Part of our repair as an African
people is the continued struggle to organize to challenge the
teaching of African and Africans in America history in the public
schools of America. This issue should continue to be a priority on
our educational organizing agenda.
Throughout the development of
education in the western world, the idea of transmitting knowledge
has been done through what is called a curriculum. It is through this
curriculum that people are taught the values, concepts, principles,
and theories that undergird the basic philosophy of any agreed upon
knowledge. This agreed upon knowledge is called a discipline.
In the late 1960s, the Black
Liberation Movement charged American educational institutions as
being racist and white supremacist. One of the movements that
developed as a result of these charges was the call for a more
accurate and thorough recognition of the contributions of Africans in
America and African people worldwide to be included in the
curriculums of elementary, secondary, and higher education.
This
movement became known as the Black Studies Movement. Throughout
America, particularly on college campuses and high schools, battles
unfolded for the revision of curriculums that were racist in their
interpretations of history and its impact on African people.
The
demands of the Black Liberation Movement were so forceful (in some
instances buildings were seized by students demanding Black Studies
be taught at their schools) that many universities began to develop
Black Studies programs. On the secondary and elementary level in many
school districts throughout the United States task forces were
developed to study, evaluate, and recommend changes in public school
curriculums regarding the contributions and history of African people
in the world.
It
has been well over thirty years since the call was made for Black
Studies and since the first Black program was established at San
Francisco State University, after months of intense battle by African
in America students with university officials.
During this current climate of
so-called educational reform very little discussion has taken place
regarding the continued racism and white supremacy of American public
school curriculums. The great movement of the 1960s and 70s put the
issue of Black Studies on the American agenda, but like many issues
of the 1960s, they have either fallen by the wayside or have been put
on the backburner.
The
concern has shifted from what is being taught to African in America
children to the problems with skill development in reading and math.
There must be a balance in our concerns not just regarding skill
development but for what is taught. To have African in America
children skilled and proficient at reading and math, but having no
idea of who they are or where they came from will repeat the
historical errors of education that Carter G. Woodson so insightfully
discusses in his 1933 publication of The Mis-Education of
the Negro.
We
must not abandon the struggle to demand that the public school
curriculums in America be changed to reflect an accurate
interpretation of the history, culture, and contributions of African
people in math, science, language arts, art, and social studies. At
the Ninth National Convention of the National Black United Front
(NBUF) in 1988, in Kansas City, Missouri, the decision was made to
place education as a major priority in our National Plan of Action in
the work that NBUF carries out in all of its chapters.
NBUF
drew on the success of the Portland Chapter members of NBUF who were
able to organize the African in America community in Portland to
demand significant changes be made in what is called the baseline
areas of the curriculum as it relates to African people. Some of the
best African minds in the world, such as our distinguished ancestors
Dr. John Henrik Clarke and Dr. Asa G. Hilliard, III were brought in
as consultants to help rewrite the curriculum of the Portland Public
Schools. This document has become known as “The Portland Model”
and has been implemented selectively in other school districts around
the country, particularly in cities where there are NBUF Chapters.
However, we are still at the embryonic stages of its implementation.
NBUF
maintains that, “The issue of education when properly
approached is a mass issue that when won will have a mass impact on
the minds of millions of Black youth and thousands of Black youth
locally. Portland NBUF has demonstrated that a well organized Black
community behind a core of dedicated NBUF members can force local
school boards to adopt an African Centered Program of curriculum
change along with other changes that will be called for in each
locality.”
For
the sake of our children, we must continue take on this challenge to
change to public school curriculum to more adequately reflect the
contributions of African and African American people in all subject
areas.
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