Isabela Dias writes in Mother Jones about attacks on a Black social studies teacher who has been labeled a teacher of critical race theory.
In the first week of classes in August, Rodney D. Pierce, a social studies teacher at Red Oak Middle School in Battleboro, North Carolina, set the stage for his 8th graders by sharing a quote from James Baldwin: “American history is longer, larger, more various, more beautiful, and more terrible than anything anyone has ever said about it.” Pierce told the students they were going to learn about both the “beautiful and the horrifying parts” of the state and country’s past. “We need to talk about all of it,” he explained “because that is American history.”
The fight over how to teach American history to children—a long battle that has frothed into a particularly acute moral panic today—often comes back to whose history is being discussed. For Pierce, a Black teacher of many Black students, it’s impossible to avoid racism. For years, he has spoken openly about this in the concrete and the local: the town names, the monuments to Confederates, the horrific lynchings. He has gone above his mandate of teaching to the test because the test did not include the explanations of events that led to the world his students inhabit. He was rewarded by earning social studies teacher of the year in 2019 and has been tasked with helping write the new standards for the state to make sure others follow his lead.
But lately, Pierce’s “speak my truth and be upfront about it” approach has been drawing more backlash than ever before. In the past year, parents have complained to school administrators about a perceived political slant in his work. When he repeated something former President Donald Trump said verbatim, they accused him of lying. Some claim he has insisted on talking about slavery—and that this has made students disenchanted. “They’re really reaching for anything they can get on me,” Pierce says. “I started feeling like a target.”
A gregarious 42-year-old father of three and self-described history buff, Pierce was born in Maryland, and raised in the rural eastern part of North Carolina by his maternal grandmother, a descendant of enslaved people. He remembers sitting in his grandmother’s living room in Roanoke Rapids as a child with an encyclopedia, questioning the accuracy of depictions of ancient Egyptians as white. As a student, Pierce admired the work of Black poets like Paul Laurence Dunbar. He was inquisitive, interpretive, and analytical. “His favorite word was why,” says Charlene Nicholson, his former 6th grade English language teacher and longtime mentor. “He would always think deeper.”
Pierce has been teaching social studies for six years; the past two at Red Oak. Located less than 30 miles west of Princeville, one of the first incorporatedAfrican American towns in the country, the school sits in an affluent and fairly conservative area of Nash County. Although still predominately white, Nash has shifted in the past decades. The Black population has grown. It has become more Democratic. Pierce says he still sees “Trump-Pence 2020” signs outside the Dollar General store across the street from the school. But Biden won there, even if just by 120 votes. More than 50 percent of his students are Black and 10 percent are Hispanic, which informs his teaching philosophy of “inspiration and empowerment” and challenges him as an educator and historian. As a Black teacher talking about racism and slavery in a racially diverse community, Pierce is both the object of admiration and disapproval. “The last thing I want to do is alienate a kid,” he explains. But if he ignores race, what would his Black students think happened?
“It always goes back to local history to me,” he says. As part of an assignment, Pierce asks the class to research the historical origins of the names of towns in the Tri-County area of Nash, Edgecombe, and Wilson, including Battleboro, which was initially established by Joseph Battle as a settlement along the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, the longest in the world at the time and the “lifeline of the Confederacy” during the Civil War. In another, Pierce shows students news stories about Ku Klux Klan activities in nearby Rocky Mount—from a 1966 picket line outside a dry cleaner where a Black employee refused to clean the Klan robes to a 1992 rally. In another, he talks to them about the 1970 bombing of a formerly all-Black school in reaction to imminent integration. In the fall, he plans to discuss the Black rights group Concerned Citizens of Battleboro, who led the 1994 boycott of local white-owned businesses to protest law enforcement harassment. All of it, Pierce says, is about showing students their own community is part of history and making sure they are able to see themselves within the content and the curriculum.
Unfortunately, many parents don’t want their children to be taught the truth.
Dias recounts North Carolina’s history of fighting racial equity. After the Brown decision, the strategy to keep the races segregated was school choice.
Even now, the state is trying to censor discussion of the past, because it might make some students (and their families and elected officials) feel guilt and discomfort. They don’t want to revisit the past.
Dias writes:
In May, the North Carolina House voted along partisan lines to move to the Senate the “Ensuring Dignity & Nondiscrimination/Schools” bill prohibiting public schools from promoting concepts such as that an individual should feel “discomfort, guilt, anguish” or bear responsibility for actions from the past based on their race or sex; and opposing the characterization that the belief that the United States is a meritocracy is “inherently racist or sexist.” In support of the legislation, the Republican State Superintendent of Public Instruction Catherine Truitt vouched to eradicate CRT from classrooms, saying, “There is no room for divisive rhetoric that condones preferential treatment of any one group over another.” Democratic Rep. James Gailliard of Nash County called it a “don’t-hurt-my-feelings bill” that reproduces “discrimination, fanaticism, bigotry….”
There is no more glaring example of North Carolina’s ability to deliberately bury its history than the education of the Wilmington Coup. In November 1898, a mob of heavily armed white supremacists overthrew the Fusionist city government, burned down the local Black newspaper’s office, and killed and banished dozens of people. The port city, before then, was a symbol of Black achievement and hope. For years, the coup has been considered “lost history,” despite its importance in cementing “white rule for another century” in North Carolina. The current social studies standards, which outline learning goals for K-12 students, do not include it. Instead, it is ultimately up to school districts to determine what goes in the curriculum and to educators like Pierce, who wasn’t introduced to it until he was in college, to teach it.
“That kind of history is important particularly for African Americans because it lets us know there was a time when racial and domestic terror were waged on us and the state didn’t want us to know about it,” he says, pointing to a special commission established in the mid-2000s to finally set the record straight.
But please don’t tell the students.
Teachers in Idaho are fearful to speak out.
‘A very McCarthyism feel’: Idaho teachers say McGeachin’s task force stokes fear, confusion
BY BECCA SAVRANSKY
JULY 29, 2021 04:00 AM
After working for nearly 20 years in public education, Sonia Galaviz said she doesn’t take kindly to bullies. As a fifth-grade teacher in Idaho, she’s not afraid to speak out against what she considers direct attacks on educators like herself.
But in Idaho, many fear what could happen if they do the same.
As the lieutenant governor’s education task force continues to make claims of indoctrination in Idaho schools — and vows to root out “the scourge of critical race theory, socialism, communism, and Marxism” — Galaviz said teachers are being scared into silence.
“There’s a very McCarthyism feel to the task force and to the accusations being made against educators and public education,” Galaviz said. “Folks are hesitant to speak out for fear of reprimand or being accused directly or personally as to their pedagogy and practice in the classroom.”
Galaviz is one of about a dozen educators the Idaho Statesman spoke with about their responses to the task force and discussions surrounding critical race theory in the state. Many others said they didn’t feel comfortable talking publicly…
https://www.idahostatesman.com/news/local/education/article253040668.html
“the scourge of critical race theory, socialism, communism, and Marxism”: Which of these things is not like the others?
Since we’re associating discussion of race with fear & rage-inducing (among a certain population) topics that have nothing to do with it, why not throw in “child porn” & “killing puppies & kittens”?
This one’s me — something went weird with the login process.
Resubscribe if you must
Mr. Pierce is in the cross hairs of the “culture wars.” These anti-CRT laws are vague and provide of opportunity to interpret them in a variety of ways. These flawed state laws will result in teachers, particularly social studies teachers to be targeted. These laws are an attempt to whitewash history. Red states want to ignore the reality of our history by imposing “historical amnesia” on public schools. BTW, if the US were truly a meritocracy, there would be no disparity in pay between the race and gender of various workers, and DJT would never have become the forty-fifth President of the US.
50th?
55th?
Or am I being too optimistic believing it will last that long?
…and of course, Confederate statues don’t make anyone feel uncomfortable; and displaying Confederate flags don’t count as “divisive rhetoric.” (“Hey, I’m just admiring my flag! I didn’t *say anything!)*
“… the ‘Ensuring Dignity & Nondiscrimination/Schools’ bill prohibiting public schools from promoting concepts such as that an individual should feel ‘discomfort, guilt, anguish’ or bear responsibility for actions from the past based on their race or sex…”; and by “an individual,” you mean yourself & those who agree with you?
Oops — should be “doesn’t count,” or leave out “displaying.” Must remember I’m on a teachers’ site!👨🏻🎓
The Klan took all their robes to the dry cleaners? I’m trying to picture that, but I can’t imagine…
“It always goes back to local history to me,”
Exactly. This is why standards are pure crap.
“parents have complained to school administrators about a perceived political slant…”
Holy “captured by the bamboozle” Batman. A frog with
bad teeth could crack that nut.
“All societies perpetuate lavish myths that enable the few to rule over the many, repress critical thinking and camouflage the grim realities. Our country was, and remains, no exception.”
Do these parents imagine “kneejerk patriotism” is NOT
a product of mythical conditioning , but rather a mindset
“endowed by their creator” ?
Isn’t it obvious? The PTB have always jailed the truth.
Their foundational cornerstone of DUMBOCRACY,continues
to serve their interests.
Drumroll…The proof is in the pudding.
He is being persecuted for sharing/teaching the truth.
Trumpland does not celebrate the truth. The traitor’s mindless MAGA minions worship at a white orange-tinted alter built on a foundation of lies and greed.
TT’s lunatic mobs will tear anyone limb-from-limb that dares to disagree with them, just like the crazed mob that attacked OUR elected Congress and wanted to hang former VP Pence on January 6.
Please correct me if I’m wrong but it seems the “backlash “ against this teacher consisted of one parent email.