Friday, March 2, 2018

Ron Brown College Prep: Can We Move Back towards a Self-Empowerment Model of Education?


As we have mentioned before in class, the education system in the U.S has undergone massive changes, not just in the wake of desegregation, but complete changes in attitude about what a school or a teacher was supposed to accomplish. Many scholars and students will openly acknowledge that the education system that dominates in the U.S – a system based around standardized testing and academic acceptance rates- is deeply flawed in the inaccuracy of the measurements, but also the racial biases and divides they enforce and encourage.

But what can we do? Can we avoid playing into this flawed system?

These questions made me incredibly interested when I heard the Codeswitch team (which focuses on race and identity in the U.S.) at NPR would be following the first year of operation of a new, revolutionary high school in Washington, D.C. The high school - Ron Brown College Prep – is an all-boys, all-people-of-color school that is based on the leadership of Principal Ben Williams and the school psychologist Charles Curtis, a faculty of exceptional black teachers, as well as a team of staff and other students that are dedicated to emotionally supporting and personally engaging with all the students (called the CARE team). The entire organization, policies, and curriculum of Ron Brown are based on the goal of fostering self-love and self-respect in young men of color. They don’t even refer to their students as students, they call them “kings,” and the entire student body and CARE team begin each day complimenting each other and sharing their accomplishments from the day before. The CARE team is also responsible for resolving disputes or behavior that would normally result in disciplinary action in a typical public high school. In fact, going into the year, they had a no-expulsion, no-suspension policy. However, they weren’t able to maintain that policy until the end of 2017. This education model interests me because I feel like it is necessary and everything about it sounds like the perfect formula for bringing back self-empowerment education. The small student body, and the intense faculty investment in working with students at whatever skill level they enter the grade. Many of the students starting at Ron Brown had been passed through the D.C school system without truly learning the state-mandated curriculum. This story is not a simple turn-around of these once-neglected students into self-empowered kings who gracefully and completely rebounded from years of systemic racism over the course of one year. The problem is, the focus is on the students, not the academic standards of the state. Which means that this entire class of boys, nearly all of whom entered the school testing below their grade level, were not meeting the state goals established through standardized testing. Those scores are not meaningful to the school, but they are meaningful to the state. The problem is, school funding and achievement is often determined by these tests. So, can we base education on self-empowerment, in a system that does not value the self-empowerment of people of color? Is this the starting point we build from to change long-engrained racial biases? Or is this too late to build these school and community support systems? Does creating an all-black school promote racial separation?


The successes and failures of the first year of this school are so hopeful and heartbreaking. I strongly encourage everyone to listen to at least the first episode of the series; these students and teachers, –whether the school model ultimately succeeds or fails – are a testament to the basic concepts of empathy and human understanding that are so desperately in demand right now.

http://click.et.npr.org/?qs=69c792c51fbae17ab758c1dbd039d5473642d2510cc227e71453e9c132d6b9e481963d30fa947200d361f11fb0aa78cc69be21477aea8883eea5f49d69013fb0

1 comment:

  1. Mallory, I'm thinking about your question, "Does creating an all-black school promote racial separation?" as I respond to this. I think the Ron Brown model is powerful in the way that it empowers these "kings" through educational practices. I do think that this model can be implemented without promoting racial separation as a starting point to addressing greater freedoms and liberations. I think in this context, rather than singling out men of color, schools in marginalized communities should adopt these practices--especially pertaining to disciplinary actions. Instead of punishing students by suspending or expelling them, restorative justice methods should really be implemented in the public school system. So, I think reframing the Ron Brown model and establishing it within the educational system could be really powerful, especially for students who are in marginalized communities that are facing the injustices of poverty and homelessness. By encouraging students through self-love and self-respect and self-empowerment, students are more likely to be well-equipped on mental health standards to theorize and make more sense of their places in society. Of course, this is not THE solution, but I think it is a huge first step.

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Education is a key policy to any functioning community.  It provides the tools necessary fro achievement and success.  It also divides us an...