facebook pixel

起点传媒

Back to Blog
Jazmenmoore

Rethinking Woke

This blog post is written by member Jazmen Moore. It is the second of two parts. You can see the first part .

The idea for the following two videos emerged from conversations spurred by the . We chose to record videos as a way to genuinely communicate the emotion and sense of urgency we feel about the importance and necessity of this work.

Woke has become commodified
you can now purchase 鈥渨oke鈥
at your local Target or Walgreen鈥檚
pick two or three up off the shelf
when you鈥檙e running low.

This is name brand woke
Kendal Jenner in a Pepsi ad, woke
鈥淚鈥檝e got one person of color friend, so I can鈥檛 be racist,鈥 woke
鈥淚 teach poor kids in the inner-city,鈥 woke
鈥淚 respectfully disagree with your sexuality/religion/humanity,鈥 woke
Well-meaning intentions but ever harmful actions, woke
and the list goes on.

But, the real woke is beyond label
can鈥檛 be found for purchase
is queer in nature
is brewed up at home
my Granny calls it the antidote
is liberation minded
is about getting free
is about securing the freedom of others.

This woke ain鈥檛 trendy
may not be popular with your colleagues next week
could lead to strange stares in the copier room
or the dismissal of your ideas and proposals at the next staff meeting.

In the classroom,
this woke is bigger than
your soapbox rants
is much more than pi帽atas on Cinco de Mayo
or teaching Dr. King鈥檚 鈥淚 Have a Dream Speech鈥
for the millionth time during the month of February.

See also  Texts Most Frequently Taught in US Secondary Classrooms Are Nearly Identical to List from Decades Ago

This woke requires more than sprinkling the terms
diversity, inclusion, and social-justice
throughout your syllabus, mission statement, or classroom vision.

This woke recognizes that
equity will never be achieved through lip-service
but in action.

The real woke is about calling out your own biases
holding a mirror to your morals and being honest about
what lies in your reflection.

It鈥檚 about asking yourself at the end of each day
after the students are gone
the papers are graded
and the desks rearranged,
am I an agent of change or a tool of oppression?

Does my instruction help liberate or subjugate?

Am I constructing sanctuary cities
in my classroom
or building walls?

It鈥檚 about moving from the center
to the margin and calling
everyone in.
this woke is about identifying the silences
that exist in your curriculum,
instruction, and
classroom
and making sure they are disrupted.

It鈥檚 about listening as much as you speak; if not more.

It鈥檚 about holding space for your students
to tell their stories;
to bring all of themselves –
their languages, practices, and beliefs
into the spaces that you share.

It鈥檚 about teaching them to
think critically
to question everything
to demand change.

This woke is about
action
and words
and scholarship
and heart.

About honoring each other鈥檚
humanity
and our
right
to live
and learn
to speak
and be heard
and to
be
without fear.

This woke is about imagining
the future we want
for our students
and putting in the work
necessary to
create it.

Jazmen Moore is a Chicago based educator, spoken word coach, and poet. She is an recipient and a member of . Follow her on Twitter聽@jazmen_moore

Photography credit for Jazmen Moore:聽Jennifer Jasso, Jazmen’s former student.

See also  Teacher Groups, Major Publishers Urge Lawmakers to Protect Freedom to Read