Tuesday, July 18, 2023

This After-School Program Is Improving Students’ Reading, One Black History Book at a Time

Friends:

I can't read enough stories like these that are so heart-warming. These young people are getting lessons of a lifetime that will carry them through the rest of their lives in a positive way. This is what actual school should already be, but the good stuff—like what we do at Academia Cuauhtli here in Austin, Texas—can only really happen outside of school in after-school, or extended day programs. Some teachers and schools notwithstanding, the general absence of such opportunities for our youth to really sink their teeth into engaging readings that mirror their experiences were already precious few even before the so-called "culture wars" took hold.

There's always a lot of silly hand-wringing about literacy and the ostensible difficulties of getting "these children" to read yet there is really no mystery here. Reading empowering texts—in this case, on the Black experience, make children feel empowered and as suggested herein, "tricks" youth into becoming high achieving. Knowing this is what has motivated many a literacy expert and those of us in the Ethnic Studies movement to set up after-school programs if possibilities within the school are few or limited. At their best, these are grassroots efforts started in living rooms, cultural centers, or other community spaces accessible to parents and youth.

Hats off to Georgetown University professor Sabrina Nero and University of Buffalo LaGarrett King for their contributions to this life-saving curriculum. We should talk someday soon as Academia Cuauhtli is also akin to a Freedom School that we know is making a big difference in the lives of our children, their families, and the teachers themselves. Check out our brand new Academia Cuauhtli Youtube channel, a work in progress, so that you can view our Aztech Kidz Code graduation ceremony from last Saturday. It's a Summer coding camp in Spanish with low-income youth in Austin, Texas, where they learn how to write code, create games, monetize their games combined with danza Mexica (Aztec) ceremony. It's cool to learn how youth evolve and develop in just three weeks of camp and how so much of this hinges on their relationships to the staff and teachers the run the program.

To deny this in the public school arena, as the current culture war agenda seeks to do, is to cut off the oxygen to youth and excellent teaching like this that the right decries, not because it's "woke," but because they do not want to empower our children or communities. After all, empowered youth and communities have a voice and they vote, too.

You can't take the politics out of education. Politics are simply about power. However, there is a difference between having power over, instead of having power with, the latter of which should be our guiding principle in a democracy. What we can and should do as communities is to create after-school or extended day programs like these where our youth can still acquire the rich texts and  precious knowledge that they have long been denied. 

We need these escuelitas everywhere!

-Angela Valenzuela


 




This After-School Program Is Improving Students’ Reading, One Black History Book at a Time


Education Week
By Kaylee Domzalski & Lauren Santucci — July 14, 2023

As states across the country consider and pass laws that limit instruction on race and gender, it’s become increasingly challenging for educators to know how to teach topics like racism, sexism, and systemic inequality. In Waterloo, Iowa, a daily after-school program seeks to improve the literacy rates of the Waterloo Community School District’s Black and low-income students one history lesson at a time.

Waterloo, located two hours northeast of Des Moines, has some of the starkest differences in student achievement in the state. According to data from the Iowa State Board of Education, the Waterloo district has a large achievement gap between its Black and white students, as well as a long history of segregation that persists today. In 2020, the financial news site 24/7 Wall Street named Waterloo the fifth worst city for Black Americans. Black students make up 26 percent of the district’s students and, according to data from ProPublica, are on average 2.2 grades behind their white peers.

The 1619 Freedom School was borne out of the pandemic. Co-founders Nikole Hannah-Jones, the creator of the 1619 Project, a New York Times endeavor focused on slavery and its connections with U.S. history, and Sheritta Stokes, a 5th grade teacher in the district, saw that students were struggling to read during their Zoom classes when schools went virtual in 2020. They launched the program in the fall of 2021 and recently completed their second year.

The 1619 Freedom School is independently funded, and the 1619 Project isn’t part of the program’s curriculum. The curriculum was developed by Sabrina Nero, an associate teaching professor at Georgetown University, and LaGarrett King, an associate professor at the University of Buffalo.

The program is entirely tuition-free and provides students with 30 books to take home to encourage them to read on their own. The curriculum is centered around Black history and is meant to help students see themselves in the lessons and therefore spark their interest and desire to read. In one unit, students read about notable Black children in history, such as Audrey Faye Hendricks, who at 9 years old was the youngest person to be arrested during the civil rights movement. Studies have shown when students are reflected in their lessons it improves their engagement and academic outcomes. It’s a concept reflected in culturally responsive teaching practices and emphasized throughout the 1619 Freedom School curriculum.

“We teach about the positive aspects and contributions of African Americans and we do that because if you’re working with kids and they’re reading about people who look like them, who have done spectacular things in the world, it’s a self-motivation,” Stokes said.

“Maybe I can do that. Maybe even though I’m struggling with reading, I just want to learn about this person, so I’m going to read this book… And before I know it my test scores and my reading scores are higher than they were and I didn’t even notice that it happened.”

The literacy program has had early success with its students. In its first year, the program went from three of its students reading at grade level to 11, Stokes said. And Stokes hopes that the program will continue to grow and help Waterloo students. This fall, it’ll partner with the Waterloo Community School District for help identifying students who would benefit from the Freedom School program. Stokes said the district will also provide the program with test scores and other student data to help those students grow.

“We’re making sure that the generations of children coming from Waterloo schools … have an opportunity to come after school to get their test scores up so they can go out in the world and be successful,” Stokes said. “You couldn’t ask for anything better as a teacher.”


Kaylee Domzalski
Video Producer, Education Week
Kaylee Domzalski is a video producer for Education Week, telling meaningful stories that impact the field.
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Lauren Santucci
Video Producer
As a video producer, Lauren Santucci produces, films, and edits meaningful, human-interest digital video and works closely with Education Week editors and reporters. Prior to joining Education Week in 2022, she produced videos for Al Jazeera, FRONTLINE PBS, and The Texas Tribune. She has a master’s degree in visual journalism from Ohio University and a bachelor’s degree in international relations from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.

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