Originally published at: https://medium.com/s/story/teaching-in-the-age-of-trump-934575d60c82
Full disclosure: I’m not a Trump fan. I woke up on
Wednesday, November 9, 2016 with a sense of dread and foreboding. I wondered
how I was going to get up, go to school, and be a responsible high school
English teacher in this brave new world of Trump.
Like
many, I figured I would ride it out. My previous job, at a very conservative
school, taught me to keep my head down when President Obama was elected and
both colleagues and school families responded as if it were the end times. It
was my turn now, I reasoned. Sure, Trump had admitted to groping women, he’d
mocked a disabled journalist, done myriad things I found repugnant, but there
were checks and balances. How bad could it be?
Well,
I’ve now taught one school year that spanned the election and inauguration, and
I’ve taught one school year under the Trump presidency. In my perspective, it’s
been so much worse than I could have ever imagined — but I have a job to do. It’s a job that I take
seriously, and I’ve tried my best to be a responsible educator in the age of
Trump. As I prepare for the 2018–2019 school, I wanted to share the five tenets
I now cling to.
1. Kids need to learn how to be
more responsible and canny media consumers
Alternative
facts and fake news have
become the modern version of “nuh-uh.” If you don’t like what I’m saying, call
it fake news. If you can’t refute my assertion with objective
facts, do it with alternative facts.
Kids
(and adults) read things on social media and take them at face value. We must
teach our students how to conduct responsible, ethical means of inquiry. We
must coax them out of the echo chambers and help them learn how to discern what
is real and what is truly “fake news.” Several infographics have circulated
that show the spectrum on which news organizations can fall, showing bias to
the left and right, to varying degrees. The most popular, by a lawyer named
Vanessa Otero, can be seen below. Although this and other charts have been the
subject of debate about the placement of particular news outlets on the
spectrum, it can be an interesting starting point for a discussion of how to
figure out where to get your news from.
An
assignment I gave to my AP English Language kids was to take one event and
compare how that one event was covered by four different news organizations.
The kids analyzed the diction choices, especially adjectives and adverbs, and
what details were included and left out. The kids were surprised by the
variations, and I heard more than once, “But… what really happened?”
It’s
so easy for kids — or anyone, for that matter — to see something on social media and run with it,
regardless of the source. In a May 2017 study conducted by UCLA’s Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access,
41.0% of the 1535 teachers surveyed reported that “students were more likely
than in previous years to introduce unfounded claims from unreliable sources.
Many teachers noted a connection between students’ use of unsubstantiated
sources and growing incivility.”
2. We must create safe spaces and
insist on civility
One
of the refrains from the presidential election was the demonization of
“political correctness.” Wherever you stand on it, our kids need to understand
that a repudiation of “political correctness” does not mean a complete license
to speak any unfiltered, unconsidered thought that comes into their head.
According
to the same UCLA study cited above, “79% of teachers reported that their
students have expressed concerns for their well-being or the well-being of
their families associated with recent public policy discourse on one or more
hot-button issues.” I can absolutely attest to this phenomenon. My LGBTQ,
immigrant, African-American, Muslim, Hispanic, and female students are angry,
confused, worried, and just downright scared. The landscape keeps shifting
under them, and the loss of stability is frightening.
Moreover,
there has been an emboldening of those who have, until recently, quietly
nurtured bigoted and hateful ideas about certain groups. I have, in the past
two years, heard students using crude, derogatory, hateful terms that have
resurfaced after being chased or shamed out of the acceptable lexicon normally
tolerated peer-to-peer in high school hallways. What students used to police
each other on has now become acceptable, or the kids are just too intimidated
to continue pushing back. Some students even feel like it’s acceptable to bring
such language into the classroom. I had to have a conversation with a student
about why the words he was using to refer to Puerto Rican students who’d come
to our school after Hurricanes Irma and Maria decimated their homes were
hurtful and would not be tolerated. I also had to explain to him that Puerto
Ricans are American citizens (I honestly don’t think he believed me).
I’ve
also heard things from parents that I’ve never heard before. At a recent parent
conference, a parent said he’d heard there is a Muslim girl in his son’s class
and asked if I was being careful not to let her spread “militant Islamic
propaganda” during class discussions. I’m sure that over the years I have
talked with parents with deep-seated personal prejudices, but never before has
a parent felt comfortable asking such a question out loud. I can only imagine
what they’re saying in the privacy of their own home in front of their kid, and
how that kind of environment impacts that student’s worldview.
I
try not to make my marginalized students the spokespeople of their religion,
sexual orientation, gender, or ethnicity, but sometimes they take up the mantle
themselves. One of the goosebumpiest moments I’ve had in a long time happened
when a transgender student explained to his cisgender classmates what the big deal
actually was regarding rules about using the bathroom that corresponds to your
birth gender assignment rather than the gender with which you identify. There
were a couple of students who expressed that they were not comfortable using a
bathroom with transgender students, and they articulated their feelings and
opinions in a clear and respectful way that shared their viewpoints without
attacking anyone else’s. After class I thanked my transgender student for
sharing his views, and he shrugged and said, “I may be the only transgender
person that any of these guys know. I don’t want them to hate all of us because
I’ve given them a reason to hate me because I don’t listen to what they’re
saying.”
As
much as I would like to deprogram or reverse-engineer kids whose parents have
what I perceive to be the wrong worldview, that’s not my role. That leads to
the next tenet.
3. We need to focus on teaching
kids HOW, not WHAT, to think
I
insist on logical argumentation. I have banned the now ubiquitous sentence
stem, “I feel like…” and instead insist that students talk about what they
think and then support their ideas with evidence.
In
my AP English Language classes, we talk about a lot of very sensitive subjects.
The kids will come to class in August after reading Columbine and
are expected to be able to talk about the role of media in our society, gun
rights and gun control, and mental health. Call me a masochist (and maybe a
sadist), but I like to throw them into the deep end and get them talking about
big stuff from the first day so that I can help them develop the skills they
need to engage in meaningful dialogue. We practice active listening so that we
are certain we have truly heard what is being said before we try to respond. We
ask questions, and we empathize with opposing viewpoints, even if we ultimately
disagree.
We look for solutions rather than insults.
My
students are not permitted to get away with weak thinking. I teach them to
recognize and scorn ad hominem attacks like “cuck,” “snowflake,” and “fascist.”
They are expected to formulate cogent and logical arguments to support their
positions. What results is dialogue. Sometimes students concede points from
students with whom they disagree. Sometimes they realize that their viewpoints
aren’t very far apart. Sometimes they have trouble supporting what they
believe, and we call them out in a constructive way, sometimes pointing out
that what they’re espousing could, in fact, be insupportable. We look for
solutions rather than insults. We try to formulate open-ended ideas rather than
“burns” or “roasts.” We don’t debate toward “winners” or “losers.” We discuss
in order to understand all facets of issues.
Sometimes
it’s really hard because I have my own hot-button issues on which I feel
strongly that there is a right and a wrong position. However, I have to remain
neutral and calm so that my students can see that you can discuss emotional
topics without being led by emotion.
4. We need to check our personal
politics at the door before we enter the school
Teaching
during an election year is always interesting. There’s always that one kid who
asks for whom I’m voting. They get the same speech I’ve given numerous times:
“Asking someone who they’re voting for is not a casual question. You’re asking
that person their views on abortion, education, gun rights, military spending,
foreign affairs, the role of religion in government, and much, much more. If
you want to have that conversation, fine. We can have it, but we’re not going
to water it down into a single question.” I know that many teachers simply
refuse to talk about politics, and that’s fine too. In my AP English Literature
classes, however, being able to connect literature with the current social
context is part of the point. A conversation about Othello as a manipulated,
minority outsider has particular resonance. Considering the impossible choices
George must make in his caretaking role of Lenny leads the class to some
interesting places, given the current dialogue about mental health and
healthcare access in general.
In
my AP Language classes in particular, the political landscape is a rich seam
that I feel compelled to mine so that the kids are able to function as
responsible members of society, regardless of which political party, if any,
they align with. Whether we’re talking about homelessness, immigration, or
language inflation, the current political context is relevant.
Even
complaining in the workroom or faculty lounge can breed a toxic work
environment. Assuming that every teacher is a liberal or conservative, and
believing “only idiots think ____” is a sure way to alienate colleagues and
create a hostile environment.
I
don’t hide my political leanings like a secret identity, but I don’t open-carry
them either. I’m mindful that regardless of the fact that my kids are young
adults, I am still in a position of power to influence. I will not and cannot
abuse that position. Instead, I aspire to help the kids form their own opinions
and see the world through their own eyes. If they disagree with me on abortion,
mandatory minimum prison sentences, legalizing medical and/or recreational
marijuana use — that’s the point. It’s important that we can discuss
these issues without them looking to me to know what to think. They need to
know what they think, and they need to know why they think it.
One
disclaimer, however, is that there are objective facts. It is not partisan to
say that something is objectively erroneous as long as there is clear and
ethically sourced evidence.
5. We need to understand and
accept that there are some things we just can’t combat in one school year
If
a kid comes into your room after being raised his or her whole life with
flagrantly hateful beliefs, for example, your goal may be to merely plant a
seed or two, and get him or her to question why they have those beliefs and
whether those beliefs are complementary and compatible with the life that
student wants to lead. You can also insist that the student treat others with
respect and civility, at least within the four walls of your classroom. That
will have to be enough.
Whether
you are a staunch supporter of President Trump and his policies or are counting
the days until the 2020 election, you and I have a job to do. We need to make
sure that we do not shame or harass students (or colleagues) whose opinions we
would fight to the death to stamp out of existence. We need to hold the line
when it comes to treating one another with respect and courtesy, and we need to
teach our students how to engage within the political process and make reasoned
sense of what they see around them. Ideally, if we do our jobs and help our
students become more informed, logical, discerning, and empathetic citizens, we
will begin to bridge the chasm that currently divides us as a country. It’s an
enormous responsibility, but I have faith that we’re all up for it.
I'm
a wife, mother of three, high school English teacher, writer of things, and
native Floridian.
Follow
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.