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By Sydney Chaffee

I changed schools in the middle of the first grade because my teacher was a racist.

โ€œShe told you that youโ€™re smarter than your classmate because heโ€™s Black,โ€ my mom explained.

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My mom had a habit of exaggerating, so I never really knew whether sheโ€™d taken liberties with that particular story. Still, itโ€™s not a stretch to imagine a White teacher harboring harmful biases about kids of color. I know because Iโ€™ve been one of those teachers.

I noticed it a few years ago when I got that itchy teacher feeling that told me one of my assignments just wasnโ€™t working. Iโ€™d asked kids to write an essay, and the results were formulaic and uninspired.

It was my fault, though. I had taught them to write that way. Their essays were symptomatic of my lowered expectations for my students of color. I had allowed myself to believe that they werenโ€™t capable of more sophisticated and authentic writing.

I was reminded of this story when watching โ€œA Teacher Has to Believe,โ€ one of the videos recently released with NNSTOYโ€™s (National Network of State Teachers of the Year) Courageous Conversations About Race in Schools.

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Thinking back, I know I wanted my students to feel excited about writing the way that I did when I was in school: to unleash their ideas, express themselves, find their voices. But instead I had replicated a pattern of low expectations for kids of color that is woven throughout the history of education in our country.

If you had asked me, at the time, about my students, I would have told you that they were smart and powerful and capable. But my actionsโ€”specifically, the way I was choosing to teach themโ€”told a different story.

AS A WHITE TEACHER, I HAD TO RECOGNIZE AND BE WILLING TO CONFRONT MY OWN INTERNAL BIASES

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It took me a long time to see this. At first, I refused to think it had anything to do with race. Over time, I realized that as a White teacher, I had to recognize and be willing to confront my own internal biases if I wanted to do right by my students. In this case, I needed to actively unlearn the bias that I grew up steeped inโ€”the false belief that kids of color are less intelligent or less capable than their White peers.

As teachers, weโ€™ve got to believe that our kids are capable of deep thinking. We have to believe that they are capable of incisive writing and critical analysis and creative problem solving. Weโ€™ve got to recommit to being the teachers our students need: the ones who tell them that they are all brilliant, the ones they will remember because we made them feel like they were all capable of greatness.

Fortunately, I donโ€™t have to do this work on my own. As National Teacher of the Year, Iโ€™ve seen my colleagues all over the country digging into this work together, allowing ourselves to be vulnerable enough to admit our own imperfections and ignorance, to be messily human.

โ€ฆWill you join us?

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See original  article at EdPost


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Sydney Chaffee is the 2017 National Teacher of the Year and a member of the National Network of State Teachers of the Year (NNSTOY). She teaches ninth-grade humanities at Codman Academy Charter Public School in Dorchester, Massachusetts.

The Black Wall Street Times is a news publication located in Tulsa, Okla. and Atlanta, Ga. At The BWSTimes, we focus on elevating the stories of our beloved Greenwood community, elevating the stories of...