Paul Krugman and the Power of Science Fiction

“My mind is so free and unburdened that I am fixing to clean up my desk.”
Flannery O’Conner
Quoted by Susan Ohanian, Books Day by Day, entry for April 16

I cleaned my desk recently (more precisely, I started to…), and I came across Susan Ohanian’s article, “Nobel Prize Winning Economist Paul Krugman Was Inspired by Science Fiction, Not the Common Core” (Substance, December 2011, p. 3). Ohanian was reacting to Common Core architect David Coleman’s view that schools “need to de-emphasize fiction… just the facts.”

In my recent papers, I have reported on findings showing that those who read more know more about a variety of areas, including history and science, and most of what they read is fiction (see especially Stanovich and Cunningham, 1993).

Ohanian points out that fiction can give you even more: it can give you inspiration and a new way of seeing things. She describes how Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman was inspired to be an economist because of fiction, specifically science fiction, more specifically Isaac Asimov’s Foundation Trilogy.

Ohanian quotes Krugman’s description in her article. Krugman said that Isaac Asimov’s Foundation Trilogy “is a very unusual set of novels… It’s not about gadgets. Although it’s supposed to be about a galactic civilization, the technology is virtually invisible and it’s not about space battles or anything like that. The story is about… psychohistorians, who are mathematical social scientists and have a theory about how society works. The theory tells them that the galactic empire is failing, and they use that knowledge to save civilization. It’s a great image. I was 16 when I read it and I thought ‘I want to be one of those guys.’” Krugman decided that economics was the closest he could get.

The same thing happened to me. I also read the Foundation novels when I was a teenager, and I was also fascinated with the idea of doing this kind of research. It took a few decades until I found a way of being my version of a mathematical social scientist, an empirical scientist in a field that was not used to that kind of research. (I wasn’t the first; one of my professors, John Oller, showed me that empirical research in language acquisition and literacy development was not only possible but very worthwhile.)

Stanovich, K., and Cunningham, A. (1993). “Where Does Knowledge Come From? Specific associations between print exposure and information acquisition.” Journal of Educational Psychology, 85(2), 211–229.

Stephen Krashen is professor emeritus at Rossier School of Education, University of Southern California.

Language Adapts, Students Adapt—Why Not Language Tests?

Imagine you are trying to build strength. You go to the gym every day, lift weights, and then come home to rest and recover. The next day, you are back at the gym for another round of weightlifting. For the past two weeks, you have only been able to do ten reps with 60 pounds at the bench press, but your goal is to lift 100 pounds. What is the best way of getting to your goal of lifting 100 pounds?

Option A: Keep trying to lift 100 pounds until one day you are hopefully able to do so;
Option B: Try lifting 61–62 pounds next time you go to the gym and then increase the weight each week by two pounds;
Option C: Try lifting 80–81 pounds next time you go to the gym and then increase the weight each week by five pounds;
Option D: Keep lifting 60 pounds every time and hope you can lift 100 pounds someday.

Most of us would agree that the best way to achieve a goal—whether building strength, as in the example above, or improving language proficiency—is by pushing our limits little by little (option B above). If we do not push our limits at all (option D), no growth or development will take place. If we push too hard (options A and C), we will be disappointed that we cannot do it and will lose motivation. In the same manner, a juggler doesn’t learn to juggle five balls before first being able to juggle three and then four. And the only way to learn to juggle four balls is by being able to juggle three and then attempting to juggle four. Mistakes will happen, but with practice, patience, and the support of the foundational skills previously learned while juggling three balls, that juggler will eventually be able to juggle four balls, getting them closer to their goal of five.

Making Progress in Learning a Language

A notion that has had a significant impact in the fields of psychology, sociology, and applied linguistics is that of the zone of proximal development (a.k.a. ZPD), first presented by Vygotsky in 1978 as a component of his theory of learning and development. As originally proposed, the ZPD indicates “the distance between the actual development level (of the learner) as determined by independent problem solving and the level of potential development as determined through problem solving under adult guidance, or in collaboration with more capable peers” (Vygotsky, 1978, p. 86). Since its proposal, the core idea around ZPD has been applied to many different areas. One area in which the concept of ZPD needs to be better understood and absorbed by practitioners is the area of world language instruction and especially that of assessment.

All of us have likely met language teachers who constantly give their students tasks that are either too easy or too hard to complete. In other words, they do not really know how to adapt the lessons to the varied proficiency levels of their students or how to select exercises and tasks that will push the boundaries of their knowledge just a little further. They struggle with selecting activities that are within each student’s zone of proximal development. These would be tasks that are slightly above each student’s ability level (i.e., an intermediate-high level task for an intermediate-mid level student).

However, the idea that progress takes place when students are exposed to slightly more difficult tasks than they are capable of easily completing has been extensively researched and promoted in the applied linguistics literature. We see it, for example, in the Lexile framework, which promotes that the Lexile measure of a reading text be slightly above a student’s Lexile reading measure for the student to learn new words and structures in a scaffolded context. We see it in Krashen’s input hypothesis (1985), in which he defends the idea that acquisition takes place when input is slightly beyond a language speaker’s current level of competence (a.k.a., i+1).

Finally, we see it in the research into reading comprehension, which suggests that readers are still able to comprehend a text when about 2% to 5% of the words are unknown (Laufer and Ravenhorst-Kalovski, 2010; Nation, 2006; van Zeeland and Schmitt, 2012) and that this should be a target to aim for. The 95% to 98% of words that are known act as the scaffolding necessary for readers to infer the meaning of and gradually learn the unknown 2% to 5% of words. This is another example of i+1 in practice in our field.

Part of being a good language teacher is knowing how to adapt the content of our instruction to push students just the right amount so that they can improve their language proficiency by being continually exposed to language materials and language use scenarios that are just slightly above their current levels of ability. When we adapt, the students adapt, and so do their language skills.

Adaptive Language Tests?

Let’s imagine we have 100 language learners at various levels of reading proficiency in French, ranging from novice-low to advanced-high, but we do not know what each learner’s level is. Our task is to create an assessment that measures their reading proficiency in French. There are many ways to develop an assessment for that purpose, including

  • Option A: Create a paper-and-pencil or computerized test with several reading questions at each level (e.g., ACTFL levels from novice-low to advanced-high). Then, have all test takers, regardless of their actual proficiency, take the entire test, which is the same for everyone. At the end, see how many questions they got correct and assign a proficiency level to each test taker.
  • Option B: Create a computerized test that has several reading questions at each level from novice-low to advanced-high. Then, have each test taker take a few intermediate-level questions at first (the expected average ability of the group). For those test takers who fail to correctly answer most of the initial intermediate-level questions, show them novice-level questions and let them attempt to answer those. Accordingly, for those who do succeed in correctly answering most of the intermediate-level questions, show them advanced-level questions instead.

I hope most of the readers will agree that assessment method B above will tend to be shorter and will lead to less frustration or boredom than assessment method A. After all, if test takers can successfully answer intermediate-level questions, why ask them to answer a series of novice-level questions? Not only would that make the test longer and more boring for these test takers, but it could in fact decrease the level of precision of the assessment instrument. If I have seen a juggler successfully juggling six balls on a few occasions, do I need to see them successfully juggling four to be highly confident they can juggle four balls? The answer is no. We know their juggling ability is at least six balls. And the reason we can safely say so in this case is because juggling ability is a unitary construct, just like reading proficiency in a language, which follows determined developmental stages.

A well-known fact of Rasch measurement, a measurement framework commonly employed in developing language assessments (Ockey, 2021), is that the measurement precision of a question (i.e., the amount of statistical information provided by a question given a specific examinee) increases the closer the level of the question is to the level of the test taker. This is, for example, the psychometric framework employed in developing computer-adaptive tests (CATs), which are tests capable of adapting in real time to the estimated proficiency level of each individual test taker.

By not having all test takers take the same exact, linear, fixed-form test, a CAT has the potential to increase the precision and efficiency of the measurement while also providing for a much more pleasant test-taking experience for each test taker. As Schultz, Whitney, and Zickar (2014) note, CATs “can be both more effective and more efficient” when compared to fixed-form tests. This is because tests in which items are better targeted to the level of each test taker can afford to be shorter than their fixed-form counterparts without compromising the precision of the measurement (and, in most cases, improving it).

CATs can come in a variety of flavors, with the two most employed in language testing being adaptivity at the item level and adaptivity at the stage level. In the former, all test takers take the same initial item. After they respond to that item, the computer then chooses a subsequent item for each test taker that is close to their currently estimated proficiency. That process is repeated until the system is confident of the test taker’s proficiency level. In the latter method, called a multistage computer adaptive test (MsCAT), the test adapts at the stage level instead. All test takers take the same initial group of items.

Whether a language testing developer decides to implement an item-adaptive or stage-adaptive test is a matter of available human and computational resources, knowledge of the subject, and personal preference.

However, one thing is certain: in this day and age, there are few good reasons why a test developer may want to deliver a linear, fixed-form computer test of language proficiency that emulates a decades-old pen-and-paper test that does not adapt in real time to the level of the test takers.

Now, back to our strength-building analogy. Let’s say you are now a personal trainer (teacher) helping a group of 20 people (students) of varied abilities build their strength (improve their language proficiency). If you do not know where they currently stand, how would you go about assessing their current abilities (their current proficiency levels) in an efficient and effective manner in order to put together a comprehensive and targeted program for each one of them, making sure not to hurt them during the process?

References

Krashen, S. (1985). The Input Hypothesis: Issues and Implications. London: Longman.
Laufer, B., and Ravenhorst-Kalovski, G. C. (2010). “Lexical Threshold Revisited: Lexical text coverage, learners’ vocabulary size and reading comprehension.” Reading in a Foreign Language, 22, 15–30.
Lund, R. J. (1991). “A Comparison of Second Language Listening and Reading Comprehension.” Modern Language Journal, 75, 196–204.
Nation, I. (2006). “How Large a Vocabulary Is Needed for Reading and Listening?” Canadian Modern Language Review, 63(1), 59–82.
Ockey, G. J. (2021). “Item Response Theory and Many-Facet Rasch Measurement.” In The Routledge Handbook of Language Testing (pp. 462–476). Routledge.
Schultz, K. S., Whitney, D. J., and Zickar, M. J. (2014). Measurement Theory in Action (2nd ed.). Hove, Sussex: Taylor & Francis.
Van Zeeland, H., and Schmitt, N. (2012). “Lexical Coverage in L1 and L2 Listening Comprehension: The same or different from reading comprehension?” Applied Linguistics. doi:10.1093/applin/ams074.
Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in Society: The Development of Higher Psychological Processes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Victor D. O. Santos, PhD, is director of assessment and research for Avant Assessment. His PhD dissertation (Iowa State University, 2017) was on the topic of assessing students’ academic vocabulary breadth by means of computer-adaptive assessment. Dr. Santos has served as a reviewer for several academic journals in the areas of language learning and assessment.

Timor-Leste Changes Law to Enforce Portuguese in Schools

Timor-Leste (East Timor) is to amend its education law to enforce the use of Portuguese in schools.

The young nation’s minister of Education Armindo Maia announced that changes would be made to the 2008 Basic Education Law to ensure schools are using Portuguese, alongside their native Austronesian language, Tetun.

“We will change the law related to education to force students and teachers to use Portuguese during lessons,” he said, expressing concern that most schools in the country do not make use of the language, despite its official status. “At present, 80% of students and teachers do not use Portuguese in class,” Maia added.

In 2020, the Timor government initiated a liaison with Portugal to implement a Pro-Portuguese Project, aimed at training its teachers in the adopted language. Some schools took drastic measures in encouraging the use of Portuguese and began to impose fines on students who were not seen to be communicating in the language.

Timor-Leste was colonized by Portugal in the 16th century and many cultural references to the European country remain. However, according to the 2010 census, as few as 600 citizens were declared native speakers of the language. When Timor-Leste gained full independence in 2002, primary languages included Tetun, Mambai, and Makasae, with little sign of Portuguese being revitalized.

Two decades later, the decision to enforce Portuguese is met with conflicting views, as many teachers are questioning how their students will perform when taught in Portuguese.

Roberto Fernandez, a teacher at St. Francis Assisi School in Fatuberliu said he backs the decision to increase the use of Portuguese, but claimed teachers would need support and resources to do so effectively. “We need a lot of time to adjust to Portuguese. This is still a challenge for us here,” he said.

Fernandez added that not all teachers in his school were fluent or familiar with Portuguese, and that teachers in remote areas in particular would need extra help. He added, “Maybe it would take decades more for all schools to fully adopt the Portuguese language.”

Hiron Goncalves, a student at the National University of Timor-Leste, said she uses Portuguese in the classroom “but it is more because of force.”

“It is the formal language we use in class, while once out we use Tetum and Indonesian,” she added.

The government and education ministry of Timor-Leste cite potential economic benefits from other Portuguese-speaking countries as an incentive to enforce Portuguese in education.

Conquering Decoding Skills


Have you ever watched a young reader seemingly have the ability to lift words off the page? Students like this have become proficient decoders, and with that, they can attend better to comprehend what they are reading.

Decoding is not easy for students with dyslexia.

According to the International Dyslexia Association, “Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that is neurobiological in origin. It is characterized by difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition and by poor spelling and decoding abilities. These difficulties typically result from a deficit in the phonological component of language that is often unexpected in relation to other cognitive abilities and the provision of effective classroom instruction. Secondary consequences may include problems in reading comprehension and reduced reading experience that can impede the growth of vocabulary and background knowledge.”

Decoding is an essential part of learning how to read and comprehend print.

Before readers can successfully decode, critical skills need to be solidly in place. One of the skills is the ability to hear and manipulate the sounds in spoken words (phonological awareness); another skill is knowing the correlation between letters and sounds (this is called phonics). To help students become successful readers, these skills need to be taught in an explicit, systematic, sequential way.
Once readers have these skills in place, teachers can start implementing decoding strategies and techniques.
I highlight six great decoding strategies below.

  1. Segmenting and Blending Activity
    Being able to segment and blend words is one step in learning how to decode. One way teachers can help students do this is by making their own blending board for students to practice with.
    What you need: Sticky notes, index cards, or paper and pencil
    How to make a blending board: First, create letter cards with any of the following: Post-It Notes, index cards, pieces of paper. Write the lowercase letters of the sounds your students know, one letter per card. Put the letter cards in vowel, consonant (VC) order or consonant, vowel, consonant (CVC) order. Starting at the left, point to each letter and sweep across with your hand as the student reads each sound and blends them into a syllable. A syllable is a word or word part that contains a vowel sound. Sometimes, this activity will create nonsense syllables. Ask the students to give a thumbs up if this is a real word that is spelled and pronounced correctly. Introduce new letters and sounds and then add them to the blending board.
  2. Word Chaining
    Word chaining is an engaging way to practice manipulating letters/sounds in words.
    What you need: Paper and pencil
    How to practice word chaining: Have students turn a piece of paper horizontally and draw five to six boxes across the page from left to right. Give them a word like map and ask them to write it in the first box. Moving to the second box, change one sound, such as changing /m/ to /t/, and have them write the new word (tap). Continue like this until all of the boxes are filled. Have students read through the word chain. Once the students understand this activity, it can be done with a partner.
  3. Word Dictation
    A great way to check if students are applying new learning is to ask them to encode, or spell words through word dictation.
    What you need: Paper and pencil
    How to practice word dictation: Give the students a one-syllable word. Have the students repeat the word and count the sounds they hear.
    Ask the students to draw one line for each sound and then put the corresponding letter(s) on each line. Make sure they have the correct number of sound lines. If they correctly spell the word, have them write the word again next to the lines. If they misspell the word, support them by walking through steps 2 and 3. When all the words are spelled correctly, ask the students to read through the list.
  4. Compound Words
    Once a student is able to decode single-syllable words, we can introduce and practice compound words. Compound words are two words put together to make a new word.
    What you need: Pencil and half a sheet of paper for each student
    How to practice compound words: Fold the right and left sides of the paper toward each other to meet in the middle, creating two flaps.
    Open up the flaps and write the compound word (as an example, catfish). Close the flaps and write cat on the left flap and fish on the right.
    Ask students to draw a picture of a cat on the left and a fish on the right. When they are finished, open up the flaps and draw a catfish. Students can then come up with other compound words and share them with their peers.
  5. Rapid Word Charts
    As students become more confident decoding words, we then want them to practice recognizing the words quickly or automatically. Rapid word charts are a great way to give students additional practice reading the words they have previously decoded.
    What you need: Piece of paper and pencil
    How to practice rapid word charts: Create a grid with six boxes going across the page and six boxes going down the page. Choose six previously taught words and put them into the grid in random order. Have the students read across each row until they get to the end.
    Students can challenge themselves by timing each read with the goal of beating the best time. For a more gamified activity, number each row going down. Add dice or cards numbered one through six. Whatever number is rolled, the student will read the corresponding row.
  6. Decodable Sentences and Stories (Fluency practice)
    Decodable texts offer students the opportunity to practice and apply previously learned phonics skills that have been explicitly taught. Using decodable texts helps students with word recognition, fluency, and automaticity. Repeated readings benefit students by providing extra practice. Some decodable text may contain irregularly spelled words like was. It is important to teach and practice these words so students can successfully read them in the text.
    What you need: Decodable texts
    How to practice decodable sentences and stories: Read the text aloud while the student reads along or follows along silently. Ask the student to read the text aloud for a second time. If they make a mistake, offer support by asking them to go back to the word and decode it. Then have the student reread the sentence correctly. Continue reading the text. For additional practice/repeated readings, have the student read to a partner or record themselves on a digital device. Send the text home for extra practice or ask a volunteer to listen to the student read.

Kathleen Law is a structured literacy, Orton-Gillingham, and science of reading–certified teacher and current instructional content specialist for IMSE. IMSE offers a number of free digital and printable resources to help teachers make an impact for students, including a printable blending board, digital blending boards, short vowel CVC flip book, word chaining trains, decodable fluency practice, and reading strategy bookmarks. You can find a full list of free, customizable lesson templates from IMSE at https://linktr.ee/imse or by following them on Instagram (@imse_og).

Declaring Literacy as a Fundamental and Global Civil Right

For decades, educators and parents have been fighting illiteracy. Research indicates that 95% of children can learn how to read with evidence-based instruction. However, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), only 35% of fourth graders and 32% of eighth graders in the US read proficiently. Reading proficiency is even lower for specific demographic groups. Often referred to as an achievement gap, in reality, it’s more of an opportunity gap.

The gap is apparent when comparing scores between Black and White fourth and eighth graders. On US national tests last year, NAEP reported that only 18% of Black fourth graders scored proficient or above in reading, whereas 45% of White fourth graders scored proficient or above. In the same report, only 15% of Black eighth graders were proficient readers compared to 42% of White eighth graders.

Robert Pondiscio, senior visiting fellow at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, has stated that any discussion about educational equity that is not focused on literacy is unserious. “Wide and persistent gaps between White and Black students, stretching back decades, make it abundantly clear—or ought to—that state education officials have no more urgent business to attend to than ensuring every child can read in every school under their control or influence,” he said.

Dr. Miguel A. Cardona, US secretary of education, highlighted this problem last year when he acknowledged that students of color and those from low-income backgrounds historically had less access to educational opportunities, including talented educators, rigorous coursework, school counselors, and other supports required for student success. “It is our moment to finally make education the great equalizer, the force that can help every student thrive, no matter their background, zip code, circumstance, or language they speak at home.”
Along with racial and social justice, literacy is a fundamental human right, just like any other liberty we enjoy. It is time to declare that literacy is a civil right in our country and globally. Reading is the gateway to learning and lifelong success.

How to Address the Opportunity Gap

In the US, there are three approaches to addressing the gap between the numbers of students reading proficiently.

We need to reframe the conversation from “achievement gap” to “opportunity gap.” The proficiency chasm has not developed because of a difference in learning ability between the various demographic or economic groups. Instead, it reflects the lack of opportunities some students have been given to help them to succeed. Instead of focusing on the misconception of what these students lack, the correct response would be to focus on the opportunities that we can provide them moving forward, like access to high-quality curriculum and highly trained teachers.

Every student has a right to a properly trained teacher using what’s known as evidence-based teaching methods to teach reading. According to Dr. John Hattie, a noted professor of education from New Zealand, teachers have the greatest impact on student achievement. Hattie advocates for what’s known as structured literacy and the science of reading–based curriculum to close the opportunity gap. Using the types of evidence-based teaching pedagogy built on decades of research is an effective way to provide educational equity during the critical K–3 learning window. Since only half of the colleges and universities in the US instruct teachers in these evidence-based methods, a nationwide focus on preparing teachers to teach reading is a vital first step in closing the gap.

To close the opportunity gap, students also require equal access to high-quality literacy instruction and programs. If local, state, federal, and country Ministry of Education officials were to collaborate with their respective school leaders to support and purchase high-quality programs, we would see the reading scores rise and the gap close sooner. As we know, here in the US, as a result of the pandemic, the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funds are still available to districts to purchase proven science of reading literacy programs. This means literacy programs that contain systematic and explicit instruction in specific areas including phonics, phonemic awareness, vocabulary, fluency, and comprehension.

To address educational equity and the opportunity gap, it is critical to zero in on the fundamental skill of reading. Fortunately, the pandemic relief funds can be invested in literacy programs based in the science of reading—the gold standard of how to teach reading.
That means that regardless of the zip codes where students live, they can have access to rigorous instruction that will open up economic and social opportunities that will in turn impact generational wealth and other benefits.

Literacy has no geographic boundaries and is at the core of sustainable solutions to the world’s greatest problems. Literacy builds the foundation for freedom from poverty, freedom from disease, and freedom from oppression.

By investing in literacy and education, schools, districts, and governments around the world can meet their fundamental obligations by giving all people the opportunity to improve their lives, their health, their communities, and their nations.

In my role, I am committed to working to ensure that every child has access to the tools to successfully navigate through this increasingly complex and competitive world.

Academic success leads to informed decision-making, active civic participation, improved self-confidence, and a path to economic prosperity.
Literacy truly is a civil right and can and should be for all.

Notes

www.nationsreportcard.gov/reading/nation/achievement/?grade=4
https://fordhaminstitute.org/national/commentary/literacy-equity

Liz Brooke, PhD, CCC-SLP, is the chief learning officer at Lexia Learning (www.lexialearning.com). She will be a keynote speaker at the World Literacy Summit (www.worldliteracysummit.org). The summit will run from April 2–4, 2023, at Oxford University, UK. Registrations are now open. The conference is being organized by the World Literacy Foundation, a peak global literacy charitable body.

The World Literacy Summit Program is built around three days of interactive discussions; presentations from academia on the latest research and development on literacy training and trends; and participation from government, nonprofit literacy associations and private industries, and individuals throughout the globe that have provided a pathway to helping world literacy. Take advantage of the early-bird registration, which ends Feb. 15, 2023.

Spain’s Queen Celebrates Spanish Growth in US

Spain’s Queen Letizia was in Los Angeles last month, not only to inaugurate the West Coast’s first branch of the Cervantes Institute but also to discuss and share ideas on the future of Spanish in the US.


Letizia, an experienced national television journalist and progressive feminist, officially opened the seventh Cervantes location in the US alongside Luis García Montero, global director of the Instituto Cervantes, and the writer Luisgé Martín, who is taking the helm of the LA institute. Unsurprisingly, there were plenty of Latinx celebrities at the event, including Kate del Castillo, Eugenio Derbez, Pedro Osuna, María Valverde, and Gustavo Dudamel, the Venezuelan conductor and head of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. 


The new center’s library, dedicated to film-related materials in Spanish, is named after Oscar-winning director Pedro Almodóvar, who recorded a short film for the event in which he welcomed Spanish “however it’s spoken.”


Queen Letizia chaired a working meeting at the institute on the current situation of Spanish in the US and its prospects for growth. Luis García Montero summarized the objectives of the new center, while Richard Bueno Hudson, director of the Instituto Cervantes in New York, explained the challenges that “pan-Hispanism”—the coordination between Spain and other Spanish-speaking countries—poses for Spanish, its teaching, and its certification. According to him, the weight and the “diverse unity” of Spanish are reinforced by the development of Ibero-American linguistic and intercultural networks, the use of technological resources, and the new perspectives of the global world.


The director of Chicago’s institute, Anastasio Sánchez Zamorano, highlighted the agreement with CPS (Chicago Public Schools) to teach and implement the curriculum of the institute in public and private schools in the city, and the new program called Cervantes Bridges, which helps teach Spanish to the most disadvantaged students in the metropolitan area so that they can obtain their Seals of Biliteracy at the end of high school.


Albuquerque’s director, Silvia Rodríguez Grijalba, pointed out the unique position of her center being in New Mexico, a truly bilingual state, and explained that although Spanish is taught there, the institute offers literacy improvement programs and cultural activities to enhance knowledge of the cultural heritage of its Hispanic students.


Grijalba also gave an overview of the work they are doing in El Paso, where 80% of the population speaks Spanish. Under the name Pride and Heritage, classes are offered to children and adolescents to help them to improve their Spanish and to learn “and feel proud of the culture of their ancestors.”


LA director Martín said the city’s center would focus on the huge influence of Mexican and Central American cultures and the importance of the audiovisual industry. The new headquarters aspires to become a meeting place for Spanish-language creativity and the place for cinematographic and audiovisual creation in Spanish.


He also said, in a statement, that special attention will be devoted to second- and third-generation immigrants, whose relationship with Spanish is sometimes conflicted.


Spanish-language film producer Ignacio Darnaude emphasized the “explosive growth of Spanish and Latino in the world of entertainment,” as well as the “undeniable business figures” and “the pressure for the product generated by Hollywood to reflect the cultural diversity of the country.” “We have a golden opportunity to unite and leverage these forces, expanding Spanish and Latino culture in the US and around the world with the help of what unites us: the Spanish language,” said the producer.

Florida Bans African American Studies Course

Florida government officials have forbidden the introduction of a new advanced-level high school course that would teach African-American history and literature.

The decision made under Governor Ron DeSantis’ administration cited a lack “in educational value” supposedly “contrary to Florida law” , but did not state which laws the course would break. The course was due to be rolled out in a pilot scheme designed by the US college board, in 60 high schools across the US. 

The Florida Department of Education stated its intent to ban the course in a letter to the College Board, submitted on January 12, suggesting that the course violates state law and is an inaccurate representation of history – “In the future, should the College Board be willing to come back to the table with lawful, historically accurate content, (the Department of Education) will always be willing to reopen the discussion,”. 

The news has been met with a feeling of outrage, leaving educational professionals in shock and many high school students in protest. As Florida celebrated literacy week, teachers emptied shelves of more banned books and three high school students announced plans to sue DeSantis, their case represented by high-profile human rights attorney Ben Crump.

Democratic state Rep. Fentrice Driskell announced the lawsuit at a news conference in Tallahassee on Wednesday, explaining “By rejecting the African American history pilot program, Ron DeSantis has clearly demonstrated that he wants to dictate whose history does—and doesn’t—belong,”.

Under DeSantis’ administration, laws on educational censorship continue to be passed, not only focusing on written literature but eliminating the opportunity for open educational dialogue in some circumstances; and in the 2021/22 school year alone, it was reported that over 2500 books were banned from schools across the country, the opportunity for written and spoken educational analysis disappearing with them. 

In 2022, DeSantis introduced the Stop Woke Act, a law forbidding the discussion of race, gender identity, and sexual orientation for certain elementary school students, and in turn allowing parents to sue educational establishments. 

The new decision to block the AP African American studies course has been strongly criticized by the National Parents Union, who have expressed that the ban is a “direct attack on the Black and all (Black, Indigenous and Persons of Color) communities.” They added, “This behavior is dangerous and should concern every American”.

Despite the government supporting students’ legal right to receive information, the administration insists the course is too ‘woke’ —with Florida Education Commissioner Manny Diaz Jr. branding the course “woke indoctrination masquerading as education.” 

In response, the College Board claimed the course was “undergoing a rigorous, multi-year pilot phase, collecting feedback from teachers, students, scholars, and policymakers”, and would “look forward to bringing this rich and inspiring exploration of African-American history and culture to students across the country.” 

Bill Would Extend Pell Grant by Four Semesters

Reps. Haley Stevens (D-MI) and Jimmy Gomez (D-CA) have introduced the Pell to Grad Act. The Pell to Grad Act will increase lifetime Pell Grant eligibility and expand Pell Grant eligibility to graduate programs.

Nearly 60% of Black college students and nearly half of Native American and Latinx students receive a Pell Grant.

For many students, completing college in the traditional 12 semesters is not a reality,” said Rep. Stevens. “Expanding Pell eligibility by four semesters means that the students who need it most have another chance to complete their degrees. We also know that advanced degrees are key to filling the jobs of the future. I hear from business owners across SE Michigan that they are eager to hire and have high-wage jobs in the advanced manufacturing sector just waiting to be filled. This bill will help students get the degrees they need to succeed and become a part of America’s next generation of workers and thinkers, ready to meet the demand of the future.” 

“Pell Grants have given millions the opportunity to receive a higher education, including myself. But Pell falls short by only funding undergraduate students and giving them a strict timeline to complete their education. In today’s job market, a master’s degree is necessary to compete for many entry level jobs, creating another barrier for low-income students and graduates,” said Rep. Gomez. “Our legislation allows students to use Pell Grants for post-grad education and extends the coverage period for from 12 to 16 semesters, enabling students to complete their education on a timeline that works for them.”

The Pell to Grad Act will:

  • Extend students’ lifetime Pell Grant eligibility to 16 semesters from the current 12 semesters.
  • Allow students who have received a Pell Grant award during their undergraduate education to utilize their remaining Pell eligibility towards their first graduate degree. Under current law, students’ eligibility for Pell Grants is limited to 12 semesters, and students are prohibited from using Pell Grants for graduate or professional degrees.

The Federal Pell Grant Program administers grants to low-income undergraduates and select post-baccalaureate pupils. The Pell Grant was introduced through the Higher Education Act of 1965.

Maine Preserves French Heritage Via Newspapers

The Maine State library is seeking French-language newspapers in an effort to digitally preserve the culture of the state’s Franco-American community.

The project was inspired by the work of Franco-American culture programs at the University of Maine and will become an important learning resource for research into the state’s migrant ancestry. 

So far, 33 newspaper titles have been identified, dating from the 1870s to the 1970s—but of those only 16 can currently be tracked using the library, historical society or museum collections. The remaining newspapers are varied in condition and conservators are concerned that without intervention, they may be lost altogether. 

Adam Fisher, director of Collections Development and Digital Initiatives at the library, explains that the team is about to proceed with a fourth round of a nationally-funded work to digitize discontinued Maine newspapers. “We are afraid that some of these titles may have been completely lost to time,” he says. “Our last hope is that someone may have copies squirreled away in the back of a closet or in an attic and would be willing to loan them to us so that we can take images of the pages for the purposes of digitization and preservation.” Focusing on underrepresented communities, previous rounds of the library’s digitization work has celebrated the Acadian people of Maine and the folklore and folklife of the St. John Valley. 

Supported by the National Digital Newspaper Program of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), funding will allow the library to digitize approximately 100,000 pages of historical Maine newspapers which will ultimately become part of the Library of Congress’ Chronicling America historic newspaper portal. 

A long-term project, Chronicling America is working to develop an Internet-based, searchable database of US newspapers. It provides a comprehensive directory, descriptive information and a select range of digitized historic pages. Permanently maintained at the Library of Congress, Chronicling America currently holds newspaper material in 19 languages, including Arabic, Slovak, Danish, Swedish, Dakota, and French, and provides a language-specific search bar. According to the Library of Congress, a planned NEH award program will eventually fund the contribution of content from all U.S. states and territories.

For Maine, this is a profound step in both preserving the state’s history and developing education. With the announcement of the first digitization efforts, Governor Janet T. Mills said “People of Franco-American, including Acadian ancestry are at the heart of Maine. I am proud to join the Maine State Library in announcing these projects, which will preserve their history for future generations. Going forward, anyone will be able to easily access these historical records online, protecting the original documents and supporting public education at the same time.”

Transcending Time, History, and Race through ‘Place’

What does education policy and Black History have in common?

This month’s article is about how we, as Rennie Education Policy Fellows1, learned about the city of Boston’s history. The fellowship is a learning experience for professionals from various fields with an interest in learning more about education policy. The primary objectives are;

  • Learning about the meaning of policy and how past and current policies have shaped the education systems;  
    • Building leadership strengths and skills;
    • Identifying opportunities to improve the education system through policy, individually and collectively.

As part of the year-long fellowship, one of our first activities was the Black Heritage Tour in Boston. The walking tour experience provided more context and foundation for our understanding of how policy, advocacy, and education intersect historically and as part of our current systems. As educators, it is important for us to bring these experiences to our students. Wright2 (2021) explained in her article about teaching Black History to High School students,

“Having students learn local Black history helps to connect them to the communities they are a part of. Students will develop academic English language with relatable information they can see as evidence in their surroundings in the neighborhoods they live in or go to school in.”

This is true for adults as well. How can we serve racially and linguistically diverse student populations without knowledge of a community’s history? Highlights from the walking tour include;

Robert Gould Shaw and Massachusetts 54th Regiment Memorial3, This monument honors one of the first Black volunteer infantry regiments.

The Lewis and Harriet Hayden House4 – one of the safe houses in the North with notable residents such as William and Ellen Craft5, husband and wife freedom seekers who posed as master and slave.

Abiel Smith School6 – the first school for African American children and adults. The house also served as a community meeting space.

Romney (2023) stated, “we, as educators, have a role to play in correcting some of these injustices, if our role is to teach the truth and respect for the truth.” This walking history tour was an example of how we can educate ourselves as part of diverse learning communities. How are Black History and other Heritage months taught in language classrooms? How can these experiences, field trips, book and film studies support oral language development, a deeper appreciation for history, and knowledge of self?

Field Trip Ideas

Alabama

The Legacy Museum, Montgomery

The Legacy Museum provides a comprehensive history of slavery in the US, including: the Transatlantic Slave Trade, the Domestic Slave Trade, and Reconstruction. Lynching, codified racial segregation, and the emergence of over-incarceration in the 20th century are brought to life through the various exhibits.

California

Crenshaw Wall, Los Angeles

This colorful mural spans a full city block. An artistic testament to African-American unity, this work of art was created by Tony Riddle, who started scribbling poetry on the side of the wall 30 years ago. This inspired other artists to express their cultural pride painting and writing along the length of the wall. The colors and stories reveal a part of African-American history.

Florida

Ruins of slave quarters, Fort George Island-Kingsley Plantation

Located East of Jacksonville, these cabins were built in 1820’s out of cement tabby. The plantation was named for Zephaniah Kingsley who lived there with his African wife, Anna Madgigne Jai, from 1814-1830’s.

Georgia

The Martin Luther King Jr. Historic Site, Atlanta

Only one block away from the Ebenezer Baptist Church of Dr. King’s boyhood, The MLK Historic Site exhibits tell the story of his childhood and visitors get a tour of the first floor of the King home. Rangers tell of how King spent most of his childhood playing baseball, sometimes getting into normal boyhood trouble even.

The John Lewis Mural, Atlanta

This 65-foot portrait of the late Congressman was painted by artist Sean Schwab and is now surrounded by a park called the “Good Trouble John Lewis Memorial Park.”

Illinois

Tribute to the Great Migration, Chicago

Tens of thousands of African-Americans fled the brutal treatment and laws of the American South, moving Northward looking for opportunity and freedom. This memorial was erected by Aaron Sarr in 1996, depicting a man who has packed up and is headed northward toward a new life.

Louisiana

Congo Square, New Orleans

New Orleans remains an important cultural and historical city representing Black History, because it is where slaves were most commonly bought and sold. Yet, one section of the French Quarter remains a symbol of hope and unity, for Black Americans. African slaves used this Congo Square to gather, dance, and sing. There is still an African American cultural and artistic community there today.

Massachusetts

The Museum of African American History, Boston & Nantucket

This Museum includes two historic sites and two Black Heritage Trails, telling the story of the organized Black community located in Beacon Hill during the Colonial Period up through the 19th century.

The Black Heritage Trail7, Boston

This 1.6-mile trail features 14 historical sites on Beacon Hill including the homes of notable Black Bostonians from the earliest years of this nation. The 54th Regiment Memorial, the Abiel Smith School, African Meeting House, and other sites make up this historic walk through the past. The stories of struggle, persistence, and progress are around every corner of this neighborhood where Black Bostonians raised children, hid fugitive slaves, and organized to fight for the freedom the American ideal promised all of us.

W.E.B. Du Bois Boyhood Homesite, Great Barrington

Writer, W.E.B. Du Bois lived here until he was 17. His family had lived there for more than 200 years and as an adult he often used the home as a retreat. Only the ruins of the original house are visible. Located on the north side of Route 23, two miles west of Great Barrington, Massachusetts.

Michigan

National Museum of the Tuskegee Airmen, Detroit

This museum remembers the African American Air Force troops who served in World War II. Retired Tuskegee Airmen are often present and on-site at the museum to speak with students about the experiences of air battle in WW2.

New York

African Burial Ground, New York

The African Burial Ground in Manhattan is the largest and oldest known burial ground in the US. Both free and enslaved Africans are buried there, showing the scope of how both free and enslaved Africans contributed to the development of Lower Manhattan during the 17th and 18th centuries.

Louis Armstrong House, Queens

Home of influential Jazz musician, Louis Armstrong from 1940 to 1971.It is located at 3456 107th Street.

Pennsylvania

Ammons Playground, Pittsburgh

Josh Gibson played on two Negro teams in Pittsburgh, hitting 800 home runs over the course of his extraordinary 17-year career.

Texas

Emancipation Park, Houston

Emancipation Park was purchased over 100 years ago in honor of the Juneteenth celebration and is still used for Juneteenth celebrations today. This park is a symbol of the pride of the African American community. It is one of the first parcels of land purchased by a black American in this country. Reverend Jack Yates bought this ten-acre property in the 19th century, in the name of Juneteenth.

Wisconsin

Underground Railroad Homes, Kenosha

Four homes in Kenosha served as stops on the Underground Railroad, run by brave people who helped escaped slaves get to Canada. The Underground Railroad was an enormously organized, impressive, and perilous effort.

Pre/Post Field Trip Activities

Grades 6-8

  • Have each student research the life of a historical Black or Brown American who lived in their state and then give an oral presentation to the class.
  • Invite a local Brown or Black author, artist, or musician to your class to read from their book, present their art, or play their music. Then, allow students to ask the guest questions.
  • Show students clips from the documentary Eyes on the Prize and lead them in a discussion about how much or little America has changed today in light of Government Sponsored Racism.

Grades 8-10

  • Watch the 1970 documentary film depicting Jane Elliott’s famous Blue Eyes, Brown Eyes Classroom Experiment about how racial prejudice is learned. Then, in groups, have students discuss the psychology of racial prejudice.
  • Have students in 8 groups, research, create and present 8 different visual timelines of American history, representing:

1. Early Slave Trade

2. The Abolition Movement

3. The Civil War

4. Reconstruction

5. Jim Crow South

6. Harlem Renaissance

7. The Civil Rights Movement

8. Civil Rights law and the Right to Vote

Grades 10-12

  • Structure a fictitious debate in your class, regarding the succession of the South, where students research and then enact the roles of various (historic) members of the US Congress in the 1850’s, debating whether or not the South had the right to succeed.
  • Read and review a book written by Black authors such as Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, Maya Angelou, August Wilson, Lorraine Hansberry, Alex Haley, Tyehimba Jess, Gregory Pardlo, Tracy K. Smith, Rita Dove, Natasha Tretheway, Yusef Komunyakaa, Annie Allen, Ai, Langston Hughes, Thylias Moss, Derek Walcott, Audre Lorde, Phillis Wheatley, Patricia Smith, James Baldwin, E.W. DeBois, Lucille Clifton, Martin Luther King, Marilyn Nelson, Gwendolyn Brooks, Richard Right, Robert Hayden, and Ta-Nehisi Coates.
  • Have students conduct primary source ethnographic research projects, using original documents, artifacts, interviews, recordings, and other yet to be interpreted sources to access an understanding of the history of system racism in their town, city, or neighborhood.
  • Have students collect, analyze, and interpret the contemporary music, sculpture, visual art, performance art, or SLAM poetry of a black or brown artist for their state.

Books & Other Readings

Ages 13-15

Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America

Ibram X. Kendi

(2016)

The book focuses on often overlooked historical events to illustrate the development of racist ideas throughout US history. The themes of racism, assimilationism, and antiracism are highlighted. The book was published in two versions. One for younger children, titled Stamped: Racism, Anti-Racism, and You. This one is for children in grades 4-8, and Stamped (For Teens ): Racism, Anti Racism, and You for children in grades 8-12.

Together, You Can Redeem the Soul of Our Nation8

John Lewis

(2020)

This article is by Congressman John Lewis and was his last message to the nation shortly before his death.

And We Rise

Erica Martin

(2022)

These are poems retelling civil rights history.

Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice

Phillip M. Hoose

(2009)

This is a dramatic story of a forgotten teen civil rights hero.

The Other Wes Moore: Two Fates

Wes Moore

2011

This book compares the lives of two boys with similar backgrounds, but who have two very different fates. One is successful, and one goes to jail. This story is about the effect that poverty in Black community has on a person.

Between the World and Me

Ta-Nehisi Coates

2015

Written as a series of letters to his adolescent son, this book shows us the tough neighborhoods of Baltimore from Coates’s youth, to his college days at Howard University and then to other horizons like New York and Paris.

Black Boy

Richard Wright

(1945)

This classic moving autobiography reveals the brutality of Jim Crow South.

The Fire Next Time

James Baldwin

1963

This book is part memoir, part essay, written with eloquence, intimacy, and controlled urgency.

Dear Martin

Nic Stone

(2017)

In this book, a boy faces racial profiling.

I Am Alfonso Jones

Tony Medina

(2017)

This is a graphic novel depicting police brutality.

The Hate U Give

Angie Thomas

(2017)

This is a powerful story of the police shooting of an unarmed Black teen.

Black Birds in the Sky

Brandy Colbert

(2021)

This book tells an account of the 1921 Tulsa Massacre.

The Black Kids

Christina Hammonds Reed

(2020)

This is a complex story taking place during the Rodney King riots.

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

Maya Angelou

(1969)

This is a poetic autobiography revealing the impact of racial prejudice.

X: A Novel

Ilyasah Shabazz & Kekla Magoon

(2016)

This is a novel about Malcolm X’s troubled youth.

The Color Purple

Alice Walker

(1982)

The book is structured as a series of letters to God, written by a 14-year-old African-American girl living in the post-Civil war South.

The Black Book

Toni Morrison

1974

This book is like a collage, exploring the history and experience of African Americans in the United States.

Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption

Bryan Stevenson

2015

This is the young adult adaptation of the bestseller Just Mercy, which details Stevenson’s efforts as a lawyer to represent people who have no one else in their corner.

To Kill A Mockingbird

Harper Lee

1960

Told by six-year-old, Jem, this story takes place between 1933–35 in Maycomb, Alabama. She lives with her widowed father who is a middle-aged lawyer, representing an innocent, black defendant who is accused of raping a young white woman.

Ages 16-Adult

Beloved

Toni Morrison

(1987)

This Pulitzer prize winning novel centers on a post-Civil War family once enslaved and now living in a house haunted by events of the past related to the abuses of slavery and The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. Morrison also won the Nobel Prize for Literature, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the National Book Foundation’s Medal of Distinguished Contribution, PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction and was awarded the Jefferson Lecture by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination

Toni Morrison

(1992)

Morrison was also a literary critic in her own right, serving as a professor of English at Princeton for many years. In this work of literary criticism, she examines America’s most prominent white authors through a lens showing the reader how Blackness is symbolized and shaped in their stories, characters, and themes.

How to Be an Antiracist

Ibram X. Kendi

(2019)

This nonfiction book combines memoir and history to outline the roots of racism in America.

Teaching for Black Lives: Black students’ minds and bodies are under attack. We’re fighting back.

Edited by Dyan Watson, Jesse Hagopian, and Wayne Au

(2018)

This book discusses ways to teach and organize for racial and economic justice in our schools.

Until Justice Be Done: America’s First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction Hardcover

Kate Masur

(2021)

The author details accounts for the roles of African Americans in shaping the American ideal of equality.

Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave

Frederick Douglass

(1845)

In his memoir, Douglas reveals his life as a slave, his journey to become a free man and his life as one of the most important people in American history. He leads us through his inspirational life, during which he endured years of physical abuse, deprivation, and tragedy. Yet, his determination to free all Americans drove him to overcome obstacles of the past and present to be the leading spokesperson for people enslaved in America. Douglass’s graphic descriptions of his childhood traumatic experiences as an enslaved African and the telling of his escape to the North and eventual freedom, is an extraordinary tale of passion, spirit, and triumph.

Common Ground: A Turbulent Decade in the Lives of Three American Families

J. Anthony Lukas

(1985)

This well-researched nonfiction book tells the story of the Boston busing crisis through the experiences of three families. The book focused on how the events of forced busing in Boston sharpened existing racial tensions, representative of conflicts across the country.

More Than Freedom: Fighting for Black Citizenship in a White Republic

Stephen Kantrowitz

(2013)

This book tells of the struggle of many black and white abolitionists in and around Boston, including Frederick Douglass, Senator Charles Sumner, and lesser known but important people. Their activism helped bring about the end of slavery.

Websites with Teaching Materials

The King Center

The National Park Service

https://www.nps.gov/subjects/undergroundrailroad/network-to-freedom.htm

Rethinking Schools

Equal Justice Institute

https://eji.org/reports

Learning for justice

https://www.learningforjustice.org/classroom-resources/lessons

World Trust

https://www.world-trust.org/post/understanding-white-privilege

The Library of Congress

https://www.loc.gov/collections/civil-war-glass-negatives/articles-and-essays/time-line-of-the-civil-war/

The Civil Rights Digital Library

https://crdl.usg.edu/events/civil_rights_act_1957/?Welcome

SlaveVoyages.org

https://www.slavevoyages.org/

Films for Teachers & Students

Grades 6-8

A Time for Justice (2011)

This film centers on America’s Civil Rights Movement

Grades 9-12

An Outrage (2017)

By Hannah Ayers and Lance Warren,

This film visits lynching sites in six American states featuring the memories of the descendants of those lynchings, and the perspectives of scholars.

Selma (2014)

This film documents the historic events of the civil right movement during the 1960s, revolving around the Selma-to-Montgomery march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge where a line of Alabama state troopers on horseback attacked marchers with clubs, tear gas and other weapons.

The Murder of Fred Hampton (1971)

This is a documentary about a 21-year-old Black Panther leader who was becoming one of the great speakers of the 20th century, but was killed by the FBI in the Chicago police department.

Eyes on the Prize (1987)

This award winning and inspirational 14-part documentary unpacks the events of the civil rights movement in the United States in a way that is compelling, educational, and ever-relevant.

Blacks Britannica (1978)

This film examines racism through the lens of black, working-class British people.

The Eye of the Storm (1970)

Jane Eliott’s classroom exercise was filmed in 1970 and became the central focus of the PBS documentary The Eye of the Storm, a series later aired on Frontline, featuring a reunion of Eliott’s 1970 3rd grade Iowan class of students. In the 1985 reunion episode called A Class Divided, the former students reflected on their behavior in the experiment, how it affected their lives, and what it meant to them.

More Curriculum Resources

The Equal Justice Institute’s Lynching in America curriculum.

https://lynchinginamerica.eji.org/drupal/sites/default/files/2017-06/EJI%20-%20LIA%20High%20School%20Lesson%20Plan.pdf

A Kid’s Guide to African American History: More than 70 Activities, 2007

CAPTION

This poster from 1851 attempted to warn the people that The Boston Police Department was enforcing the Fugitive Slave Law.

Notes

1/ https://www.renniecenter.org/initiatives/massachusetts-education-policy-fellowship

2/ https://www.languagemagazine.com/2021/03/02/black-history-in-the-community/

3/ https://www.nps.gov/places/robert-gould-shaw-and-massachusetts-54th-regiment-memorial.htm

4/ https://www.nps.gov/boaf/learn/historyculture/lewis-and-harriet-hayden-house.htm

5/ https://www.nps.gov/articles/-a-desperate-leap-for-liberty-the-escape-of-william-and-ellen-craft.htm

6/ https://www.nps.gov/boaf/learn/historyculture/abiel-smith-school.htm

7/ https://www.maah.org/boston-location

8/ https://www.ajc.com/john-lewis/john-lewis-last-words/GGQ6MKJTIBHGHJ7RQXZVLQFHUA/

Ayanna Cooper – Ayanna Cooper, EdD is the Pass the Mic series editor, and owner of A. Cooper Consulting. She is the author of And Justice for ELs: A Leader’s Guide to Creating and

Sustaining Equitable Schools (Corwin) and is currently a Massachusets Education Policy Fellow at The Rennie Center in Boston (2022-2023).

John Brown – EdD, is a Clinical Associate Professor of Education at The University of Massachusetts Lowell, owner of Praxis-Group Education Consulting and a Massachusets Education Policy Fellow at The Rennie Center in Boston (2022-2023). Before joining the faculty at Umass Lowell, John was a high school ELA teacher for 19 years.

Ayanna Cooper, EdD, is the Pass the Mic series editor and owner of A. Cooper Consulting. She is the author of And Justice for ELs: A Leader’s Guide to Creating and
Sustaining Equitable Schools (Corwin) and is currently a Massachusetts Education Policy Fellow at the Rennie Center in Boston (2022–2023).

John Brown, EdD, is a clinical associate professor of education at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, owner of PRAXIS Group Education Consulting, and a Massachusetts Education Policy Fellow at the Rennie Center in Boston (2022–2023). Before joining the faculty at UMass Lowell, John was a high school ELA teacher for 19 years.

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