At Humanities Amped in 2021, we are celebrating the first of our three core values: beloved community. As we look toward the future and its challenges, this aspect of our organizational vision, to nurture a dynamic, beloved community of lifelong learners and civic leaders, has never felt more essential to our individual and collective well-being. Over the next few months, we will release a series of think pieces reflecting on the theme of beloved community and how it shows up in our work at Humanities Amped. Click here to learn more about the heart of beloved community, and read on to learn about one way it shows up in our work.
Transformative Youth Work Begins |
I often wished my son had gotten more opportunities to connect with adults at school, to be listened to and recognized in a more spacious way. But in his experiences of school, much like my own, a spacious sense of belonging and connection did not happen much in classrooms. It was more likely to be found at the back of the school library on a second lunch shift where, feeling shipwrecked and marooned, young people form their own world inside the world. Some youth get this connection after school, on sports teams or in youth organizations, like the youth poetry workshops I’ve participated in and facilitated since I was a young adult, spaces where rounds of sharing and witnessing make our lives and hearts visible to one another. Anyone who knows what it feels like to belong in beloved communities like these, however they were formed, holds something very sacred, something healing for the world. | Young people want us to see them; they don’t want us crowding their space, but they want us to have space for them. |
The heart of what I know about holding those spaces didn’t come from any formal training. I learned about these things on the margins and unmapped peripheries, in the community playdays that took place in a cleared field next to the Roosevelt Street projects where as a child I was thrown up on a blanket held by many hands. What I learned in those spaces was the practice of accompaniment. Archbishop Oscar Romero of El Salvador gave us this term, “accompaniment.” He used it to describe an approach to social justice that is rooted in solidarity with those who are most harmed by injustice. Accompaniment means walking together, knowing one another, acting for and with one another. It means asking “How are you, really?” and holding space for the answer.
"Accompaniment" means asking “How are you, really?” and holding space for the answer. | Without accompaniment, dehumanization prevails, and with it, a perpetuation of violence. At its essence, institutional violence is the denial of personhood. It is what happens when we replace human mutuality with the priorities of control and surveillance. What is the outcome of that dehumanization in schools? Approximately 30% of students in low income schools and districts across the country, mostly concentrated in Black, indigenous, and immigrant communities, are pushed out of school before graduation and into the school-to-prison nexus that feeds on that 30% |
Abolitionist educators, whether we call ourselves that or not, are those of us who are searching for ways to accompany young people as they make the passage through the many uncertainties and vulnerabilities that come with being young, especially for those whose identities are denied or marginalized. This year, our practices of accompaniment have been challenged in very real ways. A school librarian I know recently posted on Facebook that she was reduced to “a puddle of tears'' after spending a little bit of time with that “collection of kids who were always [previously] in the library.” The ways we find ourselves being with another in the in-betweens and underneaths of formal schooling, what Fred Moten and Stefano Harney so beautifully describe as a “way of feeling through others, a feel for feeling others feeling you” (2013, p. 98), is what we yearn for most this year. Being-togetherness is where transformative youth work really happens.
The blunt pressure to produce better school performance scores through pseudo-efficient assembly line approaches to teaching and learning can create a tremendous short sightedness, ultimately pushing young people out of school. We have to challenge forms of teaching and learning that propel young people further and further away from the safety net of relationships. If you really listen to young people, families, and educators, we are all in agreement on this: relationships are the ground from which all else grows. In other words, when we systemically lose sight of that 9th grade girl and how she’s doing in the fullest sense, we lose sight of everything that matters.
The blunt pressure to produce better school performance scores through pseudo-efficient assembly line approaches to teaching and learning can create a tremendous short sightedness, ultimately pushing young people out of school. We have to challenge forms of teaching and learning that propel young people further and further away from the safety net of relationships. If you really listen to young people, families, and educators, we are all in agreement on this: relationships are the ground from which all else grows. In other words, when we systemically lose sight of that 9th grade girl and how she’s doing in the fullest sense, we lose sight of everything that matters.
The challenge to our sense of connection during this pandemic sits on top of the challenge that already was: how do we slow down and figure out how to nurture forms of being-together in beloved community as an essential and vital part of what school can be? The answers to this question are plural and are best woven into the daily fabric of school life as an essential part of the curriculum and cultures, not a stand-alone or after thought. At the heart of Humanities Amped’s learning community, we are doing this kind of weaving together with students, teachers, administrators, and families in our local public schools. Our aim is to humanize schooling and restore personhood to young people for whom that personhood has been too long denied. | how do we slow down and figure out how to nurture forms of being-together in beloved community as an essential and vital part of what school can be? |
That change has to be grassroots and systemic at the same time. Our work with restorative practices has intersected with EBRPSS’s efforts to adopt restorative practices. Likewise, we are proud to stand among the many Baton Rouge youth programs that foster positive relationships and social emotional development through mentorship, the arts, athletics and civic engagement. These are community resources that should be taken seriously as vehicles for well-being in school as well as out. One might say that when educational leaders prioritize those resources, they are prioritizing the “whole child,” except that the rhetoric of the “whole child” falls short of the urgency and importance that these communities of connection provide. After all, anything less than a “whole child” is actually a dead child. We want to urgently and critically prioritize that young people are able to live.
There are many ways to build accompaniment into the everyday places where young people already are. Every young person deserves the space to be seen and heard, and creating that space at school is not only possible, it’s how we keep our beloved youth alive, connected, and thriving. •
There are many ways to build accompaniment into the everyday places where young people already are. Every young person deserves the space to be seen and heard, and creating that space at school is not only possible, it’s how we keep our beloved youth alive, connected, and thriving. •
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At Humanities Amped in 2021, we are celebrating the first of our three core values: beloved community. As we look toward the future and its challenges, this aspect of our organizational vision, to nurture a dynamic, beloved community of lifelong learners and civic leaders, has never felt more essential to our individual and collective well-being. Over the next few months, we will release a series of think pieces reflecting on the theme of beloved community and how it shows up in our work at Humanities Amped. Click here to learn more about the heart of beloved community and why it matters so deeply to us.
Our third beloved community reflection is a collaboration between Destiny Cooper and Emma Gist. Destiny is the Amped liaison and instructional specialist at East Baton Rouge Parish School System. She has been National Board certified since 2012 and earned her M.Ed. from LSU in 2014, the same year she co-created Humanities Amped. Working with multiple schools, Destiny leads teachers and students in creating the classrooms and schools that their communities desire. dadams@ebrschools.org Emma is an Amped instructional coach and Outreach Coordinator. She has been with Amped since 2018 and has worked to strengthen Amped's approaches to restorative and project-based learning. She holds an MAT from USC and is currently a PhD candidate at LSU studying literacy practice in secondary English classrooms. egist@humanitiesamped.com |
Passing the (Virtual) Talking Piece
Destiny Cooper & Emma Gist
As students walked into our very first Amped class in 2014, they chose their place in the circle. With the intention to question schooling as it is and its corresponding structures of power, we welcomed our new students, established June Bug Productions’ story circle process, shared our seed stories, and listened in awe as person after person shared their story with this group of near strangers. From within that circle, where we offered our stories and established shared power as equal learners and teachers regardless of age or degree, we began to build a Beloved Community.
Throughout the year our students realized more power and self-trust by vulnerably building community, grappling with academics, and leaning into social risks. We noticed, however, that challenging existing power structures provoked people’s insecurities and hopelessness, which in turn led to an increase in conflict between and among teachers and peers. After attempting to use the tools from our combined decades of classroom and youth development experiences, we realized that we needed a more structured and purposeful method to build a positive community and prevent conflict, not just respond to it.
Throughout the year our students realized more power and self-trust by vulnerably building community, grappling with academics, and leaning into social risks. We noticed, however, that challenging existing power structures provoked people’s insecurities and hopelessness, which in turn led to an increase in conflict between and among teachers and peers. After attempting to use the tools from our combined decades of classroom and youth development experiences, we realized that we needed a more structured and purposeful method to build a positive community and prevent conflict, not just respond to it.
We experimented with circles over the next three years as a consistent means to ground our Beloved Community in our values. Circles call us into trust and courage: trust in each other to hold space for us and courage to share pieces of ourselves with one another. They challenge us to practice authentic inclusion by making a collective agreement to name for each individual’s voice an intentional, dedicated space and to commit to deeply listening to one another, which is itself an act of love. | Circles challenge us to practice authentic inclusion by making a collective agreement to name for each individual’s voice an intentional, dedicated space and to commit to deeply listening to one another, which is itself an act of love. |
We learned to use circles to build community about four times more often than to respond to harm and dedicated more time to using circles to live our values, process our challenges, and celebrate our triumphs. We not only saw less conflict, but we also witnessed more student ownership and growth as young leaders.
As we developed our students’ capacities to design and facilitate circles for their peers and adults, we also incorporated circles into professional development sessions, staff meetings, and community events because in Amped circles are not a trendy classroom strategy: they are a practice that allows us to live in our values while in relationship with one another.
As we developed our students’ capacities to design and facilitate circles for their peers and adults, we also incorporated circles into professional development sessions, staff meetings, and community events because in Amped circles are not a trendy classroom strategy: they are a practice that allows us to live in our values while in relationship with one another.
In Amped circles are not a trendy classroom strategy: they are a practice that allows us to live in our values while in relationship with one another. | In March of 2020, along with the rest of the world, the work of Humanities Amped was halted when public schools in Louisiana were closed indefinitely. Even in the depths of this uncertainty, we chose to respond actively: from our socially-distanced virtual spaces, we developed infrastructure to convene our Beloved Community in online circles based on the needs that our young people articulated. The mechanics were not uncomplicated--we were challenged to get in contact with students without reliably seeing them in the classroom everyday, we stumbled through the use of new platforms, we discovered Zoom fatigue along with our participants. Even so, we continued to find the cultivation of our Beloved Community worth the work of carving out inclusive spaces for human connection. |
Translating processes for in-person circles into virtual spaces requires, like any virtual transition, adaptability. At the most basic, entering a virtual classroom and assuming a place in a grid of icons is enormously different from the experience of entering a classroom and taking a seat in a physical circle, where Beloved Community is concretized as the best version of seeing and being seen. Based on our experiences, working through these challenges, we have developed the following guidelines for hosting circles in virtual spaces:
The Virtual Circle Process
1. As participants enter the virtual room, the facilitator(s) create, record, and announce an order of speakers, sharing the list of names with participants using the chat function. If people enter the room late, their name should be added to the circle order.
While circle orders are obvious in person, online spaces require a circle order that can be visually referenced throughout the process. Explicit circle orders provide structure and clarity of expectations.
2. The facilitator welcomes the participants into the circle, reviews the circle guidelines, and explains that although the “talking piece” may be invisible, its function of ensuring only one person speaks at a time still applies. The facilitator explains that to simulate passing a physical object from person to person, each participant will verbally say “I pass the talking piece to [next person in the speaking order].”
Using the phrase “I pass the talking piece to…” is a way to distribute facilitative power to the circle participants, who control the process without waiting to be called on by someone who is “in charge.”
3. The facilitator presents the first question or prompt. If the facilitator’s name is first in the speaking order, they will model the process of responding and passing the talking piece. Alternatively, they will ask the first person in the speaking order to begin in the process of responding and passing.
While the facilitator may model the process, when possible, it can be effective to approach a trusted and willing participant ahead of time and ask them to be the first to answer.
4. After offering their response, each participant passes to the next person in the speaking order. If a speaker forgets to pass, the facilitator can prompt, “And you pass to…”
Rather than simply calling on the next person, this strategy empowers the participants to guide the circle process.
5. If necessary, the facilitator reminds the participants that it is always acceptable to pass on a question or prompt. The person passing should simply pass to the next person in the speaking order.
Circle processes are not effective if participants feel forced to engage. We operate within our value of trust when we allow people to decide whether or not they want to share.
6. The last speaker in the circle always passes back to the facilitator or first person in the circle order. The facilitator then offers an opportunity to share to anyone who passed.
Often, participants who passed initially will feel ready to share once everyone else has spoken. If those who passed are still reluctant, the facilitator can offer the option of borrowing from, or echoing, someone else’s response. However, it is important to allow participants to pass a second time if they do not want to respond.
7. The facilitator then presents the next question or prompt. The participants respond using the same circle order and processes.
While this round may begin with the same person as the previous round, the facilitator might choose someone else to go first, or ask for volunteers. Whoever’s name is last in the circle order would simply pass to the person whose name is first
8. After the final round, the facilitator thanks the group for engaging the circle and celebrates any challenges that were met.
For example, the facilitator may have offered a challenge of 100% participation by the end of the process. For a challenge like this, it is important to recognize that participation may look like an out-loud response or a response in the chat.
While circle orders are obvious in person, online spaces require a circle order that can be visually referenced throughout the process. Explicit circle orders provide structure and clarity of expectations.
2. The facilitator welcomes the participants into the circle, reviews the circle guidelines, and explains that although the “talking piece” may be invisible, its function of ensuring only one person speaks at a time still applies. The facilitator explains that to simulate passing a physical object from person to person, each participant will verbally say “I pass the talking piece to [next person in the speaking order].”
Using the phrase “I pass the talking piece to…” is a way to distribute facilitative power to the circle participants, who control the process without waiting to be called on by someone who is “in charge.”
3. The facilitator presents the first question or prompt. If the facilitator’s name is first in the speaking order, they will model the process of responding and passing the talking piece. Alternatively, they will ask the first person in the speaking order to begin in the process of responding and passing.
While the facilitator may model the process, when possible, it can be effective to approach a trusted and willing participant ahead of time and ask them to be the first to answer.
4. After offering their response, each participant passes to the next person in the speaking order. If a speaker forgets to pass, the facilitator can prompt, “And you pass to…”
Rather than simply calling on the next person, this strategy empowers the participants to guide the circle process.
5. If necessary, the facilitator reminds the participants that it is always acceptable to pass on a question or prompt. The person passing should simply pass to the next person in the speaking order.
Circle processes are not effective if participants feel forced to engage. We operate within our value of trust when we allow people to decide whether or not they want to share.
6. The last speaker in the circle always passes back to the facilitator or first person in the circle order. The facilitator then offers an opportunity to share to anyone who passed.
Often, participants who passed initially will feel ready to share once everyone else has spoken. If those who passed are still reluctant, the facilitator can offer the option of borrowing from, or echoing, someone else’s response. However, it is important to allow participants to pass a second time if they do not want to respond.
7. The facilitator then presents the next question or prompt. The participants respond using the same circle order and processes.
While this round may begin with the same person as the previous round, the facilitator might choose someone else to go first, or ask for volunteers. Whoever’s name is last in the circle order would simply pass to the person whose name is first
8. After the final round, the facilitator thanks the group for engaging the circle and celebrates any challenges that were met.
For example, the facilitator may have offered a challenge of 100% participation by the end of the process. For a challenge like this, it is important to recognize that participation may look like an out-loud response or a response in the chat.
We first began implementing these online circle practices on a large and consistent scale at our fully virtual Amped Summer Institute. During these two weeks of deep community building and learning, Amped educators, staff members, and youth engaged regularly in circle processes. Teachers who participated in circles in the Summer Institute haved designed and facilitated circles for their classes, opening up spaces for each student to see and be seen, to express their ideas, and be honored for their contributions.
We first began implementing these online circle practices on a large and consistent scale at our fully virtual Amped Summer Institute. During these two weeks of deep community building and learning, Amped educators, staff members, and youth engaged regularly in circle processes. Teachers who participated in circles in the Summer Institute haved designed and facilitated circles for their classes, opening up spaces for each student to see and be seen, to express their ideas, and be honored for their contributions.
Regardless of the space we have learned that circles and circle protocols disrupt existing power structures between youth and adults as well as among peers. Whether sitting in a physical circle or participating virtually, circle structures level power by making space for equity in voice, choice, and contribution. In this sense, circles are not the end, but the means to the end of teaching the community how to make values-aligned choices. | Regardless of the space we have learned that circles and circle protocols disrupt existing power structures between youth and adults as well as among peers. |
The following protocols are fundamental to the formation and ownership of positive community and should be honored in the translation from in-person to virtual and hybrid spaces:
Because we believe in the power of circles both in the classroom and beyond it, we have continued to implement them across our organization: we have designed and hosted circles for teacher reflection, for community connection, for district-wide professional development, in staff and board meetings, in collaborative planning sessions, and in after-school settings. By committing to these practices, especially at a time when virtual life has felt, for many, unproductive and miserable, we have been able to shape interactions that center trust, inclusion, and joy. •
We invite you to visit our Amplified Classrooms curriculum on our website for more information about our use of circles, an element of restorative practices, in Amped spaces. Click below to learn more about circle protocols, to access circle templates, and to view professional development videos about applying circles for a variety of classroom contexts.
- Design a majority of circle curricula to teach values and build Beloved Community, rather than as a response to harm
- Build trust and position students as active agents by honoring the choice to pass
- Develop shared responsibility between students and teachers for the circle’s success by posing a challenge (e.g. 100% participation at least once)
- Generate engagement by accepting people at their level of participation: honor the chat as well as speaking out loud, and when possible allow choice in regards to turning on cameras. At the same time, ask students to consider the community effects of these choices.
Because we believe in the power of circles both in the classroom and beyond it, we have continued to implement them across our organization: we have designed and hosted circles for teacher reflection, for community connection, for district-wide professional development, in staff and board meetings, in collaborative planning sessions, and in after-school settings. By committing to these practices, especially at a time when virtual life has felt, for many, unproductive and miserable, we have been able to shape interactions that center trust, inclusion, and joy. •
We invite you to visit our Amplified Classrooms curriculum on our website for more information about our use of circles, an element of restorative practices, in Amped spaces. Click below to learn more about circle protocols, to access circle templates, and to view professional development videos about applying circles for a variety of classroom contexts.
At Humanities Amped in 2021, we are celebrating the first of our three core values: beloved community. As we look toward the future and its challenges, this aspect of our organizational vision, to nurture a dynamic, beloved community of lifelong learners and civic leaders, has never felt more essential to our individual and collective well-being. Over the next few months, we will release a series of think pieces reflecting on the theme of beloved community and how it shows up in our work at Humanities Amped. Click here to learn more about the heart of beloved community and why it matters so deeply to us.
Our second beloved community reflection is from Asia Reese, Humanities Amped Community Educator, Program Manager, and Serve LA corps member.
Our second beloved community reflection is from Asia Reese, Humanities Amped Community Educator, Program Manager, and Serve LA corps member.
Asia is currently a graduating senior in Sociology and Anthropology at Spelman College. During high school, she first became involved with Humanities Amped as a youth poet and peer organizer at McKinley Senior High. Asia is a Community Educator at Belaire High School and at Amped Studio Afterschool and also leads special initiatives, including the BlackFutures: A Sankofa Series city-wide Black History program. areese@humanitiesamped.com |
Reclaiming Black Pasts, Creating Black Futures
Asia Reese
I went to school in "The Bottom" at a high school initially named Hickory Street School, later renamed The Baton Rouge Colored High School, but you most likely know it as McKinley Senior High School. I am an alumna of a predominantly Black school system and the state's first high school open for Black people, yet I only remember ever talking about Black History once every school year. The conversation, when we did have it, focused solely on a heavily sanitized story about our Civil Rights Elders: always teaching us their sacrifices, but rarely did we hear their critiques--especially the ones they made towards the end of their lives.
Since this erasure was so normalized, it did not feel like an erasure at all. It just felt like school. Not until one day in my Advanced Placement U.S History Class did the extent of this disservice become clear to me. We had just finished learning about all of the different factors that made British colonizers, "Pilgrims," come to the United States and lead a genocide against the country's Indigenous People. We were learning about the start of the Triangular Slave Trade that began after the colonizers got settled. It seemed like we skipped a part. My classmates and I asked, "Well...what were Black people doing before the slave trade?" Despite being one of the best teachers I ever had, even she was left unequipped to answer. | Since this erasure was so normalized, it did not feel like an erasure at all. It just felt like school. |
With that erasure, dissatisfaction and disinterest began to grow. As someone who always loved school, I began to grow skeptical of its purpose if it did not aim to culturally affirm the primary population that it served. This dissatisfaction is why I think many students may leave the state, as I did, in search of knowledge--and more importantly--Beloved Community. Beloved Community is only created when the space you are in is dedicated to acknowledging the full extent of your existence: your multiple identities, your past, present, and helping you create your future.
Beloved Community is only created when the space you are in is dedicated to acknowledging the full extent of your existence: your multiple identities, your past, present, and helping you create your future. | I eventually graduated from McKinley and went to Spelman College, an HBCU dedicated to educating Black Women in Atlanta, Georgia. ALL first-year students have to take two semesters of African Diaspora and the World. It was only in college that I learned about Africa's diversity, the linkages of the practices Black folks do now to our cultural practices prior to slavery, and felt AFFIRMED in the classroom. Having Beloved Community is what helped me mature from a girl to a woman and helped me heal from the precariousness of feeling like there was a larger force determining my life that I could not name or did not know. I think about Frederick Douglas’s caution “It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." I think Beloved Community may be the only way we can empower children to grow into the adults the world will need. |
When COVID-19 provided me the opportunity to come back home, I knew that the time was ripe to push for a change. With the renaming of Liberty High School, an initiative that has been discussed since my good sister Tyari Heard--one of its original organizers--and I were in high school, I saw that the seeds of our dissatisfaction were ready to bloom. Thus, after becoming a Program Manager at Humanities Amped, I made it my mission to create culturally relevant work. We were asked by MetroMorphosis to partner with them in the release of their phenomenal article 'Black Baton Rouge Yesterday and Today.' Black History Month was on the horizon, and there was a need for programming since many of our East Baton Rouge students have not had one activity day since the transition to hybrid learning. I suggested we host a Black History Month Program that talked about what Black people have done and CONTINUED to do right here in our city. That decision was what I like to call a perfect full-circle moment: a moment where you are able to come back to a previous point of frustration or unrealized expectations and finally address them. | a perfect full-circle moment: a moment where you are able to come back to a previous point of frustration or unrealized expectations and finally address them. |
Coming off the high from BlackFutures: A Sankofa Series, my favorite part was and will always be the student engagement. From their questions, art submissions, songs, and drama performances it felt beautiful to provide an opportunity for them to learn and reflect on their history, our city's shared history and showcase their talent. However, I think the embodiment of Sankofa--reaching back to retrieve what is at risk of being left behind--came from our intergenerational conversations. Listening to revered community elder Maxine Crump ask the change-agent Myra Richardson what inspired her to get involved made me reflect on my own "How did I get here?" journey. Hearing the legendary Dr. Press Robinson ask young organizer Anthony Kenney what activism means to him felt like a question to all the youth. And, in the spirit of Beloved Community, it simultaneously provided an affirmation and call to action. It recognized our potential to change the world and forced us to consider who we are when we are creating our Black future.
Now we have set the stage for another goal. We have expanded the Black History Month narrative to reflect a localized community truth through powerful oral histories and storytelling. Still, we must push for the account that reflects many students' lived reality to not be denied to them in their classrooms every other academic school day of the year. We acknowledge the influence of the Spanish and the French. Indeed, we can make space to honor the blood, sweat, tears, and culture created by the slave and their descendants despite white supremacy. We can teach our students that slavery is not Black people's shame but our nation's unaddressed violence. I truly believe once students' history becomes accessible and an intentional part of the school curriculum, we will empower young people to see the full extent of their humanity and heal a wound that has existed since before any of us reading this were born.
BlackFutures: A Sankofa Series Black History Month Program
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At Humanities Amped in 2021, we are celebrating the first of our three core values: beloved community. As we look toward the future and its challenges, this aspect of our organizational vision, to nurture a dynamic, beloved community of lifelong learners and civic leaders, has never felt more essential to our individual and collective well-being. Over the next few months, we will release a series of think pieces reflecting on the theme of beloved community and how it shows up in our work at Humanities Amped.
Beloved community is a notion that came into circulation during the Civil Rights movement. Dr. Martin Luther King is well-known for summoning the image of a Beloved Community, not only as a destination, but as the means of reaching that end. For Dr. King and the many others who laid the foundation of this concept, beloved community meant the practice of looking for the best in one another by calling up and nurturing our best human possibility. These civil rights elders believed that a love for one another is not only good in itself, but it is also a way to summon the strength and imagination and create our best collective futures.
The late Detroit-based philosopher and organizer Grace Lee Boggs, explains Dr. King’s vision of beloved community. To name the forces working against beloved community, she reminds us of King’s words, “When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.” And then she interprets King’s vision of beloved community:
The late Detroit-based philosopher and organizer Grace Lee Boggs, explains Dr. King’s vision of beloved community. To name the forces working against beloved community, she reminds us of King’s words, “When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.” And then she interprets King’s vision of beloved community:
Instead, King had a vision of people at the grassroots and community level participating in creating new values, truths, relationships, and infrastructures as the foundation for a new society. He called for programs that would involve young people in “self-transforming and structure-transforming” direct actions “in our dying cities.” He called for a radical revolution in values and a new social system.
Indeed, at Humanities Amped our reflections often weave together this two-sided goal, to realize ourselves and to transform the world, not as separate processes, but as interdependent parts of a whole. We reflect on how our work together to change the circumstances around us can unsettle us and bring forth our own transformative journeys (and that’s true for all of us, not just the young folks!). By embracing each person’s belovedness, we ignite a confidence that enables us to navigate change, both the kinds of change we welcome, but also change that unsettles and genuinely calls for our personal transformation. |
As we practice doing youth work with the intention to change the world, we draw inspiration from the model set by Grace Lee Boggs. She created dynamic intergenerational spaces in Detroit through which young people could find meaningfulness and a sense of self as “solutionaries” by applying their creative energies to confronting the critical problems they identified. Her thinking has greatly influenced our work. But perhaps most importantly, Grace Lee Boggs, like Dr. King, encouraged us to live the questions in an intergenerational way, to see ourselves in a process of unfolding with an emphasis on humanizing our institutions through critical connectedness. In the spirit of these civil rights movement leaders before us, we look forward to living our questions and reflections out loud with you over the next few months as we take a dive into the theme of beloved community.
We hope you’ll stay posted on our website as these think pieces from Humanities Amped staff roll out! Click below to start reading.
We hope you’ll stay posted on our website as these think pieces from Humanities Amped staff roll out! Click below to start reading.
At Humanities Amped in 2021, we are celebrating the first of our three core values: beloved community. As we look toward the future and its challenges, this aspect of our organizational vision, to nurture a dynamic, beloved community of lifelong learners and civic leaders, has never felt more essential to our individual and collective well-being. Over the next few months, we will release a series of think pieces reflecting on the theme of beloved community and how it shows up in our work at Humanities Amped. Click here to learn more about the heart of beloved community and why it matters so deeply to us.
Our first beloved community reflection is from Humanities Amped Community Educator and Program Manager, Marcel Williams. Marcel is a hip-hop educator who leads Amped classes at Westdale Middle and the Soul Cypher workshop series in Amped Studio Afterschool, which use hip-hop as a lens to explore mental health and peer advocacy. He developed and leads the Amped Community Care initiative, connecting youth to vital mentorship and resources when they need it most. Marcel is also a national independent touring hip-hop artist. He has over 18 years of youth development experience in education, asset based youth programming, and mental health. Marcel has a bachelors in History from Southern University A&M in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and has been recognized by national publications such as XXL, Hip-Hop DX, & Genius for both his art and youth advocacy. marcelw@humanitiesamped.com |
#CultureOverEverything
marcel williams
My first performance in front of a huge crowd was February 1998 at Mt. Zion Baptist Church, where I performed at the city's Black History program. I was oh so nervous, but I sucked it up and laid out a flawless performance. My anxiety was so high that when I finished and the crowd gave me a standing ovation, I walked as fast as I could to my dad’s van and cried my eyes out. As a touring hip-hop artist I’ve performed in front of thousands, but never have I been as nervous as I was that day. I’m comfortable being in front of crowds because I was taught how to “speak” by The Fox.
I first remember seeing the Fox when I was 6 years old at the Miss Black Ardmore Pageant at the Goddard Center for the Arts. She stood out to me because she dressed very flashy and was known to change outfits several times during an event. The Fox is originally from South Carolina, educated in DC, but came to Oklahoma in her 20’s and has been knee deep in the community saving Black youth in my small Southern Oklahoma town from the ills of the streets ever since. My hometown was recently named #1 of the most dangerous cities in Oklahoma, mostly due to its drug and gang problem. The Fox is a middle school teacher by trade, but she is a superhero at heart and action. She taught us to speak, walk, and most importantly “act like we got some sense.” | THE FOX IS A MIDDLE SCHOOL TEACHER BY TRADE, BUT SHE IS A SUPERHERO AT HEART AND ACTION. |
When I was in 6th grade, she told me when I got to 7th grade I was gonna be in her class. When I got to 7th grade she pulled me from my English class, and enrolled me in an elective class called Pro-Team. I’m not exactly sure what the curriculum was for Pro-Team, nor how it was so important I didn’t have to take 7th grade English, but I know she taught me how to do speeches, and I got so good she entered me in speech & oratorical contests all across the state of Oklahoma. I had memorized “God’s Trombone” by James Weldon Johnson, and I was killing it.
The Fox was/is old school though. I was a church boy, a son of a gospel musician. I was supposed to be at choir practice, practicing my tenor harmonies for the African American Youth Achievers choir. I was in the 11th grade (I think), starting to act out due to family trauma that I didn’t know how to describe or communicate until I myself was a youth worker and parent well into my 30’s. Me & a few other homies, whom I won’t name, were on the corner doing Lord knows what, with who knows what tucked in the small pocket of some jeans that were probably Fubu. We was “outchea,” as the kids say.
Next thing I know, a car swoops up on the curb and a figure about 5’9, 5’11 with heels, hops the Nissan and charges towards us. 2 of the 3 boys were in the choir, one was not. The dude who was not got ghost on us, leaving us frozen until we were apprehended and thrown in the back of the Nissan, and summarily cursed out. I was just praying that my dad would not be called, and my guy just wanted the chastisement to end. Instead, the Nissan pulled up to the church house, and we were again cursed out in the most lovingly way possible. After receiving the most endearing rebuke ever, we were made to go sing our parts like nothing ever happened. Luckily for me, my father never knew about it, nor were my friend and I patted down. I’m not gonna say who had what, but let's just say I’ve never tried to sing with perfect pitch more than I did this night.
The Fox was/is old school though. I was a church boy, a son of a gospel musician. I was supposed to be at choir practice, practicing my tenor harmonies for the African American Youth Achievers choir. I was in the 11th grade (I think), starting to act out due to family trauma that I didn’t know how to describe or communicate until I myself was a youth worker and parent well into my 30’s. Me & a few other homies, whom I won’t name, were on the corner doing Lord knows what, with who knows what tucked in the small pocket of some jeans that were probably Fubu. We was “outchea,” as the kids say.
Next thing I know, a car swoops up on the curb and a figure about 5’9, 5’11 with heels, hops the Nissan and charges towards us. 2 of the 3 boys were in the choir, one was not. The dude who was not got ghost on us, leaving us frozen until we were apprehended and thrown in the back of the Nissan, and summarily cursed out. I was just praying that my dad would not be called, and my guy just wanted the chastisement to end. Instead, the Nissan pulled up to the church house, and we were again cursed out in the most lovingly way possible. After receiving the most endearing rebuke ever, we were made to go sing our parts like nothing ever happened. Luckily for me, my father never knew about it, nor were my friend and I patted down. I’m not gonna say who had what, but let's just say I’ve never tried to sing with perfect pitch more than I did this night.
I also work hard to fill in the gaps they may have overlooked while doing their version of the lord's work. | The Fox loves real real hard, and expects the best out of you. She wanted us to be great, but never did much to help us deal with the emotional side of being a kid. She always told us what to do, and how we needed to do it, and I love and thank her for that. Ultimately, she is a huge reason why I do what I do today, why I am a success and not a statistic like so many of my homies, cousins, teammates, classmates, etc. ended up being, coming where I’m from. But something tells me that if I would have had an adult who could meet me where I was, someone who took the time to listen to help me sort through my troubles, someone who provided a healthy outlet to express myself based on what I was interested in, she would have never had to pick me up off that corner and drag me to choir practice that Tuesday night. |
Now that I’m grown, I look at all the things the people who love and care about me did to make me a better person, and I also work hard to fill in the gaps they may have overlooked while doing their version of the Lord’s work. That’s why I do what I do, that’s why I do it how I do it.
As an adult, I will never not be that same kid from a small town where a lot of people do not get to leave. A kid through the benevolence of The Most High, my ancestors, my loved ones, grew to be a college graduate who travels the country spittin’ Pan-African conscious hip-hop for gang members. The pandemic took away touring, so I’m now functioning as a Hip-Hop educator who teaches an elective middle school class with Humanities Amped that intersects hip-hop culture with social justice themes. I too will pull up on some youth brothers on the corner who may or may not be doing Lord knows what, the difference is I will meet them there, and ask them how they are doing. If the rapport is there, I’ll ask them why they are on this corner, and what I can do to help them get off it.
As an adult, I will never not be that same kid from a small town where a lot of people do not get to leave. A kid through the benevolence of The Most High, my ancestors, my loved ones, grew to be a college graduate who travels the country spittin’ Pan-African conscious hip-hop for gang members. The pandemic took away touring, so I’m now functioning as a Hip-Hop educator who teaches an elective middle school class with Humanities Amped that intersects hip-hop culture with social justice themes. I too will pull up on some youth brothers on the corner who may or may not be doing Lord knows what, the difference is I will meet them there, and ask them how they are doing. If the rapport is there, I’ll ask them why they are on this corner, and what I can do to help them get off it.
I took my first job as a youth worker when I was 18, working at a summer camp, and I loved it. Even though my degree is in history, 95% of my work experience has been working with young people over the last 19 years. I feel I have been successful because I meet young people where they are and with no judgement. I too deal with childhood trauma and could have easily gotten caught up in the streets, so I’m never looking to chastise or be condescending. I use hip-hop music and culture as a conduit to speak with young people on their terms, letting the dialogue and thoughts grow organically. Most importantly, I use Hip-Hop as a conduit to LISTEN. I use hip-hop to amplify voices in a way that may get ignored if they are not given the outlet to do so. | MOST IMPORTANTLY, I USE HIP-HOP AS A CONDUIT TO LISTEN. |
There’s a rapper named Li’l Baby from Atlanta, GA, known mostly for his autotuned melodic raps about hustling, flossing, and all types of street stories. In the summer of 2020 after Rayshard Brooks was murdered by Atlanta PD there were several protests, some even turned to riots where buildings were vandalized. Baby was so moved by the events that he left his million dollar mansion in the suburbs of Atlanta and started attending the marches & protests. This was the inspiration for his now Grammy nominated song “The Bigger Picture.”
In our #FreeHipHop class, our beloved community has created a space where we can be us, free of judgement & limitations. | On the ‘The Bigger Picture,” Baby talks about the traps of the streets, the unfair prison sentencing guides, stopping crimes & violence in the Black community, and the importance of young people voting. There’s thousands of conscious raps songs talking about social injustices in the era of Black Lives Matter protests, but this song cut through to the young people because he articulated in their language. Raw, uncut, pure, and in their voice. Making it a million times more potent & effective that if an old school conscious rapper like KRS-One would’ve said the same thing. This is why we HAD to discuss this song in our Humanities Amped #FreeHipHop classes. |
When I say Hip-Hop, I’m not talking about simply rapping or beats. I’m speaking to the way people think, interact, & express themselves. We can be hip-hop without ever mumbling a rap lyric or tapping our toes to the beat. In our #FreeHipHop class, our beloved community has created a space where we can be us, free of judgement & limitations. We listen, we learn, we love. We praise successes, and support when there’s tragedy. We meet each other where we are. In our beloved community, we put our culture over everything.
As Black History Month comes to a close, it is important that we treasure the wisdom of our elders and elevate the leadership demonstrated by our youth. The Sankofa bird is often interpreted to mean "return and get it."
Register using the link below to join us tomorrow, February 26, as our young guest community activists Myra Richardson and Anthony Kenny engage in a two-way dialogue with the founder of Dialogue on Race Louisiana and LSU desegregationist Maxine Crump and the first Black EBR school board member and EBR public schools desegregationist, Press Robinson.
In the afternoon we'll be showing off EBR students' soul at Fresh Heat: The Griot Edition, hosted by Asia Reese and Marcel P. Black. Asia is a Humanities Amped alumna and community educator at Belaire High School. Marcel is an Amped hip hop educator at Westdale Middle and founder of the after school hip hop leadership series Soul Cypher. You do not want to miss this amazing showcase!
Register using the link below to join us tomorrow, February 26, as our young guest community activists Myra Richardson and Anthony Kenny engage in a two-way dialogue with the founder of Dialogue on Race Louisiana and LSU desegregationist Maxine Crump and the first Black EBR school board member and EBR public schools desegregationist, Press Robinson.
In the afternoon we'll be showing off EBR students' soul at Fresh Heat: The Griot Edition, hosted by Asia Reese and Marcel P. Black. Asia is a Humanities Amped alumna and community educator at Belaire High School. Marcel is an Amped hip hop educator at Westdale Middle and founder of the after school hip hop leadership series Soul Cypher. You do not want to miss this amazing showcase!
We also invite you to read this report on the history of Black Baton Rouge, written by Dr. Lori Martin & Christopher J. Tyson, JD, and published by MetroMorphosis.
What's New at Humanities Amped
Forming Youth City Lab with our partners Front Yard Bikes, Big Buddy Program, and Line 4 Line represents enormous possibility for our Baton Rouge youth! Read more about it here.
Thank you, Amped family! We are so, so grateful for your generosity over the course of the #AmplifyHope Drive, especially in light of the year’s challenges. We recognize the importance of your choice to support this work, and we value your trust in us.
Because of you, we have been able to continue building a beloved community with Baton Rouge youth and educators as we amplify well-being, youth voice, and community-minded problem solving together. Here’s what that work looks like:
Coaching & Mentorship for Amped Educators
A cohort of teachers at Park Forest Middle, Westdale Middle, Belaire High, Broadmoor High, and McKinley High Schools meet regularly with an Amped coach to reflect, plan, and implement Amped methods in their classrooms. In the words of one Amped teacher, “Coaching gives me the tools and the confidence in my journey toward becoming an Amped teacher who can model methods for my cohorts.” Because of your generosity, we are able to offer ongoing professional development tailored to our teachers’ goals and their desire to develop as leaders.
Transformative Leadership Experiences for Students
Amped Studio Afterschool offers youth a chance to extend their Amped experience after school through tutoring, opportunities to grow as writers in WordCrew weekly writing workshops, and tools to build the future they desire in Dreamkeepers. Youth in Amped Studio have dedicated space to build community and leadership skills: last semester, an apprentice leader shared with us that being in Amped has taught her that “when other people tell me what they’re going through and I don’t understand, I know I don’t need to understand, I just need to be there for them.” Our new Soul Cypher weekly training builds on these ideas: in Soul Cypher peer leaders use hip hop as a lens to engage in dialogue about mental health and ways to support peers in crisis.
Classroom Supports
In addition to providing some classes with a dedicated Amped Community Educator, a partner teacher who collaboratively plans and co-teaches Amped electives, we are also offering a series of push-in workshops that support youth voice through writing and well-being through dialogue.
Black Futures: The Sankofa Series Black History Program
This February 26th event, co-sponsored by Humanities Amped and Metromorphosis, will feature intergenerational dialogue, a special edition of Fresh Heat Open Mic, and a variety of performances and visual art submissions from young people around Baton Rouge. Look for more information about how to attend this event soon!
We are excited about the learning and growth ahead of us in the year to come as we set up shop with our Youth City Lab coalition partners in our new home at 4385 Government Street. Our work is not possible without your support, and we are proud to have you on our team!
We are excited about the learning and growth ahead of us in the year to come as we set up shop with our Youth City Lab coalition partners in our new home at 4385 Government Street. Our work is not possible without your support, and we are proud to have you on our team!
You amplify our power and possibility!
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On November 13th, over 200 students, educators, and community leaders came together to participate in a day-long dialogue on race in education in East Baton Rouge Parish. The day included panels, small group dialogues, and workshops, all focused on the critical intersection of race and education with an emphasis on the root causes of racial disparities in education in the context of our local schools.
Many participants commented throughout the day that a wider audience would benefit from the historical and social analysis taking place, especially school board members, the incoming superintendent, and anyone in an educational leadership position in our community. As part of the day’s call to action, we ask that this report and the embedded videos be forwarded widely throughout our community, especially among school leaders and decision-makers.
The lunch panel featured Dr. Lisa Delpit, Dr. Press Robinson, and Dr. Jose Aviles. Dr. Press Robinson, the first Black school board member in EBRPSS, spoke to the process by which efforts to integrate Baton Rouge’s public schools in the 1980’s were undermined by mass divestment from public schools and policies that ultimately worsened conditions for Black students. Dr. Robinson argued that “the detrimental effects of desegregation are playing out today, and the effects are becoming more and more pronounced.”
Dr. Delpit spoke to what she calls the “smog of racism” in educational institutions. She explained, “Students internalize the smog of racism and question their own abilities. We must see our children as the brilliant beings they are with the history of brilliance they bring to our classrooms. And we have to gain the knowledge to be able to set the stage for the flowering of that brilliance by allowing them and us to see clearly what the smog of racism has been hiding.”
Dr. Aviles emphasized the role of belonging & inclusion to combat the ill effects of systemic racism, emphasizing how programs like the Pre-Scholars Academy at LSU are creating communities of belonging & inclusion, proving that students who have traditionally been denied access to college can become the school’s greatest assets, even outperforming other students, when they are adequately supported. He urged people to take action in their own sphere of influence, urging participants, “If we all do our part and get out of our comfort zone, we’re going to change the world.”
See the video of the lunch panel below.
Many participants commented throughout the day that a wider audience would benefit from the historical and social analysis taking place, especially school board members, the incoming superintendent, and anyone in an educational leadership position in our community. As part of the day’s call to action, we ask that this report and the embedded videos be forwarded widely throughout our community, especially among school leaders and decision-makers.
The lunch panel featured Dr. Lisa Delpit, Dr. Press Robinson, and Dr. Jose Aviles. Dr. Press Robinson, the first Black school board member in EBRPSS, spoke to the process by which efforts to integrate Baton Rouge’s public schools in the 1980’s were undermined by mass divestment from public schools and policies that ultimately worsened conditions for Black students. Dr. Robinson argued that “the detrimental effects of desegregation are playing out today, and the effects are becoming more and more pronounced.”
Dr. Delpit spoke to what she calls the “smog of racism” in educational institutions. She explained, “Students internalize the smog of racism and question their own abilities. We must see our children as the brilliant beings they are with the history of brilliance they bring to our classrooms. And we have to gain the knowledge to be able to set the stage for the flowering of that brilliance by allowing them and us to see clearly what the smog of racism has been hiding.”
Dr. Aviles emphasized the role of belonging & inclusion to combat the ill effects of systemic racism, emphasizing how programs like the Pre-Scholars Academy at LSU are creating communities of belonging & inclusion, proving that students who have traditionally been denied access to college can become the school’s greatest assets, even outperforming other students, when they are adequately supported. He urged people to take action in their own sphere of influence, urging participants, “If we all do our part and get out of our comfort zone, we’re going to change the world.”
See the video of the lunch panel below.
These morning and afternoon sessions further set the stage for dynamic conversations:
- Jasmine Pogue, Education Committee Chair from the Progressive Social Network presented on the History of Education in East Baton Rouge Public Schools. The purpose of the presentation was to elicit community support for EBRPSS by offering a historical lens for viewing our school system in the long struggle for equity in education. A video of that presentation is available below.
- Dr. Tiffany Franklin is a published author and member of the Federal Advisory Committee on Juvenile Justice. Her workshop was on Exploring Restorative Practices in Traditional Educational Settings explored how restorative practices offer viable alternatives to the school to prison pipeline.
- Asia Reese and Tyeone Barner, Humanities Amped alum, facilitated a workshop called Collective Truths and Transformative Justice focused on historical accuracy in curriculum and the ways that educational dispossession accumulate in students’ experiences.
- Dr. Alex Torres’ workshop, Race, Ethnicity, and Language Access in Education, focused on the unique and urgent needs of often overlooked and under resourced English Learners and immigrant students.
In the closing plenary, participants were asked to share their vision for education in EBR. Participants called for changes , including:
“A reinvestment in public schools that centers the leadership of Black and brown communities”
“Policies [that] focus on equity and restorative practices within the educational system”
“A lot more truth telling like we had today. If we can't diagnose the problem, we can't get to the real solution”
“Hire a local leader as superintendent and work to improve all schools in the parish, and not just the magnet schools.”
In summary, the day brought together community stakeholders for engaging and insightful conversations. Please join us in spreading the word so that more stakeholders in our community can gain the historical information and analysis that carried the day.
The event was co-sponsored by Dialogue on Race Louisiana, Humanities Amped, and Serve Louisiana.
What's new at Humanities Amped
Our annual Amplify Hope drive has so far raised $18,400, but we have a long way to go to reach our goal of $80,000! We invite you to join us in our work to amplify well-being, youth voice, and community-minded problem solving in Baton Rouge public schools at humanitiesamped.com/support. We cannot do this work without you!
Announcing our new building!
On Nov. 6th, the keys to 4385 Government Street were handed over to the leaders of four Baton Rouge youth organizations who together represent a newly formed Youth Coalition: Humanities Amped, Front Yard Bikes, Big Buddy Program, and Line 4 Line.
The coalition’s purpose is to provide a vibrant shared space where Baton Rouge youth have access to a network of relationships and opportunities grounded in the worth and power of young people to realize themselves and transform their communities. An open house for the public will take place as part of White Light Night on November 20th.
The coalition’s purpose is to provide a vibrant shared space where Baton Rouge youth have access to a network of relationships and opportunities grounded in the worth and power of young people to realize themselves and transform their communities. An open house for the public will take place as part of White Light Night on November 20th.
Blue Cross Blue Shield Foundation provided the initial $250K in funding through an “Angels of Change Award” intended to support past BCBS honorees to collaborate on solving issues for Louisiana’s children. This award will support the renovation and development of the space.
The coalition plans to provide a range of programming at the center, including a community-owned bike shop (Front Yard Bikes), a full-service salon where youth receive hands-on training in barbering and beauty techniques, a Community Reading Room (Line4Line), and youth workforce experiences and skill development workshops (Big Buddy Program). This exciting move to a building will provide Humanities Amped with a dedicated space for Amped Studio Afterschool, tutoring and healing circles, WordCrew spoken word poetry, Fresh Heat Open Mics, youth civic engagement projects and conferences, Dreamkeepers college and career readiness, and array of training for educators, youth workers and peer leaders.
We cannot wait to see what this space makes possible for Baton Rouge youth!
The coalition plans to provide a range of programming at the center, including a community-owned bike shop (Front Yard Bikes), a full-service salon where youth receive hands-on training in barbering and beauty techniques, a Community Reading Room (Line4Line), and youth workforce experiences and skill development workshops (Big Buddy Program). This exciting move to a building will provide Humanities Amped with a dedicated space for Amped Studio Afterschool, tutoring and healing circles, WordCrew spoken word poetry, Fresh Heat Open Mics, youth civic engagement projects and conferences, Dreamkeepers college and career readiness, and array of training for educators, youth workers and peer leaders.
We cannot wait to see what this space makes possible for Baton Rouge youth!
TEACHER CARE DELIVERY DAY
Last month Humanities Amped staff surprised our teachers with care packages filled with gift cards to local businesses, a Humanities Amped t-shirt and mask, and a hot lunch courtesy of Memphis Mac BBQ. At Humanities Amped, we believe that teacher well-being matters!
In response to the teachers' expressed needs, Humanities Amped staff also delivered cleaning supplies to support our teachers in doing what they can to keep their classrooms safe.
Board members Carlos Thomas, Megan Sheehan-Dean, and Andrew Kuo helped make the day a success.
We would like to extend a special thank you to Memphis Mac, Mid City Beer Garden, Vegan Friendly Foods, The Joint Chiropractic, Costco, Lowe's, and Elsie's Plate and Pie for their donations!
We would like to extend a special thank you to Memphis Mac, Mid City Beer Garden, Vegan Friendly Foods, The Joint Chiropractic, Costco, Lowe's, and Elsie's Plate and Pie for their donations!
Day of Dialogue on Race & Education
Join us on November 13 for this online event featuring three panels and dialogues on the critical intersection of race and education. Three separate panels will feature local education experts. Each panel will be followed by dialogues with groups of teachers, students, educational leaders, and community members. Choose to attend the full day of panels with opening and closing plenaries or select the panels you wish to attend.
We are excited to welcome Dr. Lisa Delpit, Dr. Press Robinson, and Dr. Jose Aviles as panelists. See the full program schedule below or here.
We are excited to welcome Dr. Lisa Delpit, Dr. Press Robinson, and Dr. Jose Aviles as panelists. See the full program schedule below or here.
This event is co-sponsored by Dialogue on Race Louisiana, Humanities Amped, and Serve Louisiana, and registration is open now: in order for educators and students to attend this event for free, we are asking for a $5 donation from anyone who is able.
Listen, learn, and join the dialogue!
Listen, learn, and join the dialogue!
The inaugural Humanities Amped Learning Community Summer Institute, attended by nearly 50 participants representing EBRPSS educators from five schools, Amped Community Educators, and high school and middle school youth apprentice leaders, has been running online for the last three weeks. Despite the inherent challenges of distance learning, our learning network members engaged in community building, workshops, and reading and reflection focusing on culturally sustaining pedagogies, restorative justice practices, mind-body wellness, and arts integration. Sessions leaders included Eric Butler from Talking Piece, Toni Bankston from the Baton Rouge Children's Advocacy Center, Lorena Germán from The Multicultural Classroom, and Forward Arts Teaching Artists Desireé Dallagiacomo and Donney Rose. Throughout the institute, planning teams of educators and youth have sought to address the following driving questions:
What are the conditions of student and educator well-being, connectedness, and engagement as civic-minded problem-solvers? How do we center these priorities in online/hybrid learning?
The teams worked collaboratively to develop concrete action plans for the coming school year.
One middle school apprentice leader shared that their biggest take-away from the institute has been “Learning about restorative justice and collective hope.” An EBR teacher also mentioned the notion of collective hope, offering that “Deeper student-teacher collaboration leads to braver, richer learning spaces. Transformative justice requires collective hope, which requires connection, imagination and action.” Another EBR teacher expressed, “I’m not alone. I found out there are others who see the struggle in our classroom and are willing to not only call it out, but be active participants in change at ground zero (the classroom).”
We celebrated the close of this institute with an online forum highlighting the work of four teams. We were joined by special guest Dr. David Stovall, who provided framing for this work as well as a response to each presentation. We invite you to not only view the forum (below), but to visit our Summer Institute webpage to review all of the team plans for the 2020-21 school year!
One middle school apprentice leader shared that their biggest take-away from the institute has been “Learning about restorative justice and collective hope.” An EBR teacher also mentioned the notion of collective hope, offering that “Deeper student-teacher collaboration leads to braver, richer learning spaces. Transformative justice requires collective hope, which requires connection, imagination and action.” Another EBR teacher expressed, “I’m not alone. I found out there are others who see the struggle in our classroom and are willing to not only call it out, but be active participants in change at ground zero (the classroom).”
We celebrated the close of this institute with an online forum highlighting the work of four teams. We were joined by special guest Dr. David Stovall, who provided framing for this work as well as a response to each presentation. We invite you to not only view the forum (below), but to visit our Summer Institute webpage to review all of the team plans for the 2020-21 school year!
We are grateful for the support of ReCAST Baton Rouge, the Huey and Angelina Wilson Family Foundation, and the partnership of the Big Buddy Program, the EBRPSS 21st Century Learning Center, and the East Baton Rouge Parish School System. And as always, we are grateful for your support of this work as we continue to engage in what Dr. Shawn Ginwright calls radical imagination, or "our collective dreaming about how things should be" (2016, p. 23). Thank you for engaging in radical imagination with us!