Everybody Loves Gladys’ Sweet Potato Pie: Cultural Knowledge for Collective Wisdom
Everybody loved Gladys’ sweet potato pie. On the highest of holy days, this was our communion—in each bite, we shared the memories of the fingers that assessed the size and readiness of the sweet potatoes, the hands before that selected the right ones, boiled them, and peeled the skin; and the muscular and tender arms that whipped the cooked potatoes—thick, sweet, buttery— also held the stories that never got outdoors. They stayed inside and folded into family secrets and spices.
The New Democracy Starts In The Classroom
Exploring the depths of cultural memory and the hues of identity, this post delves into personal memories that resurfaced after witnessing the latest rendition of 'The Color Purple'. This introspective piece reflects on Caroline's vivid holiday experiences, interweaving personal narratives and blood memories with insights from Toni Morrison's 'The Bluest Eye'. It contemplates how schools can act as conduits for cultural and racial understanding, breathing life into collective memory and reorienting relationships. This blog not only acknowledges the intricate tapestry of past and present but also envisions a future where diverse experiences and memories coalesce, advocating for a shift in educational paradigms towards inclusivity and environmental justice.
Remembering The Instants In The 405th Year
The New Year welcomes us to engage in instants of reflection.
We collectively pause, reconsider, recollect, and remember. These rituals may manifest in commitments to our bodies — to drink less or lose weight — or they may be slower, otherworldly journeys that challenge the beliefs about the body, its purpose, and its home. For the latter, each step is a pilgrimage of sorts: a journey intentionally crafted to remember and to put the self back together again.
What Does Revolution Sound Like?
As a child, I did not know that Bayard Rustin was a gay black man with brilliance, strategy, and a prophetic fire that fueled a vision that many could not see or imagine. As the chief architect of the March on Washington, few people could imagine what the multicultural, multiracial democracy would look like once realized. The dream, inspired by the imagination of a black woman—Prathia Hall, and rhetorically remixed by Martin Luther King—crystallized the dream for the masses. But the dream itself—an iteration of the multiracial, multiethnic, multicultural democracy may actually have been realized in the March on Washington, itself.
Anti-Blackness and the Haunts of White Supremacy
Anti-blackness is the progeny of white supremacy that haunts not just white people; it haunts everyone. It haunts our standards of beauty. It haunts our structure of language and expression. It casts spells of inadequacy, urgency, and scarcity, fomenting fracture in its wake. It waits patiently for its next host, exploiting heartbreak, grief, and misfortune. Its conjuring strikes the fear of deprivation and poverty, forcing bodies to conform to invisible standards of acceptance that always seem to shapeshift in proximity–quite devilish indeed.
The Revolution Will Be Designed, Played, and Also Queer AF: Here Is How We Built It In 11 Hours and What We Learned
Summer School was our 11-week practice of “holding it together” and sharing this burden with other educators. We humbly stand in the lineages of black and white teachers who taught enslaved black Americans how to read. We stand in the lineage of learners who spoke their languages as acts of resistance in Indian boarding schools. We stand in the lineage of Horace Tate, who created safe and brave spaces for black teachers to organize and align in progressive teaching practices in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s. And we stand in solidarity with all educators who continue to do the hard thing because it's often the right thing.
You are not alone. We are standing with you. And the ancestors are, too.
EquityxDesign: The Power of Sharing Stories
By Lauren Overton
I was first introduced to this West African proverb when I heard Dr. Howard Stevenson speak. I was in an executive leadership program, hoping to become a school principal. Dr. Stevenson opened with this adage and then segued into stories about his childhood, his family, and fatherhood.
Why Creativity is Essential to the Multiracial, Multicultural, and Multilingual Democracy
First, transformative empathy can challenge all permutations of body supremacy, with the designer seeing herself as a part of the design challenge, not separate from it. The notion of a fragmented thought system would create the ground for this type of thinking and the supremacist acts engendered.
We Are The Wind: A Love Letter to LGBTQ+ Educators and Leaders
This piece is written for all the LGBTQ+ educators and educator leaders, centering Black and Brown queer educators, doing the work - publicly, behind the scenes, and on ourselves.
Transformative Empathy to Challenge Supremacy: Creating a Multicultural Democracy in Schools and Organizations
Creating a multicultural democracy in schools and organizations is possible, but first, individuals must learn how to prepare their physical bodies to design for equity.
Design to Define: Revealing the Paradox
Characterizing equity issues as a paradox allows the nature and form of the phenomena change. Revealing paradoxes and contradictions allows us to begin to design equitable experiences that make the lines of the paradoxes visible, not to other people, but to holders themselves.
How Not to be Colonizers in the Metaverse
The route to avoiding colonizing the Metaverse must be centered on exploration, imagination, and new ways of being. How can we collectively ensure that we create a more inclusive and loving social order in the Metaverse?
How the Black Next Story Creates Schools for the Future
All public spaces, especially schools and places of learning, need to reemerge as public healing spaces. As we emerge from the pandemic, public lynchings, and gun violence, we need to remember that there is still a great need for schools to become places where a multiethnic, multiracial, multigenerational democracy is taught and modeled in practice.
How the Metaverse Helps Heal the Challenges of Our Time
Explore how technologies like the Metaverse can help us make visible and heal the contradictions and tensions of real human experiences.
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, It Will Be Played
228 Accelerator collaborated with founder of House of Legends, Andre Zarate, to create a series of banned book readings in the Metaverse. The goal is to provide a safe space for people to read, appreciate, exist, and love banned books, an act of resistance that honors LGBTQ+ identities as human.
Introducing the Latest Framework for equityXdesign
In this working reprise of equityXdesign 3.0, 228 Accelerator’s Founder, Caroline Hill, explores how designs for equity must become designs that heal, restore, and repair.
Learnings from the Design to Heal: Virtual Conference
228 Accelerator’s first Design to Heal: Virtual Conference imagined a world where web3.0 technologies are used to design healing, equitable learning systems. Read the top three learnings from the conference.
Opening Remarks from the Design to Heal: Virtual Conference
For 228 Accelerator’s first Design to Heal: Virtual Conference, we hope to emerge as a learning community that allows itself to learn together, work together, and design together.
Equity, Independence, and Web 3.0
Designs for equity must be designed equitably. Explore how the Metaverse and Web 3.0 technologies can play an instrumental role in prototyping new relationships that help us learn more about the requisites needed to scale and design equitable systems.
The New EquityXdesign Framework: Part One
EquityXdesign, our framework for re-designing systems that foster racism and inequality, was published approximately 2 weeks after the 2016 election at a time when the equity discourse in the education ecosystem was taking center stage.