Black Lives, Too, Matter in Schools:
An Exploration of Symbolic Violence in the Era of Trayvon Martin
Justin A. Coles
Michigan State University
Abstract
Urban educators often focus their attention
on the violence of inner city neighborhoods causing them to ignore the urban
school as a violent institutionÑpositioning it as a safe haven, both physically
and emotionally. However, to build ways to effectively respond to violence in
schools, urban educators must begin to reflect on the history of these
institutions and the current ways in which they subjugate and marginalize Black
children. Through in depth, semi-structured interviews with Black, high school
students, the author investigated the presence of symbolic violence in their
schooling experiences and the impact it has on their social and academic
identities. The author uses Critical Race Theory (CRT) as the guiding
theoretical and methodological framework. Highlighting the gentle and
imperceptible nature of symbolic violence, it was discovered that their
schooling experiences are laced with undertones of invisible, yet violent
attacks.
Keywords: teacher education, critical race theory,
symbolic violence
Background
Educational institutions
in the United States of America have long challenged the abilities of Black
students in relation to their achievement due to theories of intelligence
rooted in racism argued by both social and natural science. While these
theories have proven to be false (Anderson & Nickerson, 2005_ Smedley &
Smedley, 2005), claims to Black inferiority are still deeply embedded in the
ways many in society view Black Americans, including how some Black Americans
internalize attitudes of inferiority (Jones, 2000). Members of the Galton
Society, such as Dr. Carl Brigham helped to legitimize the belief in the
different levels of intelligence between Anglo and African Americans in the
1920s (Selden, 1999). Theories of Black inferiority continued and picked up
throughout the 1960s, where scholars identified cultural deficit theories to
suggest that children of color were victims of pathological lifestyles that
hindered their ability to benefit from schooling (Ladson Billings, 2006). These
cultural deficit theories are rooted in racism operating in a white supremacist
context. According to Stanfield (1985), white supremacy can be outlined as the
history of the white race Òsignificantly dominating other groups for hundreds
of yearsÓ resulting in Òthe ways of the dominant group (its epistemologies, its
ontologies, its axiologies) not only to become the dominant ways of American
civilization, but also for these ways to become so deeply embedded that they
typically are seen as ÒnaturalÓ or appropriate norms rather than as
historically evolved constructions (as cited by Scheurich & Young, 1997, p.
7). Lorde (1992) defined racism as, Òthe belief in the inherent superiority of
one race over all others and thereby the right to dominanceÓ (p.115). Over
time, notions of Black inferiority and low levels of academic achievement
became expected in the minds of white citizens and therefore white teachers as
well. Indeed, under the existence of white supremacy,
Black inferiority and white superiority became
constructed as natural and appropriate. When teachers and other school
officials believe these deficit theories they often treat African American
studentsÕ behavior as deficient (Flores, 2007; Richman, Bovelsky, Kroovand,
Vacca, & West, 1997; Villegas, 2007) and do whatever they can to control
the behavior, which negatively impacts the psyche of the Black child.
It is important to note
that in many cases, actions of racism are not always committed consciously
(Richeson & Ambady, 2002). However, whether the negative treatment of Black
students is conscious or not, teachers come to rationalize the treatment as
valid. Efforts to control behavior viewed as deficient has moved beyond teacher
dispositions to also infiltrating school policies and curriculum, causing
deficit views of Black children to become normalized in all aspects of American
schooling (Solorzano & Yosso, 2001). For example, the overrepresentation of
African American students in the use of exclusionary and punitive consequences
is of major concern in schools (Skiba et al., 2002). Since school policies,
curriculum, and teachers have the potential to impact the experiences of Black
students in harmful ways, educators must confront this fact. For true equity to
be reached, teachers must recognize the intentional, violent subjugation of
Black students in American schooling. The goal in doing this is not to send a
hopeless message to educators or students, but to confront an educational
reality that has long been ignored and work toward solutions. Echoing Wynne
(1999), silence can be dangerous and avoiding the issue of racism is concerning
because of its consequences on children. As educators think about Òthe
disproportionate numbers of African American males in prisons, the
disproportionate numbers of children of color living below the poverty level,
the numbers of children of color doomed to failure in our public schools, the
numbers of inner-city ghettosÓ
(Wynne, 1992, p. 6), it must be
understood that the time to confront the violence enacted by schools is now and
we will only begin to address the damages committed by schools if we begin to
talk about the root of those damagesÑracism and white supremacy, which produce
violence.
Statement of Problem
To situate the problem
that frames this research study, I build on Jeffrey Duncan_AndradeÕs work on
the need for Teacher Education programs to prepare students to respond to the
environments of urban students. Duncan_Andrade (2011) explained that there are
Òfour major sources of traumatic stress in studentsÕ lives that educators must
be prepared to address: (1) institutional violence; (2) physical violence; (3)
root shock; and (4) wealth inequalityÓ (p. 313). Duncan_Andrade (2011) further
purported that educators must address these four sources of trauma for youth of
color to Òtake on the seemingly intractable forms of inequity facing our
societyÓ (p. 309). Labeling the sources of trauma as toxins, his argument is
for teacher education to move toward a focus that Òaims to develop educators
better equipped to respond to the Ôsocially toxic environmentsÕ that emerge
from racism, poverty, and other forms of oppression,Ó that disproportionately
impact students of color (Duncan_Andrade, 2011, p. 310). Considering that an
overwhelming majority of teachers and teacher educators are white (Ju‡rez,
Smith & Hayes, 2008), I agree with Duncan_Andrade, and purport that it is
high time for teachers to be explicitly taught to understand and interact with
the toxic environments society often creates for Black children. However, I
ask, can a social institution that produces social toxins and thusly induces
traumaÑone that is a major source of stress for certain populations (Anderman
& Kimweli, 1997)Ñrespond to studentsÕ larger societal toxic environments?
It must be made clear that schools act as key players in maintaining the
aforementioned systems of oppression. While schools
can work to respond to studentsÕ experiences out of school, they must first
place their efforts of help inward. I argue that, as violent
institutionsÑinstitutions
of power with a
documented history of oppression, capable of inducing trauma to youth of
colorÑschools and teacher education programs cannot respond to the trauma their
students face, unless they first begin to see themselves as environments that
are inherently toxic and facilitators of traumatic experiences. As noted by
Decuir and Dixson (2004), due to the legacy of racism, schooling is often a
negative space for African American students. In this article, I aim to engage
in foundational work that begins to explore the role violence plays in the
schooling of African American students.
Although schools are
often characterized as safe oases in the violence of inner-city neighborhoods,
Herr and Anderson (2010) explained, Òthis view is due to an under theorization
of violence and a misperception of apparently orderly schools and classrooms as
violence freeÓ (p. 416). The categories of institutional violence, physical
violence, root shock, and wealth inequality, outlined by Duncan_Andrade
exaggerate claims surrounding particular forms of violence, allowing other
manifestations of violence to remain virtually invisible (Herr & Anderson,
2010). The emphasis on the more widely held interpretations of violence is what
allows educators to not see how schools are socially toxic environments. This
under theorization of violence has gone on far too long and by not seeing
schools as violent sites, but rather as trauma free oases, we invalidate every
Black childÕs schooling experience that is inherently hostile (Bell, 2004).
Teachers
and institutions must understand that Black children are victimized in schools,
just as they are in society. While positioning Black youth as victims can be
viewed as a deficit framing, I posit here
that in this context it is not. In fact, in many instances, Black youth are not
deemed worthy of being victims even when it is clear that youth of other races
would be immediately given that label if they were in a similar circumstance.
For example, with the recent attention on the numerous unarmed Black teens
being killed by police officers and vigilante citizens, the media has often
positioned them in ways that make it seem as if they were responsible for their
own death (Wing, 2014). These Black individuals were not allowed to be victims;
in many incidents, their humanity is denied, which makes it easier for society
not to address the issues. By avoiding the ways our educational institutions
victimize Black children (i.e. overrepresentation in special education,
disproportionate suspension rates, etc.), we also deny their humanity and right
to a quality education. By attempting to exempt schools from the oppressive
system of racism, whether consciously or subconsciously, we signal to students
that any failure or problem they face is a result of a lack of preparation or
diligence on their part, because everything is provided in abundance at the
violence free schoolhouse that will set them up for success. Students are told
when they leave their communities all they need to do is work hard. Building
from the literature of Bourdieu and Passeron (1990), Herr and Anderson (2010)
described two ways of getting and keeping a lasting hold over someone: overt
(physical or economic) violence as referenced by Duncan_Andrade or symbolic
violence Ð censored, euphemized, unrecognized violence.
Symbolic Violence
Radical
Schooling Theory purports that Òeducational institutions are organized around
and reflect the interests of dominant groups in the society; that the function
of school is to reproduce the current inequities of our social, political, and
economic systemÓ (Ferguson, 2000,p. 50). Moreover, it upholds that schools
reproduce social inequality through a Òhidden curriculum,Ó which reflects the
Òcultural hegemonyÓ of white Americans. This Òhidden curriculumÓ in schools
works to exacerbate inequality opposed to diminish it (Ferguson, 2000).
Iadicola (1981) explained, ÒThe schoolÕs role in sorting and placing students
with the ÒcorrectÓ cultural disposition to perpetuate the social and cultural
order is central to its role as an agency of social controlÓ (p. 362). Indeed,
schools reward the cultural capital of the dominant class (MacLeod, 2009). This
Òcultural production in education refers to the ways in which schools and
teachers reproduce social inequalities through the promotion of certain forms
of cultural knowledgeÓ (Jennings & Lynn, 2005, p. 19). Cultural
reproduction takes a micro analytical look into the ways school norms
contribute to the systemic exclusion of ethnic minorities for the educational
system (Jennings & Lynn, 2005). Furthermore, Òcultural capital is a form of
symbolic wealth that one acquires through membership and participation in the
dominant or middle_class cultureÓ (p. 19). Schools embodying the dominant
cultural capital or symbolic wealth as superior inflict symbolic violenceÑthe
painful, damaging, mortal wounds inflicted by the wielding of words, symbols,
and standardsÑagainst students not belonging to the white race (Ferguson,
2000). FergusonÕs analysis of Bourdieu and PasseronÕs symbolic violence
revealed that not only are African American youth violently attacked in
society, but that this vicious routine is perpetuated by the schools that aim
to educate them. The wielding of words, symbols, and standards Ferguson refers
to that embody white cultural capital is how schools promote white supremacy
and as a result, promote anti_Blackness. Similar to the experiences African
American youth face outside of school, (i.e. being called thugs, being followed
in stores, and being over_represented in the penal system) they also face
similar experiences in school.
Pierre Bourdieu (2001) explained symbolic
violence as Òa gentle violence, imperceptible and invisible even to its
victims, exerted through the most part by the purely symbolic channels of communication
and cognition (more precisely, misrecognition), recognition, or even feelingÓ
(p. 1). Considering common understandings of violence, it may be difficult to
grasp the concept of a violence that is gentle, yet Scott (2012) mentioned that
to fully understand the theory of symbolic violence and eventually work to
recognize it in action, the words gentle and
violence both must be kept in mind.
To be clear, the gentle nature of BourdieuÕs theory does not by any means
negate the damages done by this invisible action. In fact, it speaks to the
danger of such a gentle force; one that appears to pose zero to minimal threat
upon first encountering it and then without warning a symbolic assault occurs.
The danger presents itself in the unknowing. The assault has gone unnoticed due
to the belief that the force could not possibly pose a threat and more so that
the forceÑeducational institutionsÑwould never seek to harm. Symbolic violence
is perplexing for the simple fact that it is not a form of overt coercion,
typical violence; and for this reason alone, it is damaging for all of those on
the receiving end (Scott, 2012). How can an individual or a group of
individuals understand or recognize symbolic violence being enacted against
them in social practice if is gentle to the point of invisibility? Invisible
tactics, those incapable of being seen stop efforts of resistance in their
tracks before they even materialize. Bourdieu and Passeron (1990) further
elaborated, ÒEvery power to exert symbolic violence, i.e. every power which
manages to impose meanings and to impose them as legitimate by concealing the
power relations which are the basis of its force, adds its own specifically
symbolic force to those power relationsÓ (p. 4). Again, the act of concealing
the power relations, which essentially seal the exertion of power, contributes
to the lack of awareness those subjected to symbolic violence have in regards
to liberating themselves from the oppressive impacts of the violence.
Applying this to schooling, it can be deduced
that Òinequitable social relations are maintained not simply through bad
teaching, as current school reform efforts assume, but through the everyday
Ôpedagogic actionsÕ of Ôworld classÕ, dedicated and caring teachersÓ (Herr and
Anderson, 2010, p. 419). Pedagogic actions in schools serve as one of the main
extensions of symbolic violence. The mundane action of knowledge being passed
on to a student from a teacher is an act of symbolic violence by nature of
schools and the particular knowledge teachersÕ share and value from their
students is rooted in systems of power. Schools and the teachers housed there
impose meaning on students, rarely stopping to consider how various student
populations may make sense of the knowledge being imposed upon them differently.
In some cases, the difference of meanings constructed due to the varying
epistemologies of students that may not directly align with the schools can be
so drastic that harm is done to students who cannot understand or connect with
the meaning imposed by the cultural arbitrary.
Methodology
A
Critical Race theoretical perspective and a Critical Race Theory (CRT)
methodology informed the development and design of this study. According to
CRT, Ògiven the insidious and often subtle way in which race and racism
operate, it is imperative that educational researchers explore the role of race
when examining the educational experiences of African American studentsÓ
(DeCuir & Dixson, 2004, p. 26). Due to the subtle and diffuse ways symbolic
violence permeates U.S. educational institutions, the use of CRT, which seeks
to directly expose these subtleties is not only important, but also necessary.
CRT is currently in a ripe stage for serious utilization in disciplines beyond
legal studies due to decades of foundational research that has solidified and
affirmed it as necessary and fruitful practice. ÒToday, many in field of
education consider themselves critical race theorists who use CRTÕs ideas to
understand issues of school discipline and
hierarchy, tracking, affirmative action, high stakes testing, controversies
over curriculum and history, and alternative and charter schoolsÓ (Delgado and
Stefancic, 2012, p. 6). In alignment with school hierarchies and controversies,
the work I outline here on symbolic violence is not only timely for a CRT
discussion in education, but also highly appropriate.
Data
and Results
Data for this research paper is derived from a
larger study I conducted at a summer enrichment program, Education Trailblazers,
for high achieving students at a large university in the Midwestern United
States. The program has an explicit focus on education, particularly around
issues of social justice and the schooling experiences of students from
marginalized populations. During the program, I interviewed four rising high
school seniors, who all self-identified as Black/African American. The research
presented here focuses on a female student who I will refer to as Shayla. Each
student participated in semi-structured interviews, completed an open-ended
questionnaire, and participated in a focus group with other participants. This
data was coded using the constant comparative method to develop thematic
relationships between the students and across the three points of data
collected (Strauss & Corbin, 1998). As students who were identified by
their schools as high achieving, had an interest in education, possessed mostly
positive feelings towards school, it was clear that they probably would not
consider themselves ideal targets for symbolic violence due to their
ÒsuccessfulÓ navigation of their respective school settings. Due to the
positive images students had about their academic selves and how this affected
their ability to recognize damages done to them by symbolic violence at times,
critical incidents allowed me to better expose the subtleties present in the
data during the analysis.
Angeledis (2001) explained, critical incidents
Òare not necessarily sensational events involving a lot of tension. Rather they
may be minor incidents, small everyday events that happen in every school and
in every classroom. Their criticality is based on the justification, the significance,
and the meaning given to themÓ (p. 431). Symbolic violence is so difficult to
be cognizant of that I must note that I take responsibility in naming certain
experiences explained by Shayla as critical incidents that expose symbolic
violence. During the interviews, the term symbolic violence was not discussed,
rather students were asked to answer questions related to their everyday schooling
experiences, including but not limited to: descriptions of their school
environment, interactions between teachers and students, school demographics,
and school policies.
Shayla
At the onset of our initial conversation, Shayla
explained that her father was in real estate, which caused them to move around
often within the region. In the account below, she explained that while in
middle school she attended a predominately white school in Oaktown and then
transferred to a school serving predominately Black students in Springwood.
After learning about ShaylaÕs moving patterns, I asked her how did her previous
school differ from her current experience, she provided the following details:
When I was out in Oaktown they were moving fast
and I was trying to understand like, I never seen this before and the
curriculum was so much higher. Especially like when I came back out to
Springwood. When I came back out to Springwood I was like, I did this stuff in
seventh grade, why is it that when I'm in ninth grade no actually it was tenth,
why is it that I am in tenth grade... doing the same thing again? Why is it
that their [Oaktown] seventh graders can do what our [Springwood] tenth graders
are still learning how to do? I never understood that.
As detailed above, when Shayla arrived to
Springwood, she was doing things in tenth grade that she already learned in
seventh grade at the predominantly white Oaktown. Without realizing it, Shayla
was unveiling a critical incident in her discussion of difference in curriculum.
Her account teetered on the line between the familiar and the unjust (Scott,
2012). For students who did not have the opportunity to attend Oaktown or any
other similarly situated school, they would not necessarily know that students
at other schools are learning what they are being taught in tenth grade during
their early middle school years. However, Shayla was able to get a glimpse
behind the institutional curtain and question why the instruction between
schools was drastically different. The everyday teaching of students, the
mundane, suddenly became prickly and problematic (Scott, 2012). How are all
students expected to reach similar levels of success when many schools,
particularly those serving Black and Brown children, are teaching their
students three to four years below grade level? The violence in this instance
shows up in the form of a continual and slow violence. Shayla is aware that
something is wrong about the instructional differences, but she feels as if she
has no agency to question or challenge the practices. Like many students, she
continues to work to the best of her abilities while accepting her schooling
conditions as they are.
As our conversation
developed, I inquired whether Shayla felt she was receiving an adequate
education.
I know thereÕs better out
there, like IÕve experienced it. IÕve seen it how the other kids are like in
other districts are ahead of us but I don't know why that is, maybe its
because...no, no I donÕt think its because of our location or anything. I just
think that...maybe itÕs the way our district is set up, so that we donÕt...we
set our expectations lower for them I think thatÕs what it is, because we live
in a certain area they set their expectations for us lower because of the fact
that we are Black I guess. Like that we canÕt comprehend as fast. Because I notice its weird though because the ACT scores at the
white schools are higher than ours, but we should all be like...if we were all
learning the same things why is there this gigantic gap in our scores like that?
This is a clear example of a student
exposing cracks in the legitimacy of an educational institution. Why are ACT
scores so different between ShaylaÕs school and the white schools in the
immediate area? Opposed to my beliefs, according to Hernstein and Murray
(1994), genetic differences between whites and Blacks would be the reason why
Black students do not do as well academically. Unfortunately, much past and
present research documents Black culture as deficient. Ideas of cultural
deficiency in an educational context have provided whites with a wealth of
educational opportunities, while providing Blacks with inferior and less
desired options. ÒAfrican Americans were believed to belong to a race that was
culturally hundreds of years behind the White raceÓ and education reformers
Òsought to teach African Americans that their position was not a result of
oppression but the natural process of cultural evolutionÓ (Walker &
Archung, 2003, p. 24). However, data from the U.S. Department of Education Office
of Civil Rights Civil Rights Data Collection (2014) report suggested otherwise.
For example, the report revealed that Òa quarter of high schools with the
highest percentage of Black and Latino students do not offer Algebra II; a
third of these schools do not offer chemistryÓ (CRDC, 2014). Symbolic violence
operates in a way that causes individuals of marginalized groups to believe in
and accept their marginal status. If a group of individuals were told
repeatedly that they are inferior and the outcomes of things such as
standardized tests or dropout rates align with these sentiments, what else
would these individuals believe? Symbolic violence works to maintain white
supremacy and privilege in this country because it is self-sustaining; Black
students do the work of marginalizing themselves after being made to believe
their inferior status. Black students like Shayla may see that gaps between her
classmates and her white counterparts are alarming, but as expressed, they may
believe there is nothing they can do about it. The bewildered undertone
implicit in ShaylaÕs thought process is all too common for Black students
across the U.S. Students must be taught that they can do something about it,
but first they must be made aware of the symbolic violence they experience
daily just by virtue of showing up to school.
Conclusion
The development of
Òcritical educational spaces are essential once symbolic violence has been
namedÓ (Goldstein, 2005, p. 535). For true educational equity to occur, schools
must acknowledge and have critical conversations on issues in their school
stemming from racism. To stop the damage to students brought on by symbolic
violence, schools must foster environments that allow for students to become
critical of the system in which they are educated. Although it has been
documented widely that schools are sites of inequality there is little, if any,
research that attempts to study how students understand and internalize the
bi_directionality of inequality between school and society, particularly in the
frame of violence as outlined here. It is urgent for schools to address the way
violence gets enacted throughout classrooms, pedagogic actions, and policies.
There is a considerable amount of room for more research on the impact symbolic
violence has on a studentÕs academic and social success and what actions, if
any, students can take to contest these institutional and individual practices
of violence.
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Justin A. Coles is a fourth-year doctoral student at Michigan State
University in the College of Education in the Curriculum, Instruction and
Teacher Education Program. Justin's research centers on urban education, with
an explicit focus on the racialized schooling experiences of African
American youth and actions these youth can take to challenge negative schooling
experiences. He currently works as a Research Associate at the University of
PennsylvaniaÕs Center for the Study of Race & Equity in Education.