Month: February 2021

What Does it Take? by Caleb E. Dawson

What does it take for Black lives to matter at a historically white university? Across the history of Black campus movements – from Black Studies to Black Lives Matter – we find a litany of loved ones lost to extraordinary violence, on- and off-campus. Perhaps you remember some of their names. Their premature deaths form

Grown and Tired: A Letter to Academia by Jordan Harper

I often struggle to make sense of my position in academia. One day he’s kind, one day he’s violent; one day I love him, one day I don’t. While I certainly do not speak for the entire Black graduate student community, I am sure that many will agree with some of these points. This letter

Trying to Decenter Whiteness in the Academy by Dr. Chelda Smith Kondo

Context: I am a Black woman co-teaching a Critical Pedagogy class to 61 current and future educators. My co-instructors are a Black man and a white woman. To varying degrees, we, three, are experienced social justice educators committed to providing equitably rigorous and engaging instruction to our culturally diverse group. About 20 of the students

Centering Liberation: Imagining Schools for Black Children by Trevon R. Jones

There is an educational debt owed to Black children in our country (Ladson-Billings, 2006). The disservice to the Black community is undeniable. Our system – built on racism, White supremacy, and anti-Blackness – has consistently and predictably produced poor outcomes for Black students (Belgrave, 2009; Belgrave & Brevard, 2015; Dumas, 2016; Ladson-Billings, 1998; Ladson-Billings, 2006;