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How Do We Help Black Boys In School?

How Do We Help Black Boys In School?

Cynthia Merrill Artis · Sunday, November 21st 2010 at 3:16PM · 408 views
September 3, 2010


Most of the African Americans I know are concerned about the dismal high school graduation rates for young Black men, which are now below fifty percent. It’s something that concerns me because I’ve seen the impact of males dropping out within my own family.

Recently, Mark Anthony Neal blogged about this issue over at TheLoop.com. Here’s an excerpt from that post:

Though there are examples of “boys being boys” that deserve heavy scrutiny and critique, particularly in relation to male gender privilege and personal interactions with women and girls, the racialized dynamic of boyhood in America means that White males are viewed, as Ferguson puts it, as “naturally naughty” while black boys are seen as “willfully bad.” In this context the behavior of Black boys takes on adult attributes and their transgressions, according to Ferguson, “take on a sinister, intentional, fully conscious tone, that is stripped of any element of childish naïveté.”


This dynamic is more fully manifested in the criminal justice system, where young Black men are incarcerated for minor infractions, whereas their White peers are more often offered counseling in response to comparable infractions. Black families are often complicit in this process by endowing boys with monikers like “little man” or “big man” in response to the absence of adult males in the family. Additionally the Black male body is also policed as the gestures associated with the performances of Black masculinity are often viewed by teachers as evidence of insubordination and disrespect. This is also a situation that affects Black girls, whose performances of “Black Girlness” are often read as examples of insolence.


Though this post discusses racism toward Black males in the education system, Brother Neal offers some real–and new–solutions, ones that don’t just end up at the same stale brick walls.

This post was seriously eye-opening and you can read the rest of the post @
TheLoop21.com.

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Comments (8)

Siebra Muhammad Sunday, November 21st 2010 at 3:48PM

It is what it is Big Sis, it all boils down to parental involvement. The parents (not just mothers, but fathers as well) along with the teachers are necessary for the correct teaching of the child. If both parents and teachers are not on the same page regarding learning, teaching, and proper discipline, then the child/children will have not acquired the necessary tools to think clearly and rationally regarding how to learn, behave, and pass along the knowledge to those that have/would benefit from it. Parental involvement is essential for all of us to nurture and teach the next generation.

Siebra Muhammad Sunday, November 21st 2010 at 3:49PM

I must say you are educating quite well ...may you make the top blogger list!!!

Cynthia Merrill Artis Sunday, November 21st 2010 at 4:15PM

exactly.... HOME first!!

umm... I can't do the top blogger list thang.... lol

Siebra Muhammad Sunday, November 21st 2010 at 4:30PM

You can do it...I have faith in you!

Cynthia Merrill Artis Sunday, November 21st 2010 at 9:04PM

yeah... do you see how long it takes me to come up with ideas???

Siebra Muhammad Sunday, November 21st 2010 at 9:10PM

Yeah, it takes me quite a while to come up with lines to my poems, but once I do, it's a deal!

Jen Fad Tuesday, November 23rd 2010 at 12:23PM

@ Sister Cynthia Great blog!!

@ Sister Siebra you have it the nail right on its head with what you have stated.

[... it all boils down to parental involvement... Parental involvement is essential for all of us to nurture and teach the next generation....]

Just last week I was pulled into my 5 year old's class room by his teacher to learn that he had been sent to the principal's office for something the teacher wasn't sure he did and that she didn't witness all because two kids in his class "testified" against him.

I thought at that age (5), time outs were the standard rather than punishment. I marched down to the principal's office the very next day to speak with the school's principal and vice principal regarding my displeasure.

Hopefully we will all ( parents, teachers, school system) can get on the same page in regards to positive discipline that should be practiced with all children regardless to ethnicity and gender in kindergarten.

Siebra Muhammad Tuesday, November 23rd 2010 at 12:51PM

Great point Jen, however positive discipline should not only be practiced with kindergarten students but with students in all grade levels as well. Also we must remember to balance discipline with LOVE!

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