Antiracist Counseling in Schools and Communities. Группа авторов

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Antiracist Counseling in Schools and Communities - Группа авторов страница 20

Antiracist Counseling in Schools and Communities - Группа авторов

Скачать книгу

      Many analyses of European enlightenment often begin by critiquing the veracity of objective claims to knowledge construction about categories and discourses of social difference derived from Western episteme. This critique is important because Western episteme was crucial in justifying the violence that constructed the New World. This is important because these social categories (Black/non-Black) are the consequence of colonialism and power dynamics in this country rather than objective truths obtained through the institutionalized methods of Western empirical science. As Smith (2015) astutely pointed out, frameworks of multiculturalism (e.g., respect for difference and diversity that do not undertake analyses of structural position seriously) and liberal ideas of social justice, which claim to ameliorate forms of cultural and social exclusion Black people encounter, are often rooted in deficit-based social reform programs predicated on the notion of preexisting forms of Black cultural pathology (e.g., mentoring programs, social-emotional learning, standards of mind-sets and behavior).

      When contemplating a departure from the counseling canon, we would be remiss not to ponder the words of James Baldwin (1962): “Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced” (p. T11). The school counseling profession, a microcosm of America and broadly the Western world, perpetually avoids reckoning with its role in maintaining systemic racism. This avoidance creates incongruence between avowed values and tangible actions across the profession that is observed systemically and individually. For Black counselor educators who embody a critical standpoint, navigating incongruent landscapes in various spaces creates an internal twoness that illuminates the inconsistencies within oneself and throughout the profession (Du Bois, 1903/2015). Sometimes, in an attempt to reconcile these feelings while in this struggle, the desire to influence change within inherently racist spaces (i.e., counseling, higher education, K–12 schools; Arredondo et al., 2020; Watkins, 2001; Wilder, 2013) becomes paramount. This existential meaningless is compounded by the unspoken expectation that we rely on the very scientific discourses that problematized Blackness to achieve self-affirmation, professional acceptance, or professional recognition.

      Counselor educators, school counselors, and school counselors-in-training are encouraged to adopt a lifelong critical self-awareness whereby they continuously reflect on their own bias, worldview, and positionality (Ratts et al., 2016). Holcomb-McCoy’s (2004) checklist provides a useful tool for engaging in this reflective practice. Aimed at the white school counselors who dominate the field (American School Counselor Association, 2020; Mitcham-Smith, 2007), Holcomb-McCoy’s tool offers a comprehensive set of prompts that allows one to critically self-reflect their whiteness and other layers of their social status (e.g., class), their awareness of racism, and their potential to counsel Black and Brown students. Exploration of oneself is a foundational practice in producing systemic change. When speaking of the threat of whiteness, Bettina Love (2019) stated the following:

      Whiteness cannot enter spaces focused on abolitionist teaching. Whiteness is addicted to centering itself, addicted to attention, and making everyone feel guilty for working toward its elimination. Whiteness will never allow true solidarity to take place. Those who cling to their Whiteness cannot participate in abolitionist teaching because they are a distraction, are unproductive, and will undermine freedom at every step, sometimes in the name of social justice. Being an abolitionist means you are ready to lose something, you are ready to let go of your privilege, you are ready to be in solidarity with dark people by recognizing your Whiteness in dark spaces, recognizing how it can take up space if unchecked, using your Whiteness in White spaces to advocate for and with dark people. And you understand that your White privilege allows you to take risks that dark people cannot take in the fight for educational justice. (p. 159)

      Although Love speaks of abolitionist teaching, her observations are applicable for all who engage with Black students in educational settings. Whiteness permeates the psyche and influences thoughts and behaviors and should be interrogated and challenged (Malott & Paone, 2011). School counselors of color should also engage in ongoing reflection. Like the teachers represented in Kohli’s (2014) research examining how teachers of color actively work to develop racially just classrooms, school counselors of color would benefit from engaging in critical self-awareness work to combat internalized racism that may cause them to support white supremacy ideologies, policies, and practices.

      In addition, these skills, like the previously mentioned theories, render the experiences of students of color obtuse, not normal, and in need of correcting. If these theories or tools are used by individuals who do not hold a critical standpoint, they can be physically and psychologically dangerous. Most important, students who hold a critical awareness of the system and attempt to advocate for themselves are criminalized, viewed as noncompliant, and labeled “troublemakers.” Viewing Black people as noncompliant aligns with a history deeply rooted in psychology. Black people who dared to seek freedom from bondage or refused to remain quiet were violently punished for questioning their oppression and subordination (Guthrie, 2004).

      When facing oneself and others in dismantling systems of oppression, there are many strategies in which one may actively engage to facilitate an ongoing reflective practice to name racism and white supremacy. In addition to using Holcomb-McCoy’s (2004) checklist, these strategies include, but are

Скачать книгу