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Classroom Q&A

With Larry Ferlazzo

In this EdWeek blog, an experiment in knowledge-gathering, Ferlazzo will address readers’ questions on classroom management, ELL instruction, lesson planning, and other issues facing teachers. Send your questions to lferlazzo@epe.org. Read more from this blog.

Teaching Opinion

Q&A Collections: Race & Racism in Schools

By Larry Ferlazzo — July 08, 2021 19 min read
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During the summer, I will be sharing thematic posts bringing together responses on similar topics from the past 10 years. You can see all those collections from the first nine years here.

Here are the ones I’ve published so far:

The 11 Most Popular Classroom Q&A Posts of the Year

Today’s theme is on race and racism in schools. You can see the list following this excerpt from one of them:

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* ‘Students Deserve to Know Our History’

Two Ķvlog wrap up a four-part series on how teachers should respond to attacks on critical race theory and lessons on systemic racism.

* Connect With Colleagues to Counter Critical Race Theory Critics

Three Ķvlog discuss how teachers respond to the CRT controversy, including urging administrators to create “space” for collaboration.

* Educators Should ‘Teach the Truth to Young People’ in Response to Conservative Attacks

Three Ķvlog offer suggestions about how to respond to attacks on their ability to teach about systemic racism.

* When It Comes to Critical Race Theory, Teachers ‘Should Go on Offense With Inquiry’

Four Ķvlog respond to conservative attacks on critical race theory and lessons on systemic racism.

*'The White Voice, Experience, and Interest Dominate Education’

Four Ķvlog wrap up a series on books and articles white teachers can read to learn about racism and what they should do about it.

* ‘We Can’t Wait Until People Feel Comfortable Talking About Race’

White Fragility and Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in School are two of many books on race suggested by four Ķvlog.

* Tackling the ‘Taboo’ of Talking About Race & Privilege

Four Ķvlog share suggestions for books and articles white Ķvlog can read to learn more about race and racism.

*Twelve Ways to Make Math More Culturally Responsive

Four Ķvlog share ideas for using culturally responsive teaching in math class, including by helping students make community connections.

* Eight Strategies for Engaging in Culturally Relevant Teaching

Mariana Souto-Manning answers questions about her book, No More Culturally Irrelevant Teaching, in the final post of a two-part series.

* Author Interview: ‘No More Culturally Irrelevant Teaching’

Mariana Souto-Manning discusses her book, which highlights designing spaces where BIPOC students feel, see, and experience belonging.

* Moving Schools Beyond Anti-Racist Words to Action

Teacher Lorena Germán shares suggestions about how school committees created in response to the killing of George Floyd might move beyond words toward action.

* Nine Ways to Implement Culturally Responsive Teaching During Distance Learning

Four Ķvlog offer ways teachers can implement culturally responsive teaching during remote learning, including incorporating students’ lives into lessons.

* Strategies for Implementing Online Culturally Responsive Teaching

Four Ķvlog offer suggestions on how to provide online culturally responsive teaching, including by providing choice and opportunities for self-reflection.

* ‘The Story of Arab & Muslim Students Is Often an Untold Story’

Three Ķvlog share ways that Ķvlog and schools can promote the inclusion of Arab and Muslim students, such as having schools accurately assess their numbers in the student population.

* ‘More Than Aladdin': Dismantling Common Misconceptions About Arab and Muslim Students

Teachers have the power to help students view their Middle Eastern peers as individuals with rich cultures who defy the stereotypes, say four Ķvlog who offer guidance.

* ‘Teaching Beyond Stereotypes': Ways to Teach the Middle East & Islam in Schools

Three Ķvlog share strategies to support Arab and Muslim students, including by countering “false narratives” and encouraging them to become leaders.

* Supporting Arab & Muslim Students in the Classroom

Guest editor Sawsan Jaber discusses how to support Arab and Muslims students in U.S. schools, including by supporting their identity and recognizing there is not a “single story.”

* How Should Educators Respond to Trump Administration Attack on Anti-Racist Training?

Terri N. Watson suggests that Ķvlog reinforce their support of critical race theory in the face of Trump attacks on it, including by recognizing that “differences are not deficits” and demanding that schools are equitably funded.

* The Importance of Challenging Teachers’ Microaggressions

Three Ķvlog discuss the importance of responding to racist microaggressions committed by colleagues and how best to do it, including by expressing public and private dismay to the offender and submitting a complaint to a supervisor.

* Responding to a Colleague Who Makes a Racist Comment

Four Ķvlog suggest strategies for responding to racist comments from colleagues, including mirroring the person’s words and explaining that intent “does not lessen the blow.”

* Ten Culturally Responsive Teaching Strategies for the Science Classroom

Four teachers share how they implement culturally responsive instruction in their science classrooms.

Four Ķvlog share changes they are making in their teaching as a result of the violent death of George Floyd and subsequent protests, such as trying to leave a deficit framework behind and looking at more systemic causes of racism.

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Five Ķvlog offer recommendations about confronting colleagues who engage in racist language and actions, such as highlighting the differences between “impact” and “intent” and referencing school institutional values.

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In the face of the shootings of George Floyd, Jacob Blake, and others, four Ķvlog share their plans for confronting racism, including encouraging a culture of questioning in the classroom and engaging with Black community members.

Three Ķvlog discuss why teachers should not believe or act like “they don’t see color” and, instead, invite students to share their experiences of how race impacts their lives.

Three Ķvlog discuss what teachers can do in response to George Floyd’s death, including not stopping at conversations and instead moving to action.

Three Ķvlog share what schools should and should not do to support teachers to become anti-racists, such as lifting up Black student voices and bypassing prepackaged “character-building” lessons that don’t address racism.

Three Ķvlog offer suggestions for Ķvlog in the face of George Floyd’s death, among them, going beyond social-emotional-learning skills and “know and teach the history of race.”

Two Ķvlog challenge white teachers to confront “hard truths,” including recognizing the role of white privilege and acknowledging their own biases.

Three Ķvlog offer lessons teachers can learn from the death of George Floyd, such as neutrality has no place in the struggle for racial justice and white Ķvlog must stop expecting their colleagues of color to do the “heavy lifting.”

Two Ķvlog offer advice to white teachers, including learning more about restorative practices and focusing on their actions, not their intentions.

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Two Ķvlog offer suggestions on what to do—and not do—in the wake of George Floyd’s death, such as learning about the legacy of racism before taking action and not just limiting actions to empty messages of support.

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Two teachers reflect and communicate about what they think Ķvlog should learn from the death of George Floyd, including the importance of being anti-racist and challenging white teachers to acknowledge their implicit biases.

Shannon R. Waite, Ed.D., writes that Black students need to be shown love during the pandemic and that love should be demonstrated through developing “a critical consciousness in teachers and administrators.”

Jamila Lyiscott, Ph.D., writes about the challenges facing Black students before and during the coronavirus crisis and how schools must invite them to help identify their own needs.

Educator Adeyemi Stembridge, Ph.D., shares strategies to bolster African American students during our present emergency, such as inviting them to share their stories and their art.

Two Ķvlog describe how schools can directly respond to the needs of African American students during the COVID-19 crisis, including by regularly contacting their homes and developing a student-centered curriculum.

Five Ķvlog share culturally responsive teaching “tips,” including the use of restorative circles and creating lessons with students’ cultures in mind.

Five Ķvlog provide recommendations on how to incorporate culturally sustaining pedagogy in the classroom, including offering a four-step process and encouraging teachers to start with educating themselves about their students.

Ten Ķvlog offer specific ideas on how to apply culturally responsive pedagogy in schools, including through the use of diverse literature and by inviting students to share their own life experiences.

Six Ķvlog share specific suggestions on how to make lessons more culturally responsive, including through having teachers assess their own biases and by elevating students’ culture and language.

Veteran educator Karen Baptiste discusses how teachers believing they are “colorblind” contributes toward the school-to-prison pipeline for students.

Four Ķvlog offer recommendations on how to respond to teachers who say they “don’t see race,” including specific questions to use for deepening the conversation.

Seven Ķvlog challenge the idea of “not seeing race or color” in the the classroom and offer suggestions like considering our own implicit biases, as well as providing additional resources.

Nine Ķvlog write about possible ways to respond to teachers who say they “don’t see color,” including by framing the discussion around differentiation, school climate, and white privilege.

When teachers claim they “don’t see race” or “don’t see color, that makes it difficult for them to build relationships with students. Eight Ķvlog offer suggestions of how to respond to those teachers.

A six-part series on why Ķvlog must “see color” is wrapped up by Justin A. Coles, Chezare A. Warren, and Christopher Emdin. This series has been guest-edited by Shannon R. Waite, Ed.D.

Marcelle Mentor, Jane Bolgatz, and Akane Zusho discuss the costs of not addressing colorblindness in education. This post is Part Five in a series guest-edited by Shannon R. Waite, Ed.D.

Jia Lee, Melissa Payne, and Brady Smith write about the myth of “not seeing race.” This post is Part Four in a series guest-edited by Shannon R. Waite, Ed.D.

Public school student Jehan Pitt and Professor Kaliris Salas-Ramirez, Ph.D., discuss how teachers can deal with the issue of race in the classroom. This is Part Three in a series guest-edited by Shannon R. Waite, Ed.D.

Kris DeFilippis and Dr. Gholnecsar (Gholdy) Muhammad question teachers who say they “don’t see race,” in this series guest-edited by Shannon R. Waite, Ed.D.

Judd Rothstein and Terri N. Watson, Ph.D., challenge the notion of teacher “colorblindness” in this series guest-edited by Shannon R. Waite, Ed.D.

Vernita Mayfield agreed to answer a few questions about her book, Cultural Competence Now: 56 Exercises to Help Educators Understand and Challenge Bias, Racism, and Privilege.

For the 100th book-related post in this blog, Gholdy Muhammad agreed to answer a few questions about her new book, Cultivating Genius: An Equity Framework for Culturally and Historically Responsive Literacy.

Adeyemi Stembridge talks about his new book, Culturally Responsive Education In The Classroom: An Equity Framework for Pedagogy, including explaining the difference between “equity” and “equality.”

Tracey A. Benson and Sarah E. Fiarman agreed to answer a few questions about their book, Unconscious Bias In Schools: A Developmental Approach to Exploring Race and Racism.

Daisy Han and Lorena Germán agreed to answer a few questions about the new book they have edited, Speaking For Ourselves.

Jamila Lyiscott answers some questions about her new book, Black Appetite. White Food: Issues of Race, Voice, and Justice Within and Beyond the Classroom.

Marian Dingle, Sydney Chaffee, Raquel Rios, Rinard Pugh, and Kimberly N. Parker talk about mistakes that are often made when trying to tackle race and racism in the classroom and explore what we teachers can do, instead.

Tehia Glass, Erin Miller, Eddie Moore, Jr., Ali Michael, Marguerite Penick-Parks, Chezare A. Warren, Brian L. Wright, Ph.D., and Leah Wilson share their thoughts on the biggest mistakes made when approaching race and racism in the classroom.

A three-part series approaching race and racism in schools is wrapped up by Larry J. Walker, Jaime Castellano, Mara Lee Grayson, Ashley S. Boyd, Jennifer Orr, and Kelly Wickham Hurst.

Terri N. Watson begins guest-editing a three-part series on the discipline disparities affecting Black girls. Watson and Yolanda Tomlin contribute their thoughts in this first post.

Part Two of this series will feature practices schools and districts have and/or should implement to improve the schooling experiences of black girls. Gholdy Muhammad, Shannon R. Waite, Marquitta T. Speller, and Valerie Kinloch share their commentaries.

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This final post in a series on school discipline and Black girls includes recommendations from Venus E. Evans-Winters, Zakiyah Ansari, and Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz. The entire series has been guest-edited by Terri N. Watson.

Mandy Smoker Broaddus, Gregg Castro, and Jennifer Jilot discuss the challenges faced by Native American students and ways Ķvlog can effectively respond to those issues.

Susan C. Faircloth, Kelly Sassi, and Jennifer Borgioli share their thoughts on the challenges facing Native American youths.

Timothy San Pedro, Alayna Eagle Shield, and Amanda Holmes wrap up a three-part series on Native American education.

Matthew R. Kay agreed to answer a few questions about his new book, Not Light, But Fire: How to Lead Meaningful Race Conversations in the Classroom.

Rich Milner agreed to answer a few questions about his recent book, ‘These Kids Are Out Of Control’ Why We Must Reimagine ‘Classroom Management’ for Equity (co-authored with Heather B. Cunningham, Lori Delale-O’Connor, and Erika Gold Kestenberg).

Cia Verschelden agreed to answer a few questions about her book, Bandwidth Recovery: Helping Students Reclaim Cognitive Resources Lost to Poverty, Racism and Social Marginalization.


Part Two of an interview with Cia Verschelden about her book, Bandwidth Recovery: Helping Students Reclaim Cognitive Resources Lost to Poverty, Racism and Social Marginalization.


Tony Diaz, Ruchi Agarwal-Rangnath, and H. Richard Milner IV write about the importance of ethnic-studies classes.


This post on the role of race and equity in social-emotional learning is “guest-hosted” by Mai Xi Lee, the director of social-emotional learning for the Sacramento City Unified school district. After her introduction, she brings together responses from Robert J. Jagers, Mary Hurley, Sonny Kim, Christina Arpante, Meena Srinivasan, Africa S. Fullove, and Kashia Jensen.


Carla Tantillo Philibert, DeEtta Jones, & Peggy Collings continue the discussion on the role of race and equity in social-emotional learning.


Matthew Kay, Martha Caldwell, Oman Frame, Debbie Silver, Sonja Cherry-Paul, Dana Johansen, Alice Mercer, and Amy Okimoto share their thoughts on engaging with race in schools.


Karen Baptiste, Jonas Chartock, Jason Flom, Mara Lee Grayson, and Dara Naphan share their commentaries on engaging with race and implicit-bias issues in the classroom.


Adeyemi Stembridge, Sanée Bell, Raquel Ríos, Ruchi Agarwal-Rangnath, and Lynell A. Powell share their counsel on approaching race and implicit bias in the classroom.


Megan Adams, Sanjuana Rodriguez, and Kate Zimmer agreed to answer a few questions about their book, Culturally Relevant Teaching: Preparing Teachers To Include All Learners.

Lorena Germán, Adeyemi Stembridge, Stephen Lazar, Jen Schwanke, and Aubrie Rojee share their ideas on how to handle so-called “controversial” topics in the classroom.

Gabriella Corales, Tom Rademacher, Martha Caldwell, Oman Frame, Danny Woo, Paul Barnwell, and Kathleen Neagle Sokolowski share their responses to the question: “How do you handle controversial issues in the classroom?”

Dominique Williams, Matthew Homrich-Knieling, Meg White, Kristina J. Doubet, Jessica A. Hockett, Vance Austin, and Stephanie Smith contribute to Part Three in a series on handling “controversial” issues in the classroom.

Today’s answers on dealing with controversial issues in the classroom are provided by Sara Ahmed, Jennifer Borgioli, Kevin Scott, Erik M. Francis, Phil Hunsberger, Jackie Walsh, Beth Sattes, and Dave Stuart Jr.

A five-part series on handling “controversial” topics in the classroom series is wrapped up with commentaries by Meg Riordan, Lymaris Santana, Sarah Thomas, and Thomas Armstrong, along with many comments from readers.

Django Paris and H. Samy Alim agreed to answer a few questions about their new book, Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies: Teaching and Learning for Justice in a Changing World.

Angela Valenzuela agreed to answer a few questions about the new book she has edited, Growing Critically Conscious Teachers: A Social Justice Curriculum for Educators of Latino/a Youth.

Jane Fleming, Susan Catapano, Candace M. Thompson, and Sandy Ruvalcaba Carrillo agreed to answer a few questions about their book, More Mirrors In The Classroom.

I interview Chris Emdin about his new book.

This post is Part One of a two-part special project guest-hosted by Django Paris, Ph.D., & Travis J. Bristol, Ph.D. It has an introduction by Django Paris and contributions from Charlene Mendoza, Lorena German, David Flores, Matt Knielling, and Gabriella Corales.

Part Two consists of a short introduction by Travis Bristol and commentaries from Linda Bauld, Brian Pew, Lakisha Odlum, and Cyrene Crooms.

This is the first post in a three-part series “guest-hosted” by Travis Bristol, Ph.D., & Terrenda White, Ph.D. Part One “features examples from school districts that have implemented innovative strategies to recruit and retain teachers of color.”

Part Two in the series “features the work of universities, schools of education, and teacher-preparation programs.”

Part Three “spotlights the work of alternative teacher-preparation programs and charter schools, as well as community-based efforts on the part of parents.”

Educators Cornelius Minor and Bridget Wilhelm co-author a guest review of Ta-Nehisi Coates’ book, Between the World and Me.

Gloria Ladson-Billings, Travis J. Bristol, and Terrenda Corisa White contribute their responses here.

This post highlights contributions from teachers Antoine Germany, James Pale, Dominique Williams, and Evelyn Ramos and from student Jacquelin Estrada.

Teacher Ya Po Cha, teacher Elizabeth Villanueva, student-teacher Billy William Ivy, biligual aide Alma Avalos, and student Amanda Martinez provide their thoughts on the topic.

I interview Zaretta Hammond about her book.

Three Ķvlog—Ashanti Foster, Melissa Bollow Tempel, and P.L. Thomas—and a number of readers share their thoughts.

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The opinions expressed in Classroom Q&A With Larry Ferlazzo are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Editorial Projects in Education, or any of its publications.

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