I suppose it could be tempting to some following a confusing and disheartening round of lay-offs. Expectations to carry out  half-baked initiatives lacking a clear purpose may be stifling your creativity and motivation, but contrary to the quote above you are passionate and generally optimistic. That is exactly why you need to make your positions clear to our leadership. Teachers are experts and our ideas are critical to decision-making.


Soon, our Board of Education will interview and hire a full-time superintendent of schools. I hope you will get involved in the process even if it means you have to push, pull, drag or backdoor yourself into the process ... be heard. Next November, three Board of Education seats will be up for election so get a head start now.


In a profession and environment that may lack support for teachers, the story linked here reminds us to get back to very important and basic ideas like building relationships with students, using technology to connect with other teachers or even switching schools.


Do yourself a favor and click the link when you have a mindful minute or two to spare (placing it here again) and think about the most important aspects of our profession. Why are you a teacher?   


While it can seem daunting to influence politics at the state level, we can make our voices heard in our school district. Soon, we can have ownership in WHO WE HIRE as superintendent and the PRIORITIES that will drive the final selection by our elected board. Whatever your own brand of leadership and communication, be heard. We are the professionals who know best what our students need. If we choose to own this indisputable fact and elevate our voices in the political process our students will be better off because of our effort.
  
We got this,
Nick

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Officer Fields & Our Youth Entitlement Problem


Part of the incident as shown on news.yahoo.com
When School Resource Officer Ben Fields slammed a 16-year-old African-American girl to the floor and tossed her across the classroom, his actions that day became the source of national scrutiny.

If not for the video footage would we even believe something like this could happen in a classroom? For some among us, the duty-bound officer also became the face of a ghastly national problem.

Police brutality in light of reports that the student suffered a broken arm, rug burns and emotional trauma? No.

Inequity in our schools, the impact of zero tolerance policies or the role of law enforcement in our schools? Nope.

Racial divisions in the United States? Nah.

Officer Fields is becoming a hero to a cause that has been in existence as long as backpacks. Apparently, we need to address the entitled and bratty kids problem plaguing our nation.

The kids these days, long a euphemism relegated for use by the elderly, now belongs to 30-somethings on Facebook. Even Twitter blew up with shots at the damn kids now-a-days because they are such a rude and smug bunch, unlike the kids 15 or 20 years ago. Right.

When we hear about the kids, just beware of the potentially coded language meaning those kids - the kids whose geography, look and even race may be vastly different from the person offering the critique. Those kids, not our own children or relatives of course, are the ones criticized most. And can we please quit with the glory days when all the good parents spanked their children and it only took a menacing look from an adult to re-direct a kid. Those days have been gone for decades, not weeks. Enough already.

Isn't bitching about kids (and their disrespect, and their video games, and their music, and their saggy drawers, and on and on and on) a page out of an old playbook? Every generation seems to point to the kids as this sort of blanket response to societal problems that erases any personal responsibility from the adults who are complaining.

For instance, in Ted Nugent's ridiculous rant he claims someone "finally gave the child a dose of reality" and how shameful it is we live in a world where an, "undisciplined brat could be made out to be innocent while a good cop can be called a perpetrator." Not sure about you, but I never witnessed a "dose of reality" when an adult took down a kid in school for refusing to comply. Take a look at the comments on Twitter suggesting justice was served. The victim blaming response when a child messes up and displays poor judgment is a petulant comeback by adults who refuse to address the more complex reality. I understand that young people need to learn about accountability, but to assume the best way to reach that end is to body slam the respect out of them is ludicrous.

If you will agree that "legally" allowing physical assault in schools is not in anyone's best interest, I will agree that we have some troubled kids out there making it difficult for schools to deliver a quality education. In some cases, extremely difficult. 

Leon Lott press conferenceAs expected, Deputy Fields lawyer reminds us his actions were "justified and lawful." If the implications weren't so serious, it would be laughable that the same incident that led to his firing and an FBI investigation has also resulted in two teenage girls being arrested for "disturbing school." The 16-year-old student who was the target of Field's aggression was arrested and a classmate was cited for having the audacity to record the incident and speak out in class. Meanwhile, we continue to hear that the videos don't tell the complete picture and some supporters of Fields pretend he had no other options in the classroom that day. I'm not buying it.

Predictably, we have slipped into a programed "national debate" where emotional arguments turn this officer into a hero or a villain depending on what story you choose to buy. We pick sides, exchange barbs with political slants and then fill in missing information with a narrative that fits a particular perspective and ideology.

Maybe this generation of young people is not failing us as much as we are failing them.


Our children are taking their cues from media personalities and adults who avoid substance while turning our attention to slow motion replays and legal strategies so we can strengthen our opinion on the matter.

Maybe it's not as much an entitlement problem of our youth as it is our failure as adults to acknowledge and solve the real problems we lug around every election cycle without much change.

We can start by agreeing on what all students should be entitled so we can divert our attention from the make-believe issues.

We must ensure every child is entitled to:
  • A quality education with professional teachers, leaders and a community of support
  • A safe learning environment
  • A voice that is valued in a democracy that understands their background and their perspective
  • An educational system that is funded with proven interventions and programs that serve student needs 
  • Opportunities for success and preparation for career & college 
  • An educational program that embraces the rich diversity that makes the United States special
  • Optimism regarding what they can achieve  
  • Trust in the people who serve (and protect) them in our schools
This list could certainly be longer (add your ideas in the comments). The point here is that if we allow the conversation to drift off into griping about kids these days then we will miss the part about creating lasting and important changes in our schools. It will take courage and heroic leadership to advance changes that have staying power. Improvements will not happen by complaining about students.

Of course, we want to do a better job raising responsible, respectful and culturally aware children, but let's not assume we are the first adults to raise a generation that is losing faith in our ability to leave them a better world (Remember the Vietnam era?). Our energy would be better spent figuring out why so many young people are doubting the promise of this nation rather than denying problems exist.

We, as adults, share responsibility for the mess we find ourselves in and we can begin by owning up and talking about the injustices and the lessons we are learning alongside of our children. After all, we are the parents, grandparents, teachers, neighbors and family friends of these kids and blaming them is counter-productive. We need to start by listening to children, especially those children who may not look like us or come from the same neighborhoods and schools where we live. Listen to their parents. Their teachers. Listen.

If we aren't mindful, we will miss an opportunity to work toward addressing the education gap that exists in our country. I am sick of talking around the tough issues in favor of the hot topic du jour. What example will we set for children if we spend our time and energy keeping score on Facebook and Twitter while ignoring a search for solutions?

Simply being right, no matter how clever our 140-character idea, is not going to solve the problems we have if we're talking about the wrong things.

Our children do have an entitlement problem and we need to deliver what they are entitled. It's past time we own our share of that problem and start demanding we do a better job for all children.

If you feel the way I do, post this blog to Facebook or Twitter and/or write a letter of concern to your local school board member or government official. This is an opportunity to turn voice into action and get to the root of our problems in American education.

All of this, you say, because a video of an officer slamming a child to the floor went viral?

It's not because it went viral. It's because it took me seeing that video to realize that we have an obligation to speak for those who do not have a voice (or a camera).

Sitting by silently will not make our schools better. I do not need another video to remind me that the entitlements children deserve are being ignored. This incident reminds us that as a nation we are not living up to a fundamental principle that all children should have an equal opportunity to pursue their ambitions. Quit with the kids these days routine and do something constructive about the real problem of adults looking the other way.

Eventually, Deputy Fields' actions will become background noise in our education policy. If we fail to shine a spotlight on the negative culture within too many of our schools in this country, our response will be predictable and useless once again: Those damn kids these days!

TAKING ACTION

It is not safe to assume people have heard your point of view before or that they will dismiss your stance. Educational opportunity and fighting for the common good are not ideals beholden to a specific political party or ideology. Please be heard.
  • To find your local school board and school leaders, visit your school district web site. Write to them about your concerns. Your concerns in your district are important.
  • Write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper or news outlets.