Another Ted Video about Hip Hop Pedagogy, Shakespeare in Rap, Yo!
Hip Hop And Shakespeare
Poetry TEdx and Hip Too.
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Sunday, June 16, 2013
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Reflections and 3 Reading Responses to Week 4 of Hip Hop Pedagogy Class at Mills
I humbly post these reflections as I am jumping into my own understanding of Crit. Theory and CHHP (Crit. Hip Hop Theory)
Response Paper #3 to Critical Perspectives By
Sunny Dawn EDUC 440 June
11, 2013: Descriptive/Personal Int. Phase: What sticks for
me in this week’s readings out is the constant referral (in the CHHP blog) Andrade’s
perspectives in the dialogue of Critical Perspectives. Andrade’s work shows the importance of laying out
the “counter narrative” as well empirically documenting the “Quasi-Darwinian
belief system” that has been legitimizing our failing urban school
systems. While at New College in
2007 I had a chance to hear Andrade speak as the Key Note of the T4SJ Conf. as
well as in my teacher credential program.
I can’t lie and say his words and philosophy didn’t impact my
career. So much so that I had my
daughter be a part of the “low income urban” school I was teaching at, just to
be fully a part of the movement of change in the urban school or a “ryder”. However I digress because coming full
circle I agree with Andrade that teachers who are making the conscious choice
of being a part of this counter narrative pedagogy need more support. As Andrade states, “…more attention
must be paid to the type of training, development, and support that are given
to urban teachers and school leaders.” (p.9) Critical Phase: “Misconceptions”
of “gangsta rap” I have to disagree with, “violent lyrics
are not intended to be taken literally, but rather should be seen as
metaphorically boasting and as artistic challenges to competitors on the
microphone”(Kelley, 1996, p. 189). I think at one
point I agreed that the violent language and overtones were metaphorical and at
one time totally resonated and needed to hear “that bitches” were not going to
triumph over me. However I believe my own evolution within Hip Hop has changed
with age. Rappers in the Bay seem
to speak louder to a spiritual oppression that I feel deeper than the actual
physical/cognitive one experienced in academia or the work force that some
“gangsta” rap speak of. Transformative Phase: What has come
to me through these readings is the need to really legitimize educators who are
doing this work. I need my
leadership to take the “serious” tone of conscious political acts within the
public sphere, more than academic research. Although I believe in all the underground HH movements in
the Bay and have a pride that Andrade is here in Oakland, a professional
consistent public forum for educators, beyond T4SJ is desperately needed. I know that my efforts will be targeting
that as I move forward and my skills in leadership need to be channeled in that
way for me to have a renewed commitment to public and private education.
Response Paper #1 to KRS ONE and CHHP
By Sunny Dawn EDUC
440
Descriptive Phase: KRS ONE speaking
at Temple University and Akon’s paper together really highlight the need for
real education in the classroom.
KRS ONE has a deep history in hip hop and talks about his real
experience. Akon stayed away from
his personal history and had a very academic tone that uses Friere Theory of
Action as a basis for discussion.
I appreciate the various references and agreed with Akon’s paper as well
as appreciate how much he references Andrade. What keeps sticking out for me is the truth that I believe
is extremely hard to work with other public education teachers who work from
the deficit model versus asset model. Personal Interpretive Phase: The
hardest thing for me to swallow is that the education system is so personal to
me. I see other teachers of color
that I work with and they are definitely not sticking their “conscious” evolved
necks out for their students. Critical Phase: In fact they
practice discipline policies that silence students in their class that have a
different cultural tone than them or that doesn’t fit in the mold of academics
they are trying to deliver or as Akon puts it, “School cultures and practices
encourage students to believe that a meritocratic educational system exists,
that students are responsible for their own failure, and that issues of racial
inequality, hip hop, and social justice are not worthy of study inside or
outside of schools.”Creative Transformative Phase: KRS ONE as a rapper has been a
huge influence on me and to watch (both parts) of his Youtube talk at Temple
reaffirms my practice. I also
participated in what Akon calls CCHP this past semester with my 5th
grade Special Education Social Studies class. Using this exact platform;
“…transformative education for the poor and disempowered begins with the creation
of pedagogic spaces where marginalized youth are enabled to gain consciousness
of how their own experiences have been shaped by larger social
institutions.” The only reason I was comfortable enough to do this
curriculum where we the curriculum was based on how imperialism impacted us as
African Americans, Latinos, and Native Americans was because I did not have to
worry about them being tested. In
fact it’s the only subject 5th graders do not get tested on and my 5th
grade General Education teachers as well as the principal could care less what the Special
Education students are learning about.
Response Paper #2 to What is Pedagogy?
By Sunny Dawn EDUC
440
Descriptive Phase/Personal Interpretive
Phase: “Discourse” (a way of life) as summed up in the first sentence of Au’s
piece is the best word for summing all 3 articles in this week’s reading and
thinking about CHHP. I remembered
when I was an R.A. for the dorms at Chico State, I put this in the bathroom all
year long. “Because it is a
distortion of being more fully human, sooner or later being less human leads to
the oppressed to struggle against those who made them so. In order for this
struggle to have meaning, the oppressed must not, in seeking to regain their
humanity (which is a way to create it), become in turn oppressors of the
oppressors, but rather restorers of the humanity of both,” Freire. (p.26) This was one of so many subtle
movements I was a part of in my twenties when hip hop started to first effect
how interact with the world (the beginning of my punk rock/hip hop/electronic
meets politics when I was 24, a wee 13 years ago.
Critical Phase: Bell Hooks
writing always seems to hit me in the core of my body. I actually avoid her now days because I
can barely hear her break it down and feel the deepness of my own life too. For
example, I will not watch that Precious movie,
but I know reading PUSH changed my
life. I can relate to Au’s
motivation for writing an article that felt pretty self explanatory and yet his
acknowledgment that acadamia are not people of color I found a bit offensive,
For example, Au states“….safe to assume that students do not regularly read
critical theorists and academic journals…” I found the statement an unnecessary
opinion in his purpose for writing the article.
Creative Transformative Phase: The readings
translates very easy to my practice with particular points from Hooks. I related to her journey as student and
as teacher, although she is a professor and I am in K-5 education. Words or
phrases form this text stick out in my mind as an educator, “confine each
pupil”; “active participant, non a passive consumer”; “teachers must be
committed to a process of self-actualization”; “professors who claimed to
follow Freire’s model even as their pedagogical practices were mired in
structures of domination”. As I
move forward it is hard for me to educate colleagues to their blindness
regarding students and what they bring to the classroom, I guess I am still
looking for the right district or school that would support the mind, body,
& soul.
Counter Narrative's from Hip Hop Pedagogy: Tedx Video of Jeff Duncan Andrade
Hard to search in Ted so I posted it here.
Tedx Andrade Video!
Harvard Video below better (2 hours though, but worth the time)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8z1gwmkgFss
Tedx Andrade Video!
Harvard Video below better (2 hours though, but worth the time)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8z1gwmkgFss
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