The Dreamkeepers. Gloria Ladson-Billings

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as a member of the program’s advisory board but by 2014 the students were clamoring for more course offerings in education and hip-hop.2 I agreed to craft a course we called “Pedagogy, Performance, and Culture” to serve both First Wave Scholars and students generally interested in hip-hop and education. Our class started with about 20 students and our format was to meet once a week for 2.5 hours in class followed by another 1.5-hour public lecture. With a little support from the Office of Multicultural Arts Initiatives (OMAI) we pulled together a series of weekly lectures comprised of artists, scholars, and entertainment businesspeople to take on topics like race and culture, the art world, education, how business can determine what art we have access to, and of course, hip-hop. The public lecturers also came to our class before their public lectures and gave the students a chance to be one on one with some very talented people. Before each public lecture I designated one member of the class to introduce the speaker with a poem or spoken-word piece. In every case the lecturers, as well as the general public who attended the lecture, were amazed by the talent of our students.

      On the first day the course was to begin I received a call from a local television reporter saying, “I heard you’re going to be teaching a course about hip-hop and education. I’d like to interview you about it.” I agreed to the interview and at the conclusion of the interview the interviewer asked if he could visit and film in the class. I hastily dashed off an email to the students and asked people who objected to email me back. I did not receive any emails but when the class met, I began by asking if anyone objected to having a reporter and camera person present. No one objected (after all, half the class were performers) and shortly after starting the class the reporter and camera person arrived. The next day the segment ran on our local news broadcast.

      A week or so later, I traveled to Spain for an academic award and during my time there my phone started blowing up with text messages—“Hey, you’re on CNN,” “Your hip-hop class is all over CNN,” and “Yo, we’re watching you on TV!” Somewhere buried among all the texts and emails I was receiving was a message from CNN wondering if I would be willing to sit for an interview. When I returned to Madison, I made my way to the campus Public Broadcast affiliate studio and sat for an interview with one of their midday shows. I could not help but acknowledge that despite all of the work I had done to this point, it was my engagement with youth culture that caught the attention of a wider public. It was a true awakening for me to continue to explore the way that youth culture can have a powerful influence on teaching and learning.

      The final public event was a performance by members of the class. Originally, I had planned for the First Wave students to do an artistic performance that incorporated ideas from the class and the non–First Wave students would create a curriculum innovation—a unit of study, a course syllabus, or a series of lessons and activities. As the semester moved along, I decided that everyone in the class would do the public performance. I allowed the students to form their own groups with the one prohibition being no group could be comprised of only First Wave students or non–First Wave students. On the night of the performance there was a nervous energy backstage and the audience we had cultivated over the semester showed up to see the student performances.

      At the end of the evening our students received standing ovations. It was impossible to determine which students were the seasoned performers versus the novices. The students did a marvelous job of integrating the ideas from the course academic readings. Their sketches touched on racism, inequality, oppression, achievement, assessment, and diversity. Their work was so professional that one of the students expanded on his spoken word piece created for the performance and entered it in a national competition aimed at preventing school dropout. He ultimately won that competition, went on to Graduate School, earned a MFA, and is now a working actor in Los Angeles.

      The failure of administrators to recognize how youth culture, i.e., hip-hop, could enhance student achievement and engagement prompted OMAI to create a one-day workshop each spring for superintendents and principals. We presented scholarly information on incorporating youth culture, student engagement, and academic success. Our big message to administrators was don’t get in the way of teachers who were trying to be innovative in order to reach all students. The combination of scholars and student performances helped us reach some of those administrators and convinced another few to support teams of teachers from their schools to attend the summer institute.

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