Why Black girls are targeted for punishment at school -- and how to change that | Monique W. Morris

110,720 views

2019-02-05 ・ TED


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Why Black girls are targeted for punishment at school -- and how to change that | Monique W. Morris

110,720 views ・ 2019-02-05

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
When I was in the sixth grade, I got into a fight at school.
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It wasn't the first time I'd been in a fight,
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but it was the first time one happened at school.
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It was with a boy who was about a foot taller than me,
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who was physically stronger than me
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and who'd been taunting me for weeks.
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One day in PE, he stepped on my shoe and refused to apologize.
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So, filled with anger, I grabbed him and I threw him to the ground.
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I'd had some previous judo training.
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(Laughter)
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Our fight lasted less than two minutes,
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but it was a perfect reflection of the hurricane
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that was building inside of me
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as a young survivor of sexual assault
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and as a girl who was grappling with abandonment
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and exposure to violence in other spaces in my life.
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I was fighting him,
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but I was also fighting the men and boys that had assaulted my body
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and the culture that told me I had to be silent about it.
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A teacher broke up the fight
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and my principal called me in her office.
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But she didn't say, "Monique, what's wrong with you?"
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She gave me a moment to collect my breath
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and asked, "What happened?"
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The educators working with me led with empathy.
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They knew me.
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They knew I loved to read, they knew I loved to draw,
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they knew I adored Prince.
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And they used that information to help me understand
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why my actions, and those of my classmate, were disruptive
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to the learning community they were leading.
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They didn't place me on suspension;
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they didn't call the police.
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My fight didn't keep me from going to school the next day.
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It didn't keep me from graduating; it didn't keep me from teaching.
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But unfortunately, that's not a story that's shared by many black girls
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in the US and around the world today.
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We're living through a crisis in which black girls
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are being disproportionately pushed away from schools ---
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not because of an imminent threat they pose to the safety of a school,
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but because they're often experiencing schools
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as locations for punishment and marginalization.
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That's something that I hear from black girls around the country.
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But it's not insurmountable.
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We can shift this narrative.
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Let's start with some data.
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According to a National Black Women's Justice Institute analysis
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of civil rights data
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collected by the US Department of Education,
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black girls are the only group of girls who are overrepresented
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along the entire continuum of discipline in schools.
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That doesn't mean that other girls aren't experiencing exclusionary discipline
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and it doesn't mean that other girls aren't overrepresented
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at other parts along that continuum.
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But black girls are the only group of girls
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who are overrepresented all along the way.
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Black girls are seven times more likely than their white counterparts
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to experience one or more out-of-school suspensions
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and they're nearly three times more likely than their white and Latinx counterparts
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to be referred to the juvenile court.
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A recent study by the Georgetown Center on Poverty and Inequality
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partially explained why this disparity is taking place
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when they confirmed that black girls experience
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a specific type of age compression,
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where they're seen as more adult-like than their white peers.
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Among other things, the study found
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that people perceive black girls to need less nurturing,
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less protection, to know more about sex
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and to be more independent than their white peers.
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The study also found
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that the perception disparity begins when girls are as young as five years old.
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And that this perception and the disparity increases over time
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and peaks when girls are between the ages of 10 and 14.
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This is not without consequence.
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Believing that a girl is older than she is can lead to harsher treatment,
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immediate censure when she makes a mistake
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and victim blaming when she's harmed.
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It can also lead a girl to think that something is wrong with her,
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rather than the conditions in which she finds herself.
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Black girls are routinely seen as too loud, too aggressive,
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too angry, too visible.
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Qualities that are often measured in relation to nonblack girls
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and which don't take into consideration what's going on in this girl's life
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or her cultural norms.
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And it's not just in the US.
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In South Africa,
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black girls at the Pretoria Girls High School
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were discouraged from attending school with their hair in its natural state,
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without chemical processing.
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What did those girls do?
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They protested.
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And it was a beautiful thing to see the global community for the most part
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wrap its arms around girls as they stood in their truths.
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But there were those who saw them as disruptive,
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largely because they dared to ask the question,
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"Where can we be black if we can't be black in Africa?"
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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It's a good question.
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Around the world,
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black girls are grappling with this question.
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And around the world,
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black girls are struggling to be seen, working to be free
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and fighting to be included
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in the landscape of promise that a safe space to learn provides.
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In the US, little girls, just past their toddler years,
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are being arrested in classrooms for having a tantrum.
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Middle school girls are being turned away from school
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because of the way they wear their hair naturally
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or because of the way the clothes fit their bodies.
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High school girls are experiencing violence
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at the hands of police officers in schools.
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Where can black girls be black without reprimand or punishment?
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And it's not just these incidents.
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In my work as a researcher and educator,
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I've had an opportunity to work with girls like Stacy,
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a girl who I profile in my book "Pushout,"
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who struggles with her participation in violence.
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She bypasses the neuroscientific and structural analyses
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that science has to offer
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about how her adverse childhood experiences inform
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why she's participating in violence
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and goes straight to describing herself as a "problem child,"
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largely because that's the language that educators were using
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as they routinely suspended her.
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But here's the thing.
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Disconnection and the internalization of harm grow stronger in isolation.
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So when girls get in trouble, we shouldn't be pushing them away,
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we should be bringing them in closer.
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Education is a critical protective factor
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against contact with the criminal legal system.
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So we should be building out policies and practices
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that keep girls connected to their learning,
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rather than pushing them away from it.
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It's one of the reasons I like to say that education is freedom work.
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When girls feel safe, they can learn.
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When they don't feel safe, they fight,
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they protest, they argue, they flee, they freeze.
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The human brain is wired to protect us when we feel a threat.
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And so long as school feels like a threat,
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or part of the tapestry of harm in a girl's life,
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she'll be inclined to resist.
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But when schools become locations for healing,
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they can also become locations for learning.
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So what does this mean for a school to become a location for healing?
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Well, for one thing, it means that we have to immediately discontinue
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the policies and practices that target black girls for their hairstyles or dress.
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(Applause)
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Let's focus on how and what a girl learns
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rather than policing her body in ways that facilitate rape culture
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or punish children for the conditions in which they were born.
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This is where parents and the community of concerned adults can enter this work.
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Start a conversation with the school
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and encourage them to address their dress code
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and other conduct-related policies as a collaborative project,
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with parents and students,
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so as to intentionally avoid bias and discrimination.
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Keep in mind, though,
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that some of the practices that harm black girls most are unwritten.
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So we have to continue to do the deep, internal work to address the biases
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that inform how, when and whether we see black girls for who they actually are,
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or what we've been told they are.
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Volunteer at a school
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and establish culturally competent and gender responsive discussion groups
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with black girls, Latinas, indigenous girls
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and other students who experience marginalization in schools
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to give them a safe space
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to process their identities and experiences in schools.
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And if schools are to become locations for healing,
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we have to remove police officers
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and increase the number of counselors in schools.
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(Applause)
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Education is freedom work.
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And whatever our point of entry is, we all have to be freedom fighters.
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The good news is that there are schools
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that are actively working to establish themselves
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as locations for girls to see themselves as sacred and loved.
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The Columbus City Prep School for Girls in Columbus, Ohio, is an example of this.
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They became an example the moment their principal declared
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that they were no longer going to punish girls for having "a bad attitude."
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In addition to building --
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Essentially, what they did is they built out a robust continuum
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of alternatives to suspension, expulsion and arrest.
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In addition to establishing a restorative justice program,
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they improved their student and teacher relationships
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by ensuring that every girl has at least one adult on campus
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that she can go to when she's in a moment of crisis.
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They built out spaces along the corridors of the school and in classrooms
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for girls to regroup, if they need a minute to do so.
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And they established an advisory program that provides girls with an opportunity
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to start every single day with the promotion of self-worth,
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communication skills and goal setting.
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At this school,
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they're trying to respond to a girl's adverse childhood experiences
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rather than ignore them.
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They bring them in closer; they don't push them away.
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And as a result, their truancy and suspension rates have improved,
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and girls are arriving at school increasingly ready to learn
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because they know the teachers there care about them.
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That matters.
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Schools that integrate the arts and sports into their curriculum
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or that are building out tranformative programming,
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such as restorative justice, mindfulness and meditation,
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are providing an opportunity for girls to repair their relationships with others,
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but also with themselves.
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Responding to the lived, complex and historical trauma
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that our students face
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requires all of us who believe in the promise of children and adolescents
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to build relationships, learning materials,
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human and financial resources and other tools
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that provide children with an opportunity to heal, so that they can learn.
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Our schools should be places where we respond to our most vulnerable girls
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as essential to the creation of a positive school culture.
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Our ability to see her promise should be at its sharpest
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when she's in the throws of poverty and addiction;
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when she's reeling from having been sex-trafficked
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or survived other forms of violence;
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when she's at her loudest,
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or her quietest.
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We should be able to support her intellectual
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and social-emotional well-being
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whether her shorts reach her knees or stop mid-thigh or higher.
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It might seem like a tall order in a world
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so deeply entrenched in the politics of fear
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to radically imagine schools as locations where girls can heal and thrive,
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but we have to be bold enough to set this as our intention.
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If we commit to this notion of education as freedom work,
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we can shift educational conditions
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so that no girl, even the most vulnerable among us,
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will get pushed out of school.
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And that's a win for all of us.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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