Race has been a powerful subtext of Americaâs education crisis during COVID â and ¶¶Òőapp faculty members Detra Price-Dennis and Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz believe that teachers must be digitally fluent in order to understand and connect with the nationâs public school student population, which is primarily made up of young people who are Black, Indigenous or of color.
Case in point: the response of students and staff to the online workshops that Price-Dennis and Sealey-Ruiz conducted this winter as part of the first-ever Racial Equity Day at Hastings High School in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.
Detra Price-Dennis and Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz
CREATING A SPACE FOR RACE Detra Price-Dennis (left) and Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz are co-authors of the forthcoming book Advancing Racial Literacies in Teacher Education: Activism for Equity in Digital Spaces. (Photos: TC Archives)
During her talk, Price-Dennis, Associate Professor of Education, shared an example from the youth platform TikTok in which a prominent figure in social media â someone who has cultivated a public image of being anti-racist â was implicated in a racist incident.
The conversation quickly ratcheted up. Some students defended the personâs actions; others condemned them.
âThe exchanges in the chat show that kids are living through racism and oppression, and they want the tools to deal with it,â Price-Dennis says.
The exchange underscored a central point that Price-Dennis and Sealey-Ruiz make in their forthcoming book, Advancing Racial Literacies in Teacher Education: Activism for Equity in Digital Spaces (¶¶Òőapp Press).
âTeachers need to do work around their own racial and digital literacy,â says Sealey-Ruiz, Associate Professor of English Education. âThey canât afford to say, âIâm not technology-oriented.â You may not be as quick as your students, but you have to build this literacy, because not only are students using technology every day, theyâre learning about racial issues and becoming engaged in them though online spaces such as #BLM. So digital literacy canât just be part of the curriculum. It is the curriculum.â
In advance of their bookâs publication in May, Price-Dennis and Sealey-Ruiz have been bringing their message to teachers through a variety of venues.
TIMELY CONVERGENCE TCâs Detra Price-Dennis and Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz provide âtheoretical and practical entry points into a conversation about race in the digital age.â (Photo courtesy of ¶¶Òőapp Press)
Price-Dennis has repeatedly taught a course she developed, âDigital Learning for the Kâ8 Classroom,â through TCâs Continuing Professional Studies platform, and covered the same ground in webinars for Columbia Universityâs Global Centers. Since late March 2020, she has also hosted weekly Member Gatherings for the 35,000-member National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE), in which teachers nationwide meet online to share ideas and build fellowship. The series has featured guest appearances by national book award winners, researchers, literacy educators, classroom teachers and public personalities speaking on topics that have ranged from linguistic justice and writing pedagogy to mentoring and LGBTQ representation.
At the very first gathering, Sealey-Ruiz read from her recently published volume of poetry, Love from the Vortex. A line from a poem titled âIcarusâ caught the essence of what educators everywhere were already feeling: âThe distance between us sometimes feels unbearable â too much to handle after a day in a life that requires all of me.â Sealey-Ruiz has also conducted professional development workshops in which in-service teachers, school leaders, community college educators and others undertake an âarchaeology of the selfâ â a process of âdigging deep and peeling back layersâ to understand their own racial beliefs and practices so that they can teach their students to do the same. Sheâs done much of this work with her former doctoral student, Angel Acosta (Ed.D. â20), an education consultant who has created a timeline experience in which educators and others review the history of racism in America and process their own emotional reactions.
This fall, Price-Dennis and Sealey-Ruiz will also co-teach a course titled âDigital Literacies for Equity in Education.â
âTeaching is being open to other peopleâs stories,â Sealey-Ruiz says. âBut you have to know your own story. If youâre not aware of who you are and what you bring to the classroom, and if you donât think deeply about how issues of race, gender, class and religion live inside of you, you will just exact harm.â
[Watch of Sealey-Ruiz discussing the "archaeology of the self."]