The New York State Department of Education has TC doctoral student William âBillyâ Green âEducator of the Year.â The prestigious award is considered the stateâs highest honor for educators.
Green, who is currently pursuing his Ph.D. in Philosophy, is a chemistry teacher at A. Philip Randolph Campus High School in Manhattan.
His passion for education and commitment to inclusion is recognized throughout the TC community. âOne thing that immediately stands out to me when I think about Billy is the enormous amount of passion he brings to the classroom space,â shares Felicia Mensah, Professor of Science Education and Greenâs academic advisor. Heâs very dedicated to his craft as a teacher and it shows.â
âHe crafts educational lesson plans that he can relate and connect to his personal experiences,â she says. âOur students need teachers that center their unique voices. They want a teacher who models active learning and engagement in the classroom; Billy does just that.â
The following article, was originally published on Sept. 26, 2022, by , a nonprofit news organization covering public education. Sign up for their newsletters at .
Congratulations to 2023 NYS Billy Green, pictured with this yearâs finalists, past NYS Teachers of the Year, his supporters from home, Chancellor Young, Commissioner Rosa, and Jolene DiBrango.
— NYS Education Department (@NYSEDNews)
On a recent Friday morning, a group of freshman students flagged down their chemistry teacher, Billy Green. Students were in pods, tasked with completing math equations related to physical chemistry and then presenting them to Green for points.
After several failed attempts, the group of students at Harlemâs A. Philip Randolph Campus High School finally felt ready and threw up their hands.
But when Green walked over, the students hadnât decided who would present, and then they began doubting their conclusions.
âSo, Iâm gonna stop you âwhy do you think? Yâall not ready to present,â Green said. âEven if itâs wrong, you gotta be confident in your work. Iâm moving away because guess what, I have 30 other students, so yâall lost your turn, so now yâall better get it right.â
Green gave them a clue about how to fix what turned out to be incorrect work. âAre you serious right now?â one irritated student said as Green walked away.
Training students to work together, especially under pressure, is at the core of how Green, recently named New York Stateâs Teacher of the Year, teaches. He reminded his class that âscience is about collaboration, discussion, discoveryâ â and revealed that it was a practice activity that wouldnât be graded that day.
Greenâs pathway to teaching was rocky, a point that was highlighted when he was recently honored for the state award. He grew up living in poverty and navigating homelessness, often squatting in abandoned buildings, while his mother battled a drug addiction. Still, he fell in love with school and education at an early age, and with the nudging of his mother and help from a trusted high school teacher, Green enrolled in college.
A few years into his first teaching job at High School For Environmental Studies in Manhattan, Green, who was untenured at the time, said he was fired for showing up late on multiple occasions. (Nathaniel Styer, a spokesperson for the education department, confirmed that Green was âdiscontinuedâ as a teacher in 2007 and began teaching full time again in 2009, but said he couldnât provide further details about what happened.)
Green said he made those mistakes because he was not raised to know that time management was important â one of several skills he hopes to pass on to his students, hence the time restrictions on the group activity on Friday.
Heâs taught at six schools over his 20-year career, including a program on Rikers Island. Asked why heâs moved around so much, he said that he intentionally leaves after a few years because he feels that other schools that predominantly serve many low-income students could benefit from his teaching methods.
Multiple former students shared glowing reviews of Green, saying that he inspired them to come out of their shell. But Green acknowledges that his teaching style and his focus on culturally responsive education are not universally loved, pointing to a recent New York Post article critical of his approach. While his former and current principal both agreed to nominate him for Teacher of the Year, he also noted that, just like any job, he didnât always see eye-to-eye with former bosses. That earned him the nickname, âRebel With A Cause.â
Green wants his mostly Black and Latino students to feel connected to science, a field that is still dominated by white workers. That means finding links between what heâs teaching and their backgrounds, such as introducing them to prominent scientists who look like them, or batting down stereotypes.
âWhat stops Black and brown people from studying mathematics,â he told the class, âis that somebody told you that you canât make a mistake.â
Chalkbeat sat down for a brief interview with Green. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
You have been talking about this collaborative model. What informed that? Is this how youâve always taught, or is this an evolution of your teaching methods?
So I went to one of the most difficult schools in the country, Williams College ⊠And you set the bar so high, that even the smartest that think theyâre the smartest and the weakest that think theyâre the weakest have no choice but to work together.
So one of the greatest models I learned from Williams College was that in order to succeed in corporate, in order to succeed in the world, you needed to know how to collaborate with different people and different places, things, communities. Part of that was always: Set the bar high, donât stress too much about intelligence or smartness, and more so, whoâs collaborating with who and whoâs building each other up?
How do you sort of take how you grew up and bring that into the classroom? One of your former students mentioned that he knew where you came from, he knows your back story, and so do you talk about that in the classroom? And how do you let that inform your teaching?
I canât wake up and take off my identities, right? So I was always taught by my mother [to] never to hide who I am, right? Always present my authentic self. So Iâm Puerto Rican, like I said, Black, Italian, gay, [Williams]-educated ⊠I learned a lot on how to survive in these environments. So, what I teach my kids is that survival, right?
And there are many moments in my subject, right, that Iâm able to tell them a story, or things that I have been through because my subject, chemistry, relates to the world. I do a project called Chemistry in the City that a lot of the kids love, because every unit, they have to go out into their communities or their cultures, and bring something back thatâs related to the content of chemistry, I then become a learner. Right? Itâs the reason why I teach the way I teach it, because my teachers affirmed me and I know what that affirmation is like when you are a marginalized person or a marginalized identity. So, I want all students to feel that in these spaces.
At the end of class, you were talking about why Regents exams arenât everything and then you specifically called out Black and brown people. (He said, âWhat stops Black and brown people from studying mathematics is that somebody told you that you canât make a mistake.â) Can you tell me more about that?
There is a stereotype that Black and brown people hate math. Theyâll tell you, âOh, I donât like it.â Right? They have phobias of this. There are many stereotypes that Asians perform better, or whites perform better.
I build their self esteem back up. I get them to work together to let them know that itâs okay, thereâs a big misunderstanding between Black and brown people just saying, âWeâre crabs in a barrel.â I know this. I live in Black and brown communities. So it is my job to let them know you are not crabs in a barrel, we will uplift each other. Donât claw each other down.
What do you feel like are the challenges of this school year?
So, the challenge that I think that the students are facing â and is the only challenge Iâve always faced in these types of schools â is the lack of knowledge of what is next. So the goal of my teaching is to teach them what they canât get in the books, right? And that is connecting their science to their community, connecting their science to their cultures, connecting science to a career, connecting science to literacy, right, I want them to do those things. And the challenge becomes, when not everybodyâs on the same page, right? Educationally, you push for certain things, and then curriculums detour you the other way.
Theyâll say, âNo, weâre not doing this,â or, like, âDonât do too much,â like what theyâre saying in the [recent New York Post] article right there. Some people just donât get that you have to incorporate student voice, student cultures, studentsâ living into curriculum. They should not come in here and be robots and controlled, overpoliced. You know, thatâs not what education is about. So the big thing for me, like I said, is just creating spaces that emancipate, liberate, and educate.
What comes next for you?
Thatâs the saddest part of this award. That everyone asks me, âSo now youâre going to be the superintendent, the chancellor? When are you going to leave the classroom?â Are you kidding me? My love, my passion is in the classroom. My power with these youth is in this classroom. I am going to do this for the next 80 years. I hope to live to 120 so they can see what a 120-year-old teacher can come into the building and do.
Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.