Teaching the Taboo

February 5, 2011

A Book That Will Push Any Educator, February 5, 2011

By Tessa Strauss

This review is from: Teaching the Taboo: Courage and Imagination in the Classroom

I have to admit, I might be a little biased towards this book. Rick Ayers was my own high school teacher and I saw him create change in our large urban public school, along with inspiring students, teachers, and community members alike, and mentoring them through the process of creating change themselves. Rick’s personal standpoint on education and politics has always inspired and motivated me; in fact, it was in part because of his ability and persistence in pushing students to question the norm that motivated me to become a teacher too.

As a first year teacher in an urban public school, I am faced every day (every moment even) with ethical, political, social, and personal dilemmas that could paralyze me if I had nowhere else to turn. I know why so many teachers leave the education system after only a year or two in the classroom. This is hard work! There are pressures from every angle to be the best teacher, to have your students succeed academically, to pull students up from the bottom single-handedly, to do the impossible and be a superhero. Teachers play a lot of roles in their classrooms; I am prepared daily to be a friend, surrogate mother, listener, conflict manager, food giver, trash picker upper, Academic English speaker, expert speller, math skills driller, disciplinarian, copy machine repairer, nurse, punching bag, and story reader. This can get a little tiring and overwhelming to say the least. This is where books like “Teaching the Taboo” are critical to keeping teachers alive and inspired, pushing us to ask questions in our classrooms and to remember why we became teachers in the first place. We need to believe in our students.

In this age of reporting and ranking teachers according to students’ test scores, I know teachers are doing anything to raise these scores to keep their jobs stable. It’s a scary world out there for teachers these days, but it’s a really scary world for students! I am asked by my school district to teach in a drill & kill style, to give my 8-year old “urban at-risk youth” a standardized, scripted, teacher-centered education so that they can have the same skills as other youth coming from wealthier and more educated communities. But are they really receiving the same education? In just one example, my students are not supposed to use math manipulatives and therefore have a much less conceptual understanding of how math fits in with their daily lives, as opposed to the many other schools that have a hands-on policy for teaching math. As a first year teacher, I struggle with deciding which of these “requirements” are really required and which are suggested; I struggle with the decisions I have to make daily about which students this system is working for and who it is not working for and why, and how I can adapt it or completely throw the curricula out the window in place of something that may work better for my particular students. Of course I believe that all of my students need basic academic skills, and I will go to the end of the earth and back to teach them these skills. I also deeply believe that in order to have any chance of “succeeding” in our society today, my students need to be able to think for themselves, to problem-solve, to apply their math and language skills to their daily lived experience, and to think critically about the world they are in. Rick and Bill Ayers are pushing educators to think deeply about their practice and to question their assumptions about teaching. They ask us to loosen our hold on “control” and to give some of the power and decision-making abilities to our students. They ask us to be flexible, to re-imagine a world where our students (even the most “challenging”) are who education is really for.

My teacher education program stresses the ideas of “teacher as researcher” and the teacher as a political being and someone who is constantly evolving and reflecting about their own roles in the classroom and world. “Teaching the Taboo” is a great reminder to me of how I imagined myself as a classroom teacher; creating a culture of community, creativity, and imagination, where my students are learning and teaching.


Support the People of Egypt Now

February 4, 2011

The US government must break its ties to the dictatorship in Egypt. As courageous Egyptians are being bombarded with US tear gas and other Made-in-the-USA weapons, US officials hypocritically call for peace and a peaceful transition. Just this week they “discovered” Mubarak is a dictator, but the US gives $1.3 billion a year of our tax dollars to Hosni Mubarak. The US has give Egypt $68 billion since 1948, and since 1979, Egypt has been the second- biggest recipient of US aid after Israel.  This US aid to Egypt includes military weapons that have been used to suppress the people and silence any opposition, and during the last few days against peaceful protesters.

Join human rights groups around the world in calling upon the US government to stand on the right side of history and support the Egyptian people’s right to true democracy and freedom.

Tell President Obama to stop funding the Mubarak regime now, to call on Mubarak to resign, and to expressly say that our government stands with the Egyptian people.


An interview with graphicnovelreporter.com

June 26, 2010

Dr. Bill Ayers is a Distinguished Professor of Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is also the author of To Teach: The Journey, In Comics, which uses the comic book format to reach out to teachers. Recently, Dr. Ayers took the time to speak to graphicnovelreporter.com about his work.

Dr. Ayers, to many readers, especially to those of us in education, your name and reputation is one of esteemed legend. I am honored just to be interviewing you. Thank you so much for the opportunity! My first question, then, is, If you were asked to introduce yourself to the general graphic novel reader, what would you want them to know?

I’ve been a teacher, a peace activist, a troublemaker, an artist-in-residence, and a work-in-progress for many decades. As a lifelong comics reader and a serious fan of the medium, I feel honored and privileged to be experiencing a rebirth of sorts as coauthor of a comic book.

When did you become aware of/interested in the comic format? As a child? An adult?

I began reading comics early, and like a lot of suburban kids growing up in the soft illusion of 1950s suburbia, I was an instinctive anarchist. Mad magazine was a canonical text that let me know that, while I may be crazy, I’m not alone in the world. My love of comics grows and grows: Crumb, Spiegelman, Satrapi, Sacco, Bechdel, Ware, Barry, Alexander-Tanner…I’m so happy to be alive in the most propulsive and yeasty moment, diving every day into the wide, wide universe of comics.

Why did you want to publish To Teach in comic format?

I was asked to do a third edition of a book I wrote long ago, and I was bored with the thought of it. So rather fliply I told the publisher that I would do it if I could make it a comic book. I thought that would be the end of it, but to my surprise they said okay, and launched me into an excellent adventure.

What do you hope readers of To Teach: The Journey, in Comics will take away from their reading experience?

I hope that people might see that teaching at its best is profoundly intellectual and ethical work, filled with joy and challenge, agony punctuated with moments of ecstasy, and certainly that all the ideas of teaching as clerking are not only reductive and morally repulsive, but they are also aesthetically unappealing and unlovely, entirely unworthy of our deepest humanistic dreams.

As a scholar of comics and their use in educational settings, I am deeply impressed by how well you and your coauthor/artist, Ryan Alexander-Tanner, use both words and images to convey meaning. The words and the images in To Touch are seamless. Can you offer GNR readers some insight on the writing process behind To Teach?

Working with the dazzling Ryan Alexander-Tanner was a joy for me as well as a powerful education. I’m a slow learner and a bad student, but Ryan was patient and nourishing. It took a while for me to really get the fact that we were writing an entirely new book, not an illustrated version of something I had already written, and not a floppy gateway drug into the “real” To Teach. He insisted from the start that the comic would be as nuanced, complex, dense, and profound as any book on teaching. Our writing process included lots of pizza and mind-altering experiences.

As you know, To Teach is aimed at classroom teachers. As a fellow scholar and professor of teacher-education, I wonder what your thoughts are about teachers using comics and graphic novels in K–12 settings?

Of course teachers should use comics across the curriculum, just as they might use film or poetry or painting. I can’t imagine teaching the Middle East without Sacco, the holocaust without Spiegelman, gender without Bechdel.

Dr. Ayers, thank you so much for sharing your thoughts with GNR readers (and for giving the comic community a wonderful new addition to its list of accolades!). I have one last question: To Teach creates a much-needed link between the comic community and the education community. What do you hope the two communities can learn from each other?

Teachers need to recognize that teaching has an aesthetic—they might be nudged to strive for beauty and something pleasing and lovely in their work—and that the opposite of aesthetic is anesthetic. Wake up! Get moving! Nourish the imaginative and the weird and the queer! Art urges voyages of discovery and surprise. The comics world might give teaching a chance—at least I hope a zillion artists and marginalized bodies flock into classrooms to lend a hand.

— Katie Monnin


High School Haiku

June 26, 2010

school—

take out the “sh”

and it’s cool

The great Gwendolyn Brooks, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in the early 1950’s and Poet Laureate of Illinois for many years, asked in her Dedication to Picasso, “Does man love art?” Her answer: “Man visits art but cringes. Art hurts. Art urges voyages.”

Exactly. Art, which often begins in pain and horror, when it’s good ends in the imaginable; art embraces the entire territory of possibility. Art stands next to the world as such, the given or the received world, waving a colorful flag gesturing toward a world that should be, or a world that could be but is not yet. So if we believe that the world is perfect and in need of no improvement, or that the world is none of our business, or that we are at the end of history and that this is as good as it gets and that no repair is possible, then we must banish the arts, cuff and gag the artists—remember, they urge voyages. If, on the other hand, we see ourselves as works-in-progress, catapulting through a vibrant history-in-the-making, and if we feel a responsibility to engage and participate, then the arts are our strongest ally. It depends.

Perhaps that’s what Ferlinghetti was thinking when he published a slim volume with the provocative title Poetry as Insurgent Art, or what Picasso had in mind when he said, “Art is not chaste. Those ill-prepared should be allowed no contact with art. Art is dangerous. If it is chaste it is not art.” Add to that Einstein’s famous observation that “Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.” Wow! The poet meets the most famous painter and the most renowned scientist of the century, and think about it: they are on the move and on the make, propulsive, dynamic, unsettled and alive—of course.

Haki Madhubuti, Gwendolyn Brooks’ publisher as well as her artistic son, claims that art is a “prodigious and primary energy source,” and then turns to the connection of art to education: “Children’s active participation …is what makes them whole, significantly human, secure in their own skin…” His poem then becomes a chant, each line ending with the words “with art” or “through art.” Every teacher or student, parent or community member can play along and add on:

Magnify your children’s mind with art,

jumpstart their questions…

keep their young minds running, jumping and excited…

Keep them off drugs, respecting themselves and others, away from war…with art!

Your turn.


TO TEACH on Huffington Post

May 20, 2010

William Ayers’s new book To Teach: The Journey, In Comics is part autobiography, part education reform tract, and entirely enjoyable to read. I don’t know another edu-book that blends these three elements so well. To Teach updates Ayers’s 1993 book of the same title– except this time around he’s featured in comic panels whose only facial features are dark hair, opaque glasses, and a mustache. It’s profoundly charming.

2010-05-20-ayerss-toteach.jpg

Ayers leads us on a tour of a teaching life that skips between overflowing love for his craft and pupils and extraordinary systemic frustrations. The first stop: debunking popular myths about teaching. Ayers fights myths that teachers are savior super-genuises that lead classes full of students who are all above average. It’s a fitting opening note for a book that seeks aggressively to confront distortions and impediments to quality classroom environments. Ayers writes, “Myths tower above the world of teaching like giant, fire-breathing dragons. Somehow teachers need to slay these creatures in order to move from myth to reality. And the realities can be harsh. I can think of a million reasons not to teach just off the top of my head…”

That list, which includes pay so low it’s a “national disgrace,” rings much truer. I know quite a few on-the-ground educators who would agree with the Ayers’s succinct sentence: “Teachers often work in difficult situations under impossible circumstances, with too many kids, too little time, stingy resources, and heartless bureaucrats peering through the door.”

And yet… teaching can be an extraordinary, fulfilling job. Ayers told SMITH Magazine: “What we’re trying to do with the book is present the possibility of entering into that contradiction and being successful in your own mind and in your own way with the children, in terms of offering alternatives to the soul-crushing reality of both teaching and schooling as it’s practiced.”

To Teach succeeds.

The author steers us chapter by chapter to different struggles teachers face. He presses teachers to re-think their learning environments– his students’ domain looks more like a learning lounge than a traditionally anonymous classroom. He rejects labeling students “at risk” and insists on the vital importance of getting to know students in a holistic way that celebrates their many good qualities and gives them opportunities to shine. He rails against standardized curricula and shows how unstructured classroom time can allow for priceless discoveries, like when he facilitated an impromptu mission to jury-rig a ramp so his kindergarten class turtle could climb a level of stairs. The kinds of epiphanies his students experienced while working on the ramp for Bingo the Turtle are invaluable, and would never occur at all unless classrooms are liberate from rigidly-structured, “teacher-proof” curricula.

At every turn, there are villains. Several times, Ayers’s class is visited by self-important bureaucrats designed as buffoonish, literally caricatured characters– the female curriculum cop has no nose and a bob approximately twice the mass of her head. The bureaucrats are quick to label an exuberant student as ADD and come across as lobotomized minions pushing “research-based support and coaching in the areas of planning, technique, and assessment.” They never show any interest in kids.

Despite the crushing tide of standardization and distorted expectations placed on teachers, Ayers is optimistic that thoughtful, liberating teaching is possible. His book is peppered with examples of other teachers getting outside the box. Some encounter hand-wringing discouragement; all persevere in the profession.

First-time graphic novel artist (and teacher) Ryan Alexander-Tanner gives life to Ayers’s vision with sharp black-and-white drawings that provide engaging context for Ayers’s assertions. (In one panel, the author is standing on a wooden box labeled “SOAP.”)

To Teach: The Journey, In Comics is a must for educators and highly encouraged for all. As Jonathan Kozol offers in his foreword, “Here’s what I have to say about this largely autobiographical delight: “Super-good! Lots of mischief! Lots of grit and guts and fun! Zap! Bam! Gadzooks! Hooray!”

Dan Brown is a teacher and the author of The Great Expectations School: A Rookie Year in the New Blackboard Jungle.


A New Review of the Comic Book! HOORAY!

May 20, 2010

Interview: Bill Ayers & Ryan Alexander-Tanner, authors of To Teach: The Journey, in Comics

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

By Todd Blackmore

“In a world as out of balance as this world, everyone can find something to do. And the question isn’t can you do everything; the question is, can you do anything?”

Bill Ayers and Ryan Alexander-Tanner collaborated on the new nonfiction graphic novel, To Teach: The Journey, in Comics, a plea for smaller classes, better resources for teachers, and standards that push students without punishing them.

You may have heard of Ayers, for all the wrong reasons, so let’s get it out of the way: When Sarah Palin accused Barack Obama of “palling around with terrorists” throughout Campaign 2008, she was referring to Bill Ayers. There are countless news articles and Wikipedia entries devoted to Ayers, his radical history as a member of the Weather Underground in the 1970s, and how, decades later, he and Barack Obama met and served on some of the same boards as active community members in Hyde Park, Chicago.

You probably haven’t heard of Ayers’ collaborator, Ryan Alexander-Tanner, a 27-year-old Xeric Foundation Award-winning cartoonist from Portland, Oregon. Alexander-Tanner lived in Hyde Park with Ayers in 2008 at the height of the campaign hysteria, working on a project totally unrelated to all the stories airing about Ayers on the evening news, in an area of Ayers’ expertise that most media outlets ignored.

For over 30 years, Ayers has been a teacher and an advocate for public education. In 1993, he wrote a book about his experiences, To Teach: The Journey of a Teacher—part practical guide to teaching, part meditation on the reciprocity of successful teacher-student relationships.

When Columbia University’s Teachers College Press approached Ayers to update To Teach for a third edition, he said that he would only do the book again if he could do it as a comic. Before long, Alexander-Tanner was moving into Ayers’ house and the two were collaborating. The result is To Teach: The Journey, in Comics, just published by Teachers College Press.

At coffee with Ayers and Alexander-Tanner, I talked about adapting prose to panels, collaborative relationships, and what to do when faced with the seemingly inevitable question, “What do I do?”
Click on the images below for an excerpt from, To Teach.

What did you learn from making this book?
BA: I had to learn from Ryan that six pages of text from me could actually result in just two panels. I wrote all these elaborate descriptions of everything and thought every word counted and it turned out that it didn’t. And the way I learned that from him is really what we’re saying with the book.

Do you think that your collaboration making the book was a living example of the fluid, reciprocal student-teacher relationship?
BA: I think the relationship that we built—that’s the heart and soul of teaching. It’s relationships. The idea that teaching is somehow the delivery of the goods is such a misunderstanding of what actually goes on.

RA: This kind of sounds like my “party line,” but it’s true: The best thing about Bill is that he gave me total freedom and the worst thing about Bill is that he gave me total freedom. He really thought that I could just translate this book. And if the original had been a story—if I’d been working on his memoir, Fugitive Days, then I could have adapted it using whatever reference materials were available. But To Teach wasn’t a story or even a bunch of scenes, it was a bunch of ideas. And you can’t just illustrate someone’s ideas without taking a lot of liberties. I didn’t feel like it was my place to tell Bill or anyone else what Bill’s ideas were. So I needed this intense, back-and-forth, ongoing conversation to work out these big ideas. Bill wasn’t so precious about his stuff—there wasn’t a conflict of ownership—and that was inspiring. It freed me up to generate ideas, that constant back-and-forth dialogue.

BA: I would say that collaboration like this is a living example of writing into the contradictions. Not trying to run away from them all the time, but embracing them and letting them drive the project forward. If we hadn’t had the conversation, if we’d just illustrated the existing book as a set of ideas, it would have just been dead. It had to have that tension between ideas and narrative, between Ryan’s experiences and mine, between young and old, between teacher-student and student-teacher, and that’s what the final book came to embody.

RA: When we were working on the pitch our publisher sent me Marx for Beginners and I think they were very much thinking of this [project] like an illustrated textbook, with just these supplemental illustrations. One thing I didn’t like about Marx for Beginners was the notion that maybe it was for beginners because it was a comic. It was important to me that this new visual representation of To Teach was as challenging and had as much depth as the original text. I didn’t want to do the “easy” version, I just wanted to do an alternate version. It’s like turning a book into a movie—it’s a different medium.

You’ve acknowledged that the format of To Teach was influenced by Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics. How do you feel about being compared to McCloud?
RA: It’s funny, people are very careful about mentioning Understanding Comics to me, like I’m going to get mad or something, but that’s a great book to be compared to. We both read it and were inspired by it. Another book that we read that had as much influence on To Teach was Paul Karasik and David Mazzucchelli’s adaptation of Paul Auster’s City of Glass—maybe my favorite graphic novel ever. That’s another example of taking these large, difficult concepts and translating them into visual ideas. Going back to Understanding Comics: that’s a great book and I’m glad that we have comics on comics, and McCloud does that very well. To truly treat comics as a medium, why not use the same things that are effective in comics on comics to make comics on teaching?

Along with The Wire and Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution, is the comics version of To Teach part of a new wave of progressive education reform media?
BA: What comes to my mind, when we point to this book or point to The Wire and other things, is that the discussion on education is a profoundly conflicted discussion and we’re entering that conflict with an approach to teaching that we take to be humanistic and deeply rooted in notions of justice, fairness, decency, honesty, and authenticity. The Wire is by far, in my view, the best critique of No Child Left Behind that’s yet been written and yet the show never mentions No Child Left Behind. That’s the power of art, the power of story. If I were to outline where we are in that fight, I take a lot of hope from seeing, on the ground, people resisting the worst aspects of narrowing the curriculum, narrowing education, thinking of it like a product, like a box of bolts that you buy at the store. It’s not that. Education is a right, it’s a journey, it’s a process, and it’s something we have to stand for, as hard as it is.

What does it mean “to teach” in this kind of dysfunctional, narrowly standardized system?
BA: When you go into a college of education you’ve got aspirations of making a difference in people’s lives, of loving children, of working with kids, but none of that is affirmed in your college of education. Then you go working in schools, especially in places like New York City and Chicago that I’m most familiar with, and you find these huge aspirations are beaten out of you in a very systematic way—and still people persevere. What we’re trying to do with the book is present the possibility of entering into that contradiction and being successful in your own mind and in your own way with the children, in terms of offering alternatives to the soul-crushing reality of both teaching and schooling as it’s practiced.

It’s astonishing, looking at Newark, where they’ve cut out everything that doesn’t have to do with test prep for a very narrow standardized test that will punish you. And they keep cutting away so the next thing that’s cut is recess, and yet Newark has the highest childhood obesity rate in the state. So they’ve done away with recess so that these kids can learn the skills to take a test—the most narrow kinds of skills—and that’s the catastrophe waiting to happen. That’s the education you have to overcome, rather than an education that speeds your development and participation in this society.

RA: In a lot of ways I feel like a casualty of the education system. School for me was about getting away with doing as little as possible. When I think of high school, I don’t even think of school. I think of working at the comic book store. I had a job and a girlfriend, and that’s what I remember. Everything else was just going through the motions. I didn’t take the SATs or think that I was going to college. I think at that point in your life, you’re processing a lot of personal shit, so it’s a strange time to be learning Spanish III. I’d say the system failed me, but in the end I made a comic book about it.

Discussions about improving education usually end with overwhelming questions of, “But where do we start?”
BA: The problem is overwhelming, and part of the problem is that the reactionaries who are in the driver’s seat—the privateers and so on—have simple sound bites. You say, “How do we deal with our problems?” And they say, “Charter schools,” or “Fire the teachers.”

RA: “Let’s return this country to what makes it great!”

BA: Exactly. And those kind of things sound great, but they don’t really say much. What we need is a gigantic, messy community conversation about what is teaching and learning for the 21st century. We need to engage communities. One of the great crimes of the Bloomberg/Klein administration [in New York City] is that they’ve removed themselves from communities, as if communities have nothing to say about what their needs and aspirations are for themselves and for their children. It’s the connection between schools and communities that creates greatness in schools. We illustrate that here with the story of the Little Village Lawndale High School.

BA: In a world as out of balance as this world, everyone can find something to do. And the question isn’t can you do everything; the question is, can you do anything? One of the things that you can do is come into a world like the world of teaching prepared to make a difference in kids’ lives, prepared to change yourself, and prepared to link up with others who can possibly change the world, and that’s what this book invites you to do.

RA: When I come up with a “What do I do?” question, I ask someone like Bill. And sometimes he asks me what to do. That might be terrifying if we all start asking each other what to do, but it’s also hopeful. You don’t sit and have lunch with Bill or read a book and have the answers. There’s no simple answer to any huge, sweeping question, but the act of investigation is a step in the right direction.

Class is almost over. What are your Six-Word-Memoirs?
RA: Oh! Oh! It’s all so amazing!
BA: Hatched; still making my twisty way.


A letter in response to Nicholas Lemann’s article (April 26, 2010)

May 11, 2010

May 17, 2010

New Yorker

Nicholas Lemann’s otherwise excellent review of the current scholarship on terrorism becomes muddled when he attempts to answer the most basic and straightforward question: What is terrorism, anyway (Books, April 26th)? The expert consensus, according to Lemann, includes a few common traits: terrorists have political or ideological objectives, and they intend to spread fear and panic as they intimidate an audience larger than their immediate victims. Good enough, but he then veers off track: terrorists are non-state actors, he claims, which exempts Russia’s brutality in Chechnya, Iraq’s crushing of the Kurds, Sherman’s march to the sea, and countless other horrors and atrocities throughout history designed to cause terror for a political goal. Terrorists, he continues, target ordinary citizens, or, when they kill soldiers, their attacks don’t take place on the field of battle. That’s a convenient tautology: if any conventional government decides to pound a village to dust, it’s a field of battle; if a villager kills a soldier in the exact same spot before the invasion commences, that’s terrorism. Terrorism, according to Webster’s, is “a mode of governing, or of opposing a government, by intimidation.” This definition has the virtue of consistency and fairness; it focuses on the use of coercive violence, whether committed by a religious cult, a political sect, a group of zealots, or the state itself.

William Ayers

Chicago, Ill.

Related Links

Nicholas Lemann’s “Terrorism Studies”


To Teach: The Journey, in Comics

May 9, 2010

To Teach: The Journey, in Comics by William Ayers and Ryan Alexander-Tanner (Teachers College Press, $15.95 trade paper, 9780807750629/080775062X, May 1, 2010)

The eight chapter titles of To Teach, including “Seeing the Student,” “Creating an Environment for Learning” and “Liberating the Curriculum,” are by no means misleading–they promise a serious assessment of trends in contemporary education, which William Ayers delivers with passion and authority. But the buttoned-up chapter titles don’t really prepare us for the fact that the text (mostly dialogue balloons) and artful cartooning within each chapter are anything but dry and abstract. Using arresting visuals and snappy design for this graphic memoir, Ayers and Ryan Alexander-Tanner succeed in setting the principles from the bland chapter titles spinning with wit and animate concepts you might have worried would be dull. The result is education at its best: you learn and have fun, too.

Alexander-Tanner’s style is especially well-suited to illustrating the contrasts between his own and Ayers’ senses of humor. Alongside Ayers’s discussion of designing the right kind of creative environment, Tanner slips in a visual of his own workspace (in which he also lives): mothers will wring their hands and weep at the chaos and filth that he regards as heaven. And when Ayers proclaims a key point in bold type (“Labelling students has become an epidemic in our schools… [and] suppresses possibility”), Tanner’s cartoon snarkily places him on an upside-down soapbox. Ayers, with self-deprecating humor, loves the joke on himself. Their collaboration here radiates sweet good feeling throughout.

The presentation of Ayers’s ideas in the medium of a graphic memoir is so engaging that many may miss how innovative his thinking is unless we recall our own educational experiences, when exciting classes and great teachers were the exception and boring classes, uninspired instruction and clocks whose hands never seemed to move were the norm. The approaches that Ayers advocates spring not from theory but from the real-world experience of many teachers who strive to create classrooms for active learning. “All teachers must become students of their students,” he proclaims in his call for observing each child as an individual in the classroom; one size does not fit all when it comes to learning.

“We all have lots of things we’re good at and other things we’re learning to do better,” he tells his students in one frame that emphasizes the pluses rather than the minuses. “As long as I live, I am under construction,” he assures us when he invites the rest of us to join in the same kind of continuing adventure.–John McFarland

Shelf Talker: An innovative educator’s graphic memoir that is as sweet, smart and sassy as it is inspiring.


Wyo, Wyo, Wyoming

April 28, 2010
Categories: Education, News
william ayers photo.jpg
William Ayers is Wyoming-bound.

We’ve kept you abreast of developments regarding the University of Wyoming’s attempt to ban controversial professor William Ayers from speaking on campus — an effort that led to a lawsuit filed by Denver attorney David Lane.

Yesterday, United States District Court Judge William Downes held a hearing in Casper at which the university claimed its actions were motivated by security concerns, not speech issues. But Downes didn’t buy that.

Moments ago, he delivered a ruling videoconferenced to Denver during which he ordered that Ayers be allowed to speak at the university tomorrow.

Downes cited a four-part test in his decision, ruling that Ayers’s free speech had been violated, that the university’s decision to bar him would cause irreparable harm, that his speech would be in the public interest, and that he can speak in the campus’s multipurpose gym. Although he said it’s unclear if the gym is a designated free speech area or a limited public forum, he determined that the point is moot because the school has no written policy establishing its status.

Regarding the security concerns, Downes said, “These fears were based on, at best, veiled or indirect threats and apprehension” — calling it a “heckler’s veto.” He stressed that “fear is not enough to override the First Amendment.”

After reading an e-mail sent to the university by an anonymous individual, who felt school officials were “f-ing morons” for letting Ayers speak, Downes asked, “Where is the threat in that?” The same went for other terms, including “douchebag,” “assholes” and “prick,” as in this sample message: “For those of you who allowed this prick to speak, I think you should eat a mouth full of buck shot… All the worst to you. Mike.”

About the author of this note, Downes said, “Mike is heavily exercised, and he leaves us no doubt about his opinion of Mr. Ayers. But to read that as a direct threat is patently ridiculous.”

Among the precedents cited by Downes was 1965’s Willams v. Wallace, in which Judge Frank Johnson ordered that the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Martin Luther King Jr. be allowed to march from Selma to Montgomery — a landmark ruling in the civil rights movement.

Downes added, “The Bill of Rights is a document for all seasons… Mr. Ayers is a citizen who wants to speak. He needn’t have any more justification than that.” He ordered the university to work with the plaintiffs, led by student Meg Lanker, to organize Ayers’ speech, which is slated to take place at the multi-purpose gym on campus tomorrow at a time to be determined.

Lane’s take? “Judge Downes acted in a very courageous fashion,” he says. “This should send a message to universities across the country that they can’t use security as an excuse to stifle free speech.”

Tags:

David Lane, Michael Roberts, University of Wyoming, William Ayers


Fallout From Calling Off Bill Ayers Talk

April 15, 2010

The University of Wyoming, which called off a talk by William Ayers, the one-time Weather Underground leader who is now a leading education researcher, is facing new criticism over the move. While Ayers has been canceled before, Wyoming officials were frank about their concerns over political fallout from a visit (as opposed to claiming security or scheduling problems). As a result, a Colorado lawyer, David Lane (also the lawyer for Ward Churchill), announced that he will sue the university for free speech violations unless it invites Ayers, the Associated Press reported. The suite would be filed on behalf of a student who wanted to see him talk on campus.
Inside Higher Education
April 13, 2010