Thursday, January 22, 2009

America's Song



last tuesday i made everyone with hispanic, latino, native american, and african american blood wait outside the classroom. i told them that they wouldn't be able to attend classes that day.

i had two students left.

this was the only way i could think of to really show students what segregation must have felt like and still feels like today. they were shocked. we read and then watched dr. martin luther king jr,'s i have a dream speech, followed by the inauguration of our 44th president.

i wanted the students to understand that the people who have gone before paved the way for them and that they are paving the way for the people who come after them.

almost all of them had never seen an inauguration, seen pictures of washington d.c., or understood the civil rights movement. we sat in the back of the room with linked arms and listened to two different versions of we shall overcome, closed our eyes, and imagined being in the streets of selma, alabama.

i live and breathe diversity every day in my classroom because of my students and it makes an inexplicable energy course through my veins when i have the honor of teaching these children of the ways of people who have believed in something greater than the individual and made a difference in this world- people who stayed in a system of corruption, greed, and hatred and fought with peace and grace.

it's why i stay in public education.

i love the song above because it is one of the first songs about the u.s. that i have heard for a long time that didn't say we are better than everybody else. it is simple and reflects the hope that so many of us feel and need in this time.

2 comments:

  1. Once at a cultural arts assembly an African American woman came to perform at the elementary school in which I taught. She was going to perform African folk music. She began by asking everyone in the audience who was the descendant of slaves to raise their hands. I raised mine to the surprise of many. After a pause the performer said that everyone in the audience should have raised a hand for we are all descended from slaves. And we must remember that slavery exists today. If we forget the struggles, we will lose what we have gained. I fear we may already have lost so much. Education is the only gift we can give others that can change their lives forever. It can never be taken away. Yet so many reject it.

    If you haven't read THREE CUPS OF TEA, I hope you will find time to. Another look at what education can mean and do.

    Keep your eyes on the prize, Jillian.

    Love, Sharon Gibb

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  2. Thanks Sharon. It is always nice to hear from another educator. I will put that book on my list. I look forward to reading it.

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