Imperial Valley Press

Schools still struggling with how to teach about slavery

- BY CAROLYN THOMPSON

“They made me a slave today.” Aneka Burton still remembers the way her then 10-yearold son, Nikko, who is black, recounted his experience to his grandfathe­r after school one day.

It was 2011. But Burton believes the classroom exercise in which Nikko’s classmates were encouraged to examine and pretend to bid on each other during a history lesson continues to affect his life, even now as an 18-year-old high school graduate.

“He tries to act like it didn’t bother him, but I really think it changed him,” the Gahanna, Ohio, mother said.

It’s those memories that leave her shaking her head years later as reports about mock slave auctions continue to emerge, reminders that schools are still struggling with how to teach about slavery and its impacts.

There are no national standards on how to teach about slavery, although it is often recommende­d as a topic in curriculum at the state and local levels, according to Lawrence Paska, executive director of the National Council for the Social Studies. The guidance leaves specific lessons up to schools and teachers, who on several occasions have caused offense with attempts to bring history to life.

An investigat­ion by New York Attorney General Letitia James found in May that a mock “slave auction” that singled out black students at the private Chapel School in Westcheste­r County had a profoundly negative effect on all involved students.

“Lessons designed to separate children on the basis of race have no place in New York classrooms, or in classrooms throughout this country,” James said.

Other recent examples include an “Escaping Slavery” game that gave North Carolina fourth-graders a freedom punch card that read: “If your group runs into trouble four times, you will be severely punished and sent back to the plantation to work as a slave.” Families also criticized a Virginia obstacle course intended to replicate the undergroun­d railroad, navigated by third-, fourth- and fifth-graders pretending to be runaway slaves.

“Teaching about slavery is hard,” summarized a 2018 report from the Southern Poverty Law Center, which surveyed more than 1,700 social studies teachers and analyzed textbooks. “No national consensus exists on how to teach about slavery, and there is little leadership . ... It is time to change this state of affairs.”

Dozens of teachers surveyed reported simulation­s as their favorite lessons when teaching about slavery, according to the report, though its authors and others said such re-enactments do more harm than good.

At the Chapel School, the fifth-grade teacher who led the mock auction in March was fired. The school agreed to hire a diversity officer and change its discipline practices after parents complained that black students were lined up against a wall wearing imaginary shackles and “sold” to their white peers.

Nicole Dayes complained about a similar exercise in her son’s fourth-grade class in upstate New York’s Watertown City School District in May after he described it to her.

“His whole demeanor changed,” Dayes said. “It was kind of somber and uncomforta­ble ... It took me a while to really comprehend what he was saying to me.”

The district said in a statement the teacher had been placed on administra­tive leave. Superinten­dent Patricia LaBarr said the district has since sought expert guidance on diversity, inclusion and equity as it reviews its policies and programs.

New York’s social studies curriculum is typical in that it outlines grade-level concepts — fourth-grade students “will examine life as a slave in New York state,” for example — but does not provide specific lessons.

Ill-conceived lessons happen enough that advocates like Teaching Tolerance, a project of the Southern Poverty Law Center, offer lesson plans with suggestion­s for texts and discussion. Teaching Tolerance plans to publish a framework for teaching about slavery in grades kindergart­en through five in August.

“It’s never OK to recreate painful oppressive events, even in the name of education,” said Mara Sapon-Shevin, a professor of inclusive education at Syracuse University, who said teachers risk harming their students’ sense of belonging, safety and inclusion. “One would never simulate an Indian massacre or having Jews march into the ovens.”

Nor should teachers “gamify” painful history, Teaching Tolerance Director Maureen Costello said, citing exercises like having students compete to remove seeds from cotton.

“Often it’s done because it’s kind of traditiona­l, maybe they had it when they were in school or they’ve heard about another teacher who did it and they think this is a great idea: It gets the kids out of their seats, they’ll be active,” Costello said.

 ??  ?? In this Oct. 11, 2017, file photo, Corrie Davis (left) picks up her son Turner from Big Shanty Elementary School in Kennesaw, Ga. AP PHOTO/DAVID GOLDMAN
In this Oct. 11, 2017, file photo, Corrie Davis (left) picks up her son Turner from Big Shanty Elementary School in Kennesaw, Ga. AP PHOTO/DAVID GOLDMAN

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