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Teaching Profession Q&A

Award-Winning Teachers Are Pushing Back Against Attacks on 鈥楬onest Education鈥

鈥業t鈥檚 about having educators take back the narrative to what鈥檚 happening in our schools鈥
By Madeline Will 鈥 October 24, 2022 8 min read
Diverse elementary students sitting in a circle and talking to a Black male teacher.
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Across the country, dozens of contentious policy debates have erupted over how teachers talk in the classroom about race, sexual orientation, and gender identity. But many educators say they have felt left out of the conversation.

A new fellowship program, run by the National Network of State Teachers of the Year and the Education Civil Rights Alliance, a collective effort of nonprofits, teachers鈥 unions, and civil rights groups, seeks to amplify teachers鈥 voices about how to preserve classrooms 鈥渁s spaces of student-centered honest dialogue.鈥

The Voices for Honest Education fellowship is paid and open to nationally and internationally recognized award-winning educators in the United States. The educators spend a year engaging state legislators, training educators on coming legislation, and speaking out about the importance of 鈥渉onest, affirming education.鈥

The inaugural five fellows鈥攚ho are past state teachers of the year from Texas, Georgia, Colorado, Louisiana, and Massachusetts鈥 affirming students鈥 identities in the classroom can improve academic outcomes. Culturally responsive teaching has also been found to increase students鈥 motivation, interest in content, and the perception of themselves as capable students.

澳门跑狗论坛 spoke to three of the fellows鈥擳racey Nance, the 2020 and 2021 Georgia teacher of the year, Gerardo 惭耻帽辞锄, the 2021 Colorado teacher of the year, and Takeru 鈥淭K鈥 Nagayoshi, the 2020 Massachusetts teacher of the year鈥攁bout the state of education and their goals for the fellowship. None of these three educators are still in the classroom: 惭耻帽辞锄 is now the manager of learning and development for Denver Public Schools, and Nagayoshi is the professional learning director of community events for Panorama Education.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Your report focuses on the importance of student-affirming and honest education. What can that look like? Why is it so important?

Nance: We spoke to educators across the country鈥攁ward-winning teachers like ourselves who are doing the work in the classrooms. They鈥檙e the ones speaking with parents. They鈥檙e the ones teaching from our state standards. When we鈥檙e talking about student-affirming education, we鈥檙e still starting with those state standards, but we鈥檙e talking about creating an environment where kids feel welcomed, where we invite them and every single one of their identities into the classroom, a space where their voice is valued, and where they have the freedom to ask and receive answers to questions honestly.

Tracey Nance

In this classroom, it鈥檚 also culturally responsive, and that doesn鈥檛 mean just providing multicultural materials for students. It also means making sure that the classroom curriculum represents the students who sit in our classrooms. The truth is, our country is more diverse than it鈥檚 ever been before. Our students deserve to be seen and for their histories to be told.

惭耻帽辞锄: I grew up in a school where where the curriculum was divisive鈥攖here was a wall between myself and the curriculum. I couldn鈥檛 connect to the curriculum. I was sent messages that Mexican American people like me made no meaningful contributions to the growth and development of the United States of America. I never even read a novel by a Mexican American author until I was in college, and that鈥檚 inexcusable. I should have had the opportunity to understand my community, my neighborhood, my family, my father鈥檚 country of origin in a historical context.

To me, these student-affirming practices dissolve the walls that keep our kids apart from each other and keep our society apart from each other.

How does the legislation on how race and sexuality is discussed in the classroom or what LGBTQ students鈥 rights are in school affect this work?

Nance: I think it鈥檚 terrifying as an educator and parent living in Georgia where this legislation has already lifted off the ground. I鈥檓 worried that our state is the next one to have a law about, 鈥渄on鈥檛 say gay.鈥 It鈥檚 very harmful to our kids.

I think specifically about a little girl named Sarah who had four moms and lived with all four of them, as her original family had divorced and remarried. What does that say to kids when we tell them, 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 talk about home?鈥 It doesn鈥檛 tell them to 鈥渄on鈥檛 say gay.鈥 It tells them, 鈥渄on鈥檛 be gay.鈥 ... We need to be giving them the right messages that they are every bit as worthy and every bit as loved as their classmates.

惭耻帽辞锄: When I look at the work that I did over two decades alongside amazing scholars and amazing families and communities and of course students, I was getting to the point where I actually thought victory was around the corner in terms of representing everybody in classrooms. ... And now what we鈥檙e looking at is a really upsetting backlash.

Gerardo A. 惭耻帽辞锄

Part of me looks at it and says, 鈥淲ell, it鈥檚 the evolution of a fight that my ancestors were always fighting for dignity and for survival.鈥 But I think the difference right now is the ways in which opponents of honest education are attempting to codify their intolerance and their narrow-mindedness and their harmful behaviors into law. These voices don鈥檛 represent everybody. It is a small portion of our population that is taking up a lot of space, making a lot of noise about these things.

And the legislation, if you look from state to state, is so unclear. It is confusing to teachers. So when teachers are actually saying, 鈥淥K, what are the things that I鈥檓 allowed to teach, that I鈥檓 not allowed to teach?鈥 Much of this legislation, even in the same locality, is contradictory and sends mixed messages. So what happens is the majority of teachers who need these jobs to survive are going to say, 鈥淚鈥檓 not gonna touch any of this 鈥榗ause it鈥檚 confusing.鈥

What do you think this all means for teachers鈥 longevity in the classroom, especially teachers from marginalized backgrounds?

惭耻帽辞锄: When we think about the code-switching that is required of a lot of us when we walk into these professional settings already, and then to find ourselves targeted by these bad actors鈥攖hat鈥檚 very dangerous. I think it has terrible implications for the need to put a teaching force in front of students that comes from those communities, that relates to those communities, that looks like those communities, and that has experiences that can be really helpful in ensuring that all kids have opportunities to succeed and to build a life that they want to build.

I think it does have tremendous implications of, 鈥淲ow. So you鈥檙e gonna erase my history? Maybe I don鈥檛 want to come into [teaching]. Why am I? You clearly don鈥檛 value me if you鈥檙e trying to erase who I am.鈥

During the fellowship, you鈥檒l spend the next year emphasizing the importance of honest, affirming education. What will that look like?

Nance: We , and we are contributing our thoughts in news articles [about] our own experiences in the classroom to really ground this and make sure that people know our hearts and know what we鈥檙e teaching in schools.

We know parents support their local schools. It鈥檚 all of this otherness that they don鈥檛 know about. Ignorance breeds fear. So we want to illuminate all of the work that educators are doing, and that we鈥檙e not here to indoctrinate anyone, but we are here to teach kids to have strong self-character and to look to honest history to solve today鈥檚 problems.

惭耻帽辞锄: As we look at some of the misinformation that鈥檚 out there, that鈥檚 informing a lot of these legislative and policy decisions, I think there are a lot of wrongly informed assumptions. Do parents deserve a voice? Absolutely. Do kids deserve a voice? Absolutely. Do teachers deserve to be treated as the professionals that we are? Yes. These are not mutually exclusive goals. These are goals that have to happen together, otherwise it doesn鈥檛 work.

The way I envision the next year, learning from these incredible state teachers of the year, it鈥檚 a beautiful thing. What I鈥檓 hoping is to learn how to facilitate other voices to come in. ... We have to ensure that people feel safe and protected in their speech and their association. I would love to learn what honest education looks like from community to community.

Nance: In addition to that, we鈥檒l be meeting with representatives and policymakers and writing op-eds that we鈥檒l submit to national and local newspapers. We鈥檙e looking across the entire country because we鈥檙e seeing this impact everywhere, and it starts local.

A lot of times we鈥檙e seeing that it starts with well-funded parents鈥 rights groups. So we鈥檙e going to be giving trainings to school board members and getting trainings to parents and educators鈥攋ust really trying to educate. We found that even amongst award-winning teachers, some have been unaware of what鈥檚 happening in their states.

How would you sum up the message you hope to share this coming year?

Takeru 鈥淭K鈥 Nagayoshi

Nagayoshi: I think at its heart, it鈥檚 about having educators take back the narrative to what鈥檚 happening in our schools. Politicians making our education space a battleground is something that has both scared teachers away from the classroom, prevented folks from wanting to join the classroom, and at the end of the day, impacted the students who were there.

We, as folks who have been in the classroom [and] were teaching at the frontlines, know that what鈥檚 being set out there is not true. But oftentimes we鈥檙e not empowered to come together and explore what that is.

We also don鈥檛 have the best practices around countering that message and ways of articulating what honest and inclusive education looks like. This is a space that incubates a lot of those ideas and great minds together and pushes forth that counter to this narrative that we鈥檙e seeing.

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