Videos

A Conversation With Black Parents, Teachers and Students

Written by Ikhlas Saleem | Jan 8, 2018 5:00:00 AM
 
I'm a big believer in taking the conversations that happen behind closed doors and letting everyone else in on the real scoop. It's the only for-sure way to know what people are really thinking and why they do the things they do. So, with the consent of the participants, we just let the cameras roll. We weren’t sure what we’d get, but we knew it would be, well, real. Below is a series of short videos based on the themes we heard over and over again in all three groups:

The Belief Gap

Finding the Right School

Role Models

Black Teachers

School Discipline

Parent Responsibility

Take a moment to watch the videos and find out what Black parents, teachers and students really think about their public schools. You can also download the entire conversations and transcripts at the bottom of this page.

THE BELIEF GAP

Imagine being told, your kind won’t amount to anything. When we fail to believe in the potential of students simply because of their skin color or income level, it’s called the belief gap. In every group of participants—teachers, parents and students—this concept was painfully familiar.
 

FINDING THE RIGHT SCHOOL

Some Black families go through some pretty insane experiences before they finally find the right school for their kid. Hear from a parent who has gone through seven or eight schools before finding the right one. A parent who moved into a studio apartment in another neighborhood just so their kid could attend school. The fear of not knowing whether your child was on track for passing third grade.

ROLE MODELS

Black teachers know what they’re signing up for when they enter a classroom. It goes beyond simply spouting information at students throughout the day. Teachers told us that they contemplate every part of themselves—their wardrobe, the words that leave their mouths, their belief in what their students are capable of—in order to be the best role models possible for the kids in their care.

BLACK TEACHERS

You don’t have to tell Black teachers how rare it is to see another teacher of color in their schools. They know all too well. More than 80 percent of America’s public school teachers are White, yet these students said that when they see a Black teacher—or many Black teachers—in one building, it changes their world.

SCHOOL DISCIPLINE

Many schools in urban environments have found success with stricter discipline and so-called “no excuses” policies. Not only did parents and teachers tell us they generally favored this approach—so did the students.

PARENT INVOLVEMENT

Participants emphasized that parents need to be involved in their child’s education, but many are not—and it’s not because they don’t care. They talked of parents who feel unwelcome in the school building, and of parents who feel the teachers and school leaders pass judgment on them.

 

Download Full Conversations

This video series was filmed on Saturday, August 26, 2017. We invited more than 40 Black teachers, parents and high school students to Chicago Women’s Park & Gardens to talk about their experiences in public schools. Full video footage and transcripts are available for download below. One-on-one interviews with participants Conversation with parents Conversation with students Conversation with teachers Transcript: Conversation with teachers Transcript: Conversation with parents Transcript: Conversation with students Transcript: Individual parent interviews Transcript: Individual teacher interviews Transcript: A conversation with moderator Nate Bowling Transcript: A conversation with moderator Marilyn Rhames Transcript: A conversation with moderator Chris Stewart Transcript: A conversation with moderator Sharif El-Mekki