‘Teachers must see beyond race and poverty to empower children from the toughest backgrounds’

Children from poor homes are survivors of circumstances most adults would not be able to handle, says principal Nadia Lopez. But they need to be inspired to reach their potential.
16th November 2016, 9:43pm

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‘Teachers must see beyond race and poverty to empower children from the toughest backgrounds’

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Nadia Lopez is the founder of Mott Hall Bridges Academy, a public middle school in Brownsville, one of the poorest neighborhoods in New York City.

Her new new book, The Bridge to Brilliance: How One Principal in a Tough Community Is Inspiring the World, tells the moving story of her journey to help her students succeed against the odds.

Nadia has previously been invited to the White House, to speak at Harvard and Yale, and has given a TED Talk on the ‘Revolution of Education’. She was also top 50 finalist in the 2016 Global Teacher Prize and each month shares her perspectives on the critical issues in education as one of The Global Search for Education’s Top Global Teacher Bloggers.

Here, she explains what it takes for principals and teachers to reach children in the most disadvantaged communities.

You founded a school to strengthen a community. What would you like readers to take away from your book?

I want readers to walk away understanding that education requires a holistic approach and should not be solely measured by assessments. There are beautiful challenges faced when teaching children, especially those who live in disadvantaged communities, but with conviction, faith, and ingenuity we can cultivate brilliance and provide hope for the future.

The students of Mott Hall Bridges are often growing up in environments of poverty and violence. What made you driven to work with young people who are too often neglected and forgotten?

I grew up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, where poverty and violence was just as normal as it is in Brownsville, but I had the privilege of being taught by passionate and dedicated teachers, who saw beyond race and socio-economics.

They were always in pursuit of providing a quality education that would empower and inspire children. They were the examples in my life that drove me to work with young people who have been neglected and forgotten, and believe that they are invisible in this world.

How do we do better nationally to inspire young black and brown students to believe in their own capacity for success?

Black and brown students view their capacity of success based on what they are exposed to in school, their community, and the media. Changing the narrative from poverty, crime, and violence associated with black and brown children, to inventors, pioneers, and creatives responsible for starting business, impacting the tech industry, and developing inventions, reinforces their potential of success... as does offering 21st century classes such as social justice, horticulture, entrepreneurship, coding, and arts programs.

Children must also be able to see themselves in other people and taken to places where they should know they belong, which is why our scholars take field trips to college.

I have also designed programming that connects professionals to our classrooms throughout the year. For instance, Digital Day allows people of color in digital and tech spaces to share their journey to their career and how they have overcome adversities to lead within their industries.

Our young men participate in ‘I MATTER’ that gives them access to mentors who are men of color pioneering within law, fashion, entertainment, STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, maths) careers, and entrepreneurship.

For our girls, we offer ‘She is Me,’ a program that provides a safe space for sharing personal stories, networking with women who are successful within their communities and their careers, as well as conferences on topics that impact their social well-being.

What can we do to close the school-to-prison pipeline?

Children from disadvantaged communities who are assessed with culturally and socio-economically biased exams are likely to reflect low achievement, which impacts their promotion, opportunities of taking advance placement classes, and preparation for colleges and careers.

As a nation, we should focus on the pre-K to college pipeline, which sets the pathway for our children and their future. Taking children on field trips to visit high schools and colleges plants the seeds of where they can go and where they belong.

This would also bridge communication amongst educators across grade levels to analyze the gaps that exist within our education system, to identify the resources that are needed at each level to ensure the success of children and to prepare them for college and future careers. We need a holistic approach to measure the whole child, not just an assessment that does not take into consideration growth and progress over time.

What needs to be done outside of school to support students in unstable financial situations to succeed in the classroom?

Children need to be taught financial literacy to better understand the value of and how to manage money, along with saving while they are young.

Because the average income in Brownsville is $28,000, all scholars in seventh grade at Mott Hall Bridges Academy take a year-long entrepreneurship program. The purpose is to ensure that they learn how to create their own goods and services that have the potential of becoming a business that can provide income for the scholars and support their families.

Lastly, mentorship is essential to providing access beyond the classroom and surrounding community. Children who are exposed to careers and landscapes of opportunity can see possibilities beyond the limitations they have been conditioned to accept as normal.

What would you say to young teachers from upper/middle class backgrounds who are coming into places like Brownsville, Bed-Stuy, and the South Bronx? 

Children from disenfranchised communities are survivors of circumstances most adults would not be able to handle; therefore, you are not here to “save them”.

Working in Brownsville means you are here to educate and inspire scholars by exposing them to possibilities and building their knowledge. What most people from upper/middle class backgrounds fail to do is actually learn about the community by engaging with the people, walking through the neighborhood, and observing the overwhelming disparities that exist in communities like Brownsville.

When you are confronted with what it looks like to live in a disenfranchised neighborhood, it forces one to reflect and ask, “Who is responsible for this and what do I need to do to make it better?”

The original version of this article first appeared in The Global Search for Education series on CMRubinWorld.  Follow on Twitter @CMRubinWorld

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