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Equipping Teachers to Reimagine Education
Learn, apply, and reflect on anti-racist pedagogy in accountable, grace-filled community.
The Future Perfect Teaching Cohort is an anti-bias anti-racist teacher development program rooted in a commitment to creating identity brave learning spaces. We know that teachers learn best when development is connected to doing, reflecting, and collaborating, not just reading and talking. While the work is with teachers, the impact is in the daily lived experiences of students. We will explore what we can create as educators that sets the stage for our students to begin a process of re-imagination and liberation. Our goal is not perfection, but a continuous striving towards a more perfect future.
On the blog
This poetry collection shows us the depth of and reasons behind an Asian immigrant woman’s fear, exhaustion, and rage living in the US. The imagery Wong creates to express her feelings--angry wild boar ready to charge, wilted cactus, slowly rotting orange--is vivid, intimate and very dearly familiar. I loved this book and will come back to it time and again.
The anniversary of the murder of George Floyd. Uvalde. Buffalo. Laguna Woods. We are not teaching "hard histories" but a terrorizing present. To be thinking and feeling humans in this world means that today is a hard day in a litany of hard days.
This year, maybe more than ever before, schools are being asked to be safe havens for children continuing to navigate the insecurities of the pandemic. But where is the safe haven for educators who are trying, and struggling, to do the same?
This is a listen to the kids post. In whatever way that you "listen." They are telling us so much. They are noticing, and feeling, around us, shining light into the places that we're not ready to go. Their witness is transformative, and they will lead us. What are the kids in your school community telling you?
I’m not really sure when I first learned about Juneteenth, but I remember that when I did learn about it, I thought of it starkly outside of the bounds of Black culture that I was allowed to access. White supremacy tells us that Blackness is a monolith. That if we don’t look, act, dress, speak (the list is endless) a certain way, then we are isolated from our birthrights.
But, at night, when I’m done reading to him, we turn off the light, and in complete quiet, he shares his world with me. His disappointment in his baseball coach. Parts of his day that need processing and clarification like, “How common is it to marry your sister?” (not common, bud), and “Why did that police officer kneel on that man’s neck for so long?” (deep breathing, cuddles, & assurances of safety).
“They wanted their students to know about King, but not to know that he was shot.” The educators expressed “fear of their students’ emotions, with a longing to ‘protect’ their students.” In her findings, Dr. Papola-Ellis noted the following, “At times, the resistance to the texts I shared in class stemmed from the emotion of fear, fear of how to handle what the candidates deemed as controversial topics in the classroom, or fear of pushback from students’ parents… this fear has the potential to result in narrowing the curriculum and censoring content.” (Papola-Ellis, 2016)