We shelter our children from controversy. And yet, we don't. Kids grow up hearing the news in the background, and no one ever explains it to them. They know there is conflict all over Africa and the Middle East, and they have no understanding of it beyond, "Those people are bad and we're fighting them." They also know those people have a different skin color than the majority of the U.S.
As a child in the land of plenty, in which no recent war has been fought on our soil, seeing conflict and suffering must be anxiety-provoking. I know I prayed all through the Cold War that the bad guys would drop the bomb right on our house so I wouldn't have to live through the nuclear winter. That was the extent of my understanding, because no one talked about it with me.
Kids are ready for controversy. They need the opportunity to voice their opinions and concerns. They need someone to listen, and to give them the tools to investigate the issues that feel important to them. Giving them these opportunities enables them to feel powerful and useful. I believe they crave a purpose.
Last night I met fourteen sixth through eighth graders from Southside Family Charter School in Minneapolis. This school has a social justice curriculum. That does not mean they have a social justice unit once a year; the entire curriculum is built around social justice and being agents of change. It begins in Kindergarten.
These middle schoolers told us about their preparations for a civil rights tour of the South. They leave in two weeks. This trip is a Southside tradition. Every three years, grades 6-8 visit historic sites from the civil rights movement and meet with survivors of the struggle. They meet people who were central to the struggle, like Hollis Watkins. They protest unfair treatment in these Southern cities, when possible, right alongside historic civil rights leaders.
The trip is a culmination of their years studying social justice. It is not the only aspect of social justice they examine. Each student spoke about the issues close to their hearts, and they had interests all over the map, from Global Warming and deforestation, to sexism in the workplace, to fair and accessible voter registration! They attend protests, they lobby at the capital, they raise awareness about environmental injustices in their neighborhoods. They are working hard!
There are a lot of people who believe that anti-bias education is wishy washy, feel good propaganda. And it is, in most schools, but Southside is doing it right. It is not a separate unit, compartmentalized to meet some standard. It is integrated into every aspect of their schooling from the age of five! They do not teach to the NCLB tests, and guess what? They are doing fine. They score ahead of Minneapolis Public Schools. They are, in fact, on par with the wealthier, whiter schools on the edge of the city. Southside is an inner city, low-socioeconomic (low-SES), racially diverse school with no Achievement Gap!
Their Executive Director reports that the Achievement Gap has no power over these students, because they understand the societal influence on their socioeconomic status and the societal and institutional responsibility for racism. She says that understanding these issues externalizes problems for them. They are able to see their poverty, for example, as a situation they are in as a result of societal influences, and not as a definition of who they are. They also know how to work as an agent for change, and have a sense of efficacy that raises their expectations of themselves. The curriculum is interesting to them because it is actually important.
Kids don't need kid gloves. They need something to sink their teeth into. They need to be treated as people who will take the reigns someday.













I can't agree more! It's important for kids to be able to understand controversy and how they can form an educated opinion. It shouldn't be a surprise that children are able to do this. We shouldn't doubt their abilities.
A purpose-driven education! I love it! This is really inspiring. And it makes me feel that if I'd gone through a program like this, I might have spent a lot less time staring out the classroom window.
I think kids have a pretty refined sense of outrage. If we don't show them they can do something with it, they feel disenfranchised and can grow up with a victim mentality.
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/ediblewoman
I wish my schools' curriculums integrated social justice. I think one of my high schools may have had an amnesty international club. Unfortunately, I didn't really know a lot about or participate in social justice until I got to college and started attending my Dominican-Order-run Catholic church. It was pretty much the starting point in my desire to go into public health nursing.
Who knows what kinds of great things I could have accomplished if I had been advocating social justice at an even younger age.
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/sawaboof
"...There is a crushing guilt that comes with being a Catholic. Whether things are good or bad or you're simply... eating tacos in the park, there is always the crushing guilt."
-30 Rock-
You still have time to do great things! I don't know anyone my age (or four years younger) who got a social justice education. It just wasn't done then.
But if you have kids someday (or now...do you?), get them into a school like Southside! Friends (as in Quaker) schools have a social justice ethic, as well. But they're private, so expensive.
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/ediblewoman
oh no. no kids for me. Love kids... don't really want any though. Maybe a puppy... ;-) I have enough fun with a niece and a nephew and kids of cousins.
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/sawaboof
"...There is a crushing guilt that comes with being a Catholic. Whether things are good or bad or you're simply... eating tacos in the park, there is always the crushing guilt."
-30 Rock-
They argue less, but they poop on the floor more. And sometimes they eat it. I'm in an anti-pet phase right now, though. My geriatric schnauzer keeps peeing on the rug.
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/ediblewoman
Yeah but puppies stay cute as they get older, they're never embarrassed to cuddle in public, and if their hormones get out of control you can just neuter them. :-)
I really want an Aerdale Terrior. They are like a large version of the curly teddy at build-a-bear. :-)
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/sawaboof
"...There is a crushing guilt that comes with being a Catholic. Whether things are good or bad or you're simply... eating tacos in the park, there is always the crushing guilt."
-30 Rock-
That sounds like a fun time......I bet the students accually go to school wanting to learn everyday
"my first name must be, "He aint sh@t", cause everytime I come through, yall be like "He aint sh@t"!....I'll be dat" --Redman
"Anything that can go wrong, Will go wrong"----Murphy's Law
These kids were so on fire about school! And they all talked about how there's no bullying, no teasing, no fighting, because they understand systems of oppression and they don't want to behave that way. Freaking amazing for middle schoolers.
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/ediblewoman
I agree that kids should be taught to think for them selfs. But also how young is too young. During Columbine and 9/11 my parents wouldn't let me watch the news because of graphic images. Also this school sounds like a very liberal minded school. Kids can really formulate opinions till high school. My personal opinion, I just sucked up what the teachers told me until 8th grade or Freshman Year.
They don't start out with heavy topics in kindergarten. They start with environmental issues, learning about friendship, respect, things like that. They also learn mediation skills and restorative justice. Kindergarteners can't handle Darfur yet, but you sure can lay the groundwork. They understand the concept of fairness. Then slightly older children can assess racial issues, because racism is something they see and experience everyday, so it is good to give them the language to talk about it and strategies for working to change it. By the time they get to junior high, which is when most kids begin to develop an awareness of the world around them, they are ready to dig in and go!
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/ediblewoman
Sometimes kids are overprotected.
Published Author and Poet
Teacher Education Student.
...like when they are protected from the "agenda" of "extreme groups" who try to teach them about equality and decency? I see...
http://www.progressiveu.org/blog/ediblewoman