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Miseducating Black Students as a Form of Educational Malpractice and Professional Betrayal

Dr. Donna Y. Ford

As a doctoral student three decades ago, I was introduced to Dr. Carter G. Woodson and a quote by Horace Mann. I believe that education is a great equalizer, which played a major role in my becoming an educator. Woodson was required reading then and should be now. Any discussion of the term ‘miseducation’ is woefully incomplete without referencing Dr. Woodson’s Miseducation of the Negro. It is both sad and pathetic that this term and book are more timely and timeless than ever before in 2020. Both the racial pandemic (centuries old) and COVID-19 pandemic (recent) have further exposed benign neglect in the education of Black students at all levels of education – P-12 and higher education. When the ‘cure’ for COVID-19 is found (I pray soon), the racial pandemic will still exist (sigh and tears).

Malpractice is primarily associated with the medical profession. The term, however, can relate to any profession. Malpractice refers to dereliction of duty, wrongdoing, negligent professional activity or treatment. Thus, professional malpractice in education is a reality and it must be interrogated. Our field is not exempt from accountability; what we do can truly save lives.

The academic and professional dreams and lives of targeted Black students and classmates are diminished with both the written and hidden curricula. Dreams Deferred by Langston Hughes must also be required reading. Lower grades, grade retention, racial tracking, special education misplacement, denied access to gifted and talented education, and negative school records that look like a criminal’s rap sheet follow our Black children like what is it – profiling and policing – are just a few potent examples of the grave disservices anti-Black educators do to Black students; what such adults do to Black children (P-12) and young adults and future professionals (higher education). Families send their children to school to learn, to be helped, not to be miseducated. Benign neglect is ineffective and has no place in social justice work and endeavors.

Students’ responses to miseducation and racism are predictable. They are watching educators and have a pretty accurate sense of discernment. This adage is befitting — ‘students don’t care what you know, until they know that you care’. Depending on personality, coping skills, and resources, many or most students will respond to negative educators with negative behaviors. The correlation is clear. Equity-minded, antiracist, culturally responsive educators are empathic not punitive. They are self-reflective and do not engage in blaming-the-victim attitudes and actions. Victimizing students is unconscionable; devoid of empathy and compassion.

Professional Betrayal

Culturally assaultive and incompetent educators (e.g., professors, administrators, teachers, counselors, psychologists), often cloaked under the lie of colorblindness, which I call ‘cultureblindness’, not only betray students, but also our education profession. What comes to mind are these outcomes:

Antiracist educators, alongside Black educators, deserve better colleagues. There is no place for what I call ‘drive by’ educators who come to school, do unintended or collateral damage (e.g., implicit bias), intentional damage (e.g., explicit bias), and drive or speed away when the school bell rings — with no commitment and allegiance to the Black community. I am grounded in and guided by the notion of legal ‘disparate impact’. Whether educators unintentionally or intentionally miseducate Black students, the outcome is the same – discrimination and harm.

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