What do you do with a teacher who provides students with authentic learning opportunities? A teacher who invests her own resources to support students? A teacher who was voted Teacher of the Year two of the last three years?
If you’re Superintendent Jacqueline Cassell at the Pontiac Academy for Excellence Middle School in Pontiac, Mich., you fire her.
When Brooke Harris contacted us last week, her first concern was not her career—it was her students. She worried that she had let them down by not fighting harder for her job. She worried that their essays on Trayvon Martin would no longer be included in the school newspaper. She worried that the superintendent in charge of their education would continue to underestimate them.
We’re worried about Brooke’s students too.
Last month Brooke Harris’ eighth-grade class asked her about the “kid who was killed over some skittles;” she seized the opportunity to bring her students’ lived experiences into the classroom—a strategy we and other experts advocate.
Brooke’s students identify with Trayvon Martin. Many of them are African American. Many have been stopped by police who thought they looked suspicious.
In fact, her students engaged so deeply with the issue that they asked to take it beyond essays and class discussions—they wanted to take action to help Trayvon’s family.
They, like many students across the nation, wanted to show their support by wearing hoodies. Each student who participated would pay $1. Proceeds would be donated to Trayvon’s family.
Again, Brooke saw a teachable moment. She and her students began the formal process of organizing a school event. Students wrote persuasive letters to the principal and superintendent. Brooke and a co-worker filed the necessary paperwork. The principal immediately signed off on the fundraiser.
Superintendent Cassell was less enthusiastic. She refused to approve the proposal, despite having supported many other “dress down” fundraisers. Brooke’s students took the disappointment in stride, but asked to present their idea to Cassell in person.
And that’s when things got weird.
Brooke asked that a few of her students be allowed to attend her meeting with Cassell. Outraged by the request, Cassell suspended Brooke for two days. The explanation given—she was being paid to teach, not to be an activist.
Those two days morphed into a two-week, unpaid suspension when Brooke briefly stopped by the afterschool literacy fair (she had previously organized) to drop off prizes (paid for with her own money) and to pick up materials for several students whose parents were unable to attend. Supporting her students was insubordination.
The final offense? Brooke asked Cassell to clarify her original transgression so she could learn from her mistake. Cassell referred her to the minutes of their first meeting. Still confused, Brooke again requested an explanation. Cassell fired her.
The Pontiac Academy for Excellence is a nonunionized charter school. According to Superintendent Cassell, Brooke’s contract makes no provisions for formal appeal, and Michigan is an “at will” employment state. What does this mean to Brooke? She has no right to an explanation of why she was fired. She just was.
There is a reason Michigan’s English Language Proficiency Standards call for students to “engage in challenging and purposeful learning that blends their experiences with content knowledge and real-world applications.” Students learn better this way.
Real life is not clean. It is not clear cut. It is not safe. But it is the world our students live in and they will be required to navigate it as adults. Teachers must bring this outside world into the classroom.
The only way this will ever happen is if we create an environment in which teachers feel safe discussing controversial issues with their students. Stories like Brooke’s are outrageous in their own right, but even worse, they create an atmosphere of fear among teachers.
This fear is choking our educational system, but we can pry its fingers loose if we work together. In Brooke’s forced absence, her students held their own, unsanctioned hoodie day. They made their voices heard over the fear. So can you.
Sign our change.org petition calling for Brooke Harris’ reinstatement at the Pontiac Academy for Excellence Middle School and tell administrators we will not tolerate the silencing of our nation’s best teachers.
source
If you’re Superintendent Jacqueline Cassell at the Pontiac Academy for Excellence Middle School in Pontiac, Mich., you fire her.
When Brooke Harris contacted us last week, her first concern was not her career—it was her students. She worried that she had let them down by not fighting harder for her job. She worried that their essays on Trayvon Martin would no longer be included in the school newspaper. She worried that the superintendent in charge of their education would continue to underestimate them.
We’re worried about Brooke’s students too.
Last month Brooke Harris’ eighth-grade class asked her about the “kid who was killed over some skittles;” she seized the opportunity to bring her students’ lived experiences into the classroom—a strategy we and other experts advocate.
Brooke’s students identify with Trayvon Martin. Many of them are African American. Many have been stopped by police who thought they looked suspicious.
In fact, her students engaged so deeply with the issue that they asked to take it beyond essays and class discussions—they wanted to take action to help Trayvon’s family.
They, like many students across the nation, wanted to show their support by wearing hoodies. Each student who participated would pay $1. Proceeds would be donated to Trayvon’s family.
Again, Brooke saw a teachable moment. She and her students began the formal process of organizing a school event. Students wrote persuasive letters to the principal and superintendent. Brooke and a co-worker filed the necessary paperwork. The principal immediately signed off on the fundraiser.
Superintendent Cassell was less enthusiastic. She refused to approve the proposal, despite having supported many other “dress down” fundraisers. Brooke’s students took the disappointment in stride, but asked to present their idea to Cassell in person.
And that’s when things got weird.
Brooke asked that a few of her students be allowed to attend her meeting with Cassell. Outraged by the request, Cassell suspended Brooke for two days. The explanation given—she was being paid to teach, not to be an activist.
Those two days morphed into a two-week, unpaid suspension when Brooke briefly stopped by the afterschool literacy fair (she had previously organized) to drop off prizes (paid for with her own money) and to pick up materials for several students whose parents were unable to attend. Supporting her students was insubordination.
The final offense? Brooke asked Cassell to clarify her original transgression so she could learn from her mistake. Cassell referred her to the minutes of their first meeting. Still confused, Brooke again requested an explanation. Cassell fired her.
The Pontiac Academy for Excellence is a nonunionized charter school. According to Superintendent Cassell, Brooke’s contract makes no provisions for formal appeal, and Michigan is an “at will” employment state. What does this mean to Brooke? She has no right to an explanation of why she was fired. She just was.
There is a reason Michigan’s English Language Proficiency Standards call for students to “engage in challenging and purposeful learning that blends their experiences with content knowledge and real-world applications.” Students learn better this way.
Real life is not clean. It is not clear cut. It is not safe. But it is the world our students live in and they will be required to navigate it as adults. Teachers must bring this outside world into the classroom.
The only way this will ever happen is if we create an environment in which teachers feel safe discussing controversial issues with their students. Stories like Brooke’s are outrageous in their own right, but even worse, they create an atmosphere of fear among teachers.
This fear is choking our educational system, but we can pry its fingers loose if we work together. In Brooke’s forced absence, her students held their own, unsanctioned hoodie day. They made their voices heard over the fear. So can you.
Sign our change.org petition calling for Brooke Harris’ reinstatement at the Pontiac Academy for Excellence Middle School and tell administrators we will not tolerate the silencing of our nation’s best teachers.
source
She teaches. 8th. Grade.
The final offense? Brooke asked Cassell to clarify her original transgression so she could learn from her mistake. Cassell referred her to the minutes of their first meeting. Still confused, Brooke again requested an explanation. Cassell fired her.
yeah, that's the point where my heart broke and stayed broken.
Perhaps it's simply due to being jaded to those sorts of politics, but I almost hope that instead of getting that job back, she could land another one where they appreciate the great work she does. It's a losing situation for her students and in general, but I just don't see it ending well for her if she did go back.
Even so, we need more teachers like her.
Edited at 2012-04-09 08:41 pm (UTC)
Teachers show what they think and teach us what they think in little ways; when Ms. Knowles, my 3rd grade teacher, told me that I could only read one book the entire school year because I couldn't possibly be *really* reading, I picked the dictionary. But other kids? Maybe they wouldn't have. Maybe they would have picked their favourite novel. But the message was clear: girls who read, especially girls who read well, will be punished. You can't possibly have any REAL talents; obviously, you're lying. Now sit down and shut up. When another teacher in 11th grade became offended at my suggestion that a main character in "The Crucible" may have been mentally ill, she became incensed, radically offended at the notion, despite the argument I made supported by text and the DSMV-4. She later brought in a pastor to explain why the puritanical village "only did what was right and expected". What did I learn? Don't ever, EVER, say a bad thing about a person (fictional or otherwise) if they're associated with the CHURCH. GOD is clearly in control here. On public school grounds. And enough people were also churchgoers that none protested at this sermon on public property. Teachers glossed over the fact that African slaves were forced into Christianity, the same religion so many cling to now, a religion that teaches that the slave should worship his master as the master worships God. That you are not a person. Where was that societal context, applied to today, in history and discussions of society? But no. I had great teachers, too: Mrs. Darby, who gave me a savings bond as a newly-invented Art Award, probably knowing what kind of house I lived in. The art teacher who, many years later, took me on a private trip to see the museums all over St. Pete, an opportunity I would have never had otherwise. Ms. Maxwell, an awesome teacher, who was much like Mrs. Harris... who quit because barely a single student respected her, no matter how hard she tried to provide for them. She, who would walk or bike 8 miles to school each way because she couldn't afford a car, through the most dangerous part of town, by herself, at 5AM to get here by 7AM... who paid for 9 classes' worth of school supplies out of pocket because so many students were too poor to afford their own, and distributed them to EVERYONE so that no one would know who was broke and who wasn't, SHE was an activist too.
When you teach, you have a choice: to be an activist and teach what really happened, to engage students, to genuinely help them learn and grow, or... to be an activist, and to teach the things that keep them chained into positions of powerlessness in society. To keep them ignorant and unthinking. An activist on the side of the greatest evil known to man: apathy. A teacher is an activist and a social weapon. Choose your side.
Not surprised about the police thing and I wouldn't be surprised if it has gotten worse since the county has taken over (Pontiac's own police dept. was disbanded and replaced with the county sheriffs. Just from driving through the city several times a week, it seems like the police presence in the city is MUCH higher now that the sheriffs are running things)
Wherein lies the problem.
And also laws that make unionizing hard or impossible such as the "right to work" laws. Which should be called what they are, "the right to fire you because we don't like your face, not for any real reason" laws.
Pontiac Academy for Excellence
Chartered by Saginaw Valley State University
Dr. Jacqueline Cassell, CAO/Superintendent
Grades K-12 (63906)
196 Oakland Avenue
cassellj@pontiacacademy.org
Pontiac, MI 48343
248.745.9420
Fax 248.745.9485
This was an issue her STUDENTS were passionate about. But too many people are of the mindset that teaching children of color to think critically about things that are relevent to them is going to somehow turn them into a raging reverse KKK or something.
PONTIAC, Mich. – Starting next month, the Pontiac Public School District will begin laying off 43 teachers and 52 other staff members, including administrators, secretaries and support personnel, as a first step in closing a $24.5 million budget deficit, according to The Detroit News. The cuts will take place between mid-April and the end of June.
The News reports the layoffs are a key part of the district’s state-approved deficit elimination plan and were met with hostility by union leaders.
Erm... is that legal?
Brooke’s contract makes no provisions for formal appeal
But surely suing for wrongful dismissal is a statuatory right? Isn't it in the school's interests to listen to appeals (particularly when it appears they'd reveal that the school doesn't have a leg to stand on in the debate)?
Michigan is an “at will” employment state... She has no right to an explanation of why she was fired.
If the constitution doesn't have anything to say on this issue, I'm inclined to say it's kinda useless in this modern era. It's absurd that any state has just been able to waive the right not to be wrongfully dismissed from one's job. Job security is hard to come by these days, but it shouldn't be actively sabotaged by an unsupportive legal system.
This is relevant. What a POS.
As a courtesy, I'll refrain from posting every "I CAN'T" GIF in existence here.