After Michele (not her real name), a black student from the rural South, attended the first session of Felicia Mensah’s science methods course at ¶¶Ņõapp, she called home.

ā€œI was like, ā€˜Dad, guess what? I’m taking a class with an African American professor!ā€™ā€ Michele later told Mensah. ā€œShe’s a woman.ā€

Felicia Mensah, Professor of Science & Education

Felicia Mensah, Professor of Science & Education (Photo: TC Archives)

Mensah, Professor of Science & Education, considered Michele a rarity, too. ā€œThe significant decrease in the number of Black teachers has been so drastic that scholars have referred to them as an ā€˜endangered species,ā€™ā€ she writes in her paper, published in February by the American Educational Research Journal.

ā€œThe educational landscape post-Brown [Brown v. Board of Education, the 1954 Supreme Court decision striking down school segregation] has not yet reboundedā€ from a ā€œmass exodusā€ of black educators, including many who were fired.

The educational landscape post-Brown v. Board of Education has not yet reboundedā€ from a ā€œmass exodusā€ of black educators, including many who were fired.

— Felicia Mensah, Professor of Science & Education

Mensah chronicles Michele’s journey from childhood through her first full-time appointment as a New York City elementary school teacher. She describes how Michele, ā€œa darker complexion African American woman,ā€ learns that beauty is associated with lighter skin tone; how she repeatedly experiences being ā€œthe only oneā€ in all- or mostly white classrooms; and how white teachers classify her as learning disabled, telling her she hasn’t learned to apply herself ā€œbecause of my skin.ā€

Michele is considering quitting teaching until Mensah introduces her to Critical Race Theory, which holds that race and racism are defining characteristics of American society and also in teacher education. Michele responds powerfully to what Mensah terms ā€œthe centrality of naming her own experience.ā€ ā€œI found my voice,ā€ she later tells Mensah. ā€œThis is what caused me to stay in teaching.ā€