Friday, March 01, 2019

March AVReading Newsletter


In our yearlong examination of current educational research, I found a very interesting study published in this month’s issue of American Educational Research Journal published by AERA.  The study was entitled “‘Despite the Odds’: Unpacking the Politics of Black Resilience Neoliberalism” completed by Kevin L. Clay of Rutgers University.  There were two things that initially caught my eye about the study.  First, the title seemed to question that idea of resilience, similar to the study that Jae Cody wrote about in last month’s newsletter, and secondly, it was action research-- a type of research that positions the researcher not only as a scientific observer but as an advocate, implementing an action step of some sort.  Action research is not a new methodology, but it hasn’t always gotten the same attention as the other forms of educational research.
            In this case, the researcher, working with eight high school students in an Upward Bound program, set out to help them “destabilize” the idea of Black Resilience Neoliberalism in order to “reconstitute empowerment”.  Ok, that sounds really academic and heady.  However, the argument of the study is much more accessible.  The gist of the study is that students have internalized a narrative about Black resilience. The narrative tells them “despite the odds,” they can succeed.  On the face of it, that might seem like a good thing, right?  We want our students to believe that no matter their circumstances, hard work will pay off.  And the author certainly states that he doesn’t want anyone to be discouraged from working hard and doing their best in the face of adversity and White supremacy.  However, the Black resilience narrative has consistently been used throughout the educational community as well as throughout political dialogue on race, as a means of decentralizing the larger story of structural racism that has created the need to overcome adversity in the first place. 
            As an example, Clay uses the rhetoric of former Presidential candidate Ben Carson, who is African American and who often talks about how “exceptional” people-- and specifically exceptional Black people-- will be successful no matter their circumstances, so everyone should be exceptional and overcome their obstacles.  Clay argues that this type of rhetoric has a number of extremely negative effects.  First, it normalizes structural racism.  It essentially argues that the system can’t be changed to become more equitable, so instead individuals simply have to rise to the occasion and overcome racism.  Second, it leaves those who are struggling to overcome those obstacles feeling inherently broken.  Stories of Black exceptionalism-- people who have succeeded under extraordinary conditions-- when overused are “leveraged as a critique of Black folks who, for whatever reason, cannot summon the will and long-suffering demonstrated by their enslaved, maimed, and generally despised ancestors to mettle their way through all manner of state-sponsored obstacles, dehumanization or terror.”  
            What is at stake, Clay furthers, is “a desire to centralize ingenuity and triumphalism in a story that is at its core a testament of the state’s perpetual violence against Black people.”  In working with his action research, he found that this group of students-- all of whom were students of color-- had embraced many of the aspects of this Black resilience narrative, and as a result had internalized beliefs that if someone didn’t succeed, it was simply because of their own shortcomings.  Furthermore, they come to think of these oppressive obstacles as character building.  As one of his students wrote in a journal, “I believe everyone has the chance to reach their riches in life.  If anything, where I live [a segregated community] pushes me to fulfill my every dream.”  In other words, she believes that her experiences in segregated spaces actually toughens her for the fight ahead.  Within her world view, the inequality has become normalized and unchangeable.  It is no longer the problem.  Not having enough resilience and toughness is. 
            Clay concludes that the shift should be to exploring more narratives of “collective transgression” on the part of the Black community.  Instead of focusing on stories of individuals who have overcome the system of White supremacy, stories and narratives should highlight the success of “organized deviance” undermining structural racism.
As mentioned in earlier letters, educational research has the capacity to challenge and encourage schools and educators beyond their current understandings.  In a state which still has the largest racial gap in student performance, we need to continue to critique and question our choices and to work more diligently to address the way we have institutionalized narratives that perpetuate the problem.

Full newsletter here.  

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