The Oakland Education Week in Review: 6/22-6/28

Last week, lots on getting rid of the OUSD police, a grand jury report on the Castlemont grading issue, equity in sports for girls, a great story on support for transitional youth, broader looks at how the State responds to racial injustice, how you can advocate for Mack and more, please, read, share and get involved

Oakland:

California:

Other Stories:

Resources:

How You Can Help:

Oakland:

California:

Other Stories:

  • America’s segregated schools: We can’t live together until we learn together
    • Would George Floyd be alive today had he and Derek Chauvin grown up together and attended the same schools? It’s an impossible question to answer, but it’s an important one to ask — in part because it’s about more than George Floyd and Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who knelt on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes as he pleaded for his life, or even the criminal justice system.
  • Elijah McClain played violin for lonely kittens. His last words to police are devastating.
    • Elijah McCain was a massage therapist who played violin for shelter kittens on his lunch break in his hometown of Aurora, Colorado, because he thought the animals were lonely. If that detail alone doesn’t conjure up a picture of a gentle soul, Colorado Music described McClain as a young man who was “quirky, a pacifist, a vegetarian, enjoyed running, and known to put a smile on everyone’s face.”

Resources:

  • Raising White Kids with Jennifer Harvey
    • What is a healthy racial identity for a White person, and how do we help our White children develop one?  We’re joined by Dr. Jennifer Harvey to discuss her book, Raising White Kids: Bringing Up Children in a Racially Unjust America, as well her personal journey towards anti-racist organizing, educating, and child rearing.  

How You Can Help:

  • The Debt Oakland Owes McClymonds and How We Can Start Paying it Off
    • Where we put out money is a statement of our priorities.  And no community in the East Bay has paid a higher cost of progress than West Oakland.  While the region and State’s commerce flows over and through it, from the Port, to BART, to the highways that connect the suburbs with jobs.  West Oakland has been left largely with the by-products of progress and not the benefits, 38 Hazmat sites near Mack, air that smells funny from all the industry and trucks going to the port, asthma rates to match, and all the other historical markers of racism and redlining.  Please demand that OUSD prioritize fixing Mack, and pay part of the debt West Oakland is owed.
What do you think?

More Comments