Thursday, July 18, 2013

Preparing African-American Males for the New Jim Crow

                There are some things schools are no longer capable of teaching.  One of the things schools can no longer teach is how to prepare African-American males deal with racism and profiling.

In this post Civil Rights, desegregation era, schools have lost the ability to teach young African-American males how to handle and navigate racism and profiling.  Racial profiling has become this generations “Jim Crow.”  Unfortunately, unlike their Civil Rights elders, many of today’s administrators, teachers and other school based staff do not have the skill set or the desire to become involved in teaching beyond the classroom. 

Since most administrators and teachers do not share the life experiences of their students on a daily basis as it was during the Civil Rights era, many cannot relate to plight of young African-American males.  Additionally, the absence of a strong community, inconsistent parent engagement and a fragmented faith-based community also contributes to the lack of preparation of young African-American males.  If young African-American males cannot count on community, family and faith-based institutions to prepare them to deal with the new Jim Crow, why would they look to school for help?  The question becomes:  what can be done to prepare young African-American males to deal with the new Jim Crow?

There is no easy solution to this question.  However, a crucial piece to the solution are parents, schools, the community and schools coming together to determine how to prepare young African-American males.  Once our communities have to come together, the process of preparing young African-American males can begin.  Parents, schools and faith-based institutions must educate, model, and be on watch for threats that could trip up young African-American males.  At the same time, parents, schools and faith-based institutions need to work on the local and federal level to develop legislation that protects young African-American males from racial profiling and eliminate legislation that directly and indirectly supports racial profiling. 


If our communities come together, we can prevent young African-American males from being victims of new Jim Crow legislation that allows for the sanctioned murder of young African-American males without punishment.

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