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Moving forward while learning from past vital, 快播视频 Black History Month panellists

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Moving forward while learning from past vital, 快播视频 Black History Month panellists

鈥淔ebruary is Black History Month, but we make history every day鈥 鈥
Ruth Rodney
, associate director, Harriet Tubman Institute

Education, particularly math education, is not a neutral space for Black students. It continues to be a space where there are fewer expectations of success. That was one of the messages that emerged during the Black History Month panel on education, Black Educators and Black Education, at the Harriet Tubman Institute at 快播视频.

headshot of Assistant Professor Molade Osibodu
Molade Osibodu

As Assistant Professor of York鈥檚 Faculty of Education told the audience 鈥 inequities persist for Black learners.

鈥淭here is a lot of overt racism at play in education that we have to pay attention to, but there remains a lot of push back. The system of mathematics needs to change so that young people, especially young Black people, feel like they don't belong in this space,鈥 says Osibodu, who was one of five panellists.

The panellists were from a range of disciplines and included Assistant Professor Godfred Boateng in York鈥檚 School of Global Health; Professor , director of the Canadian Research Institute for Food Safety at the University of Guelph; Assistant Professor of York鈥檚 Department of Humanities, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies; and Associate Professor of the Lassonde School of Engineering (who will be in Ghana in March to do a STEM workshop with high school students) also participated.

Panel with 快播视频 profs Ola Mohammed, Godfred Boateng and U of Guelph Prof Lawrence Goodridge
From left, Ola Mohammed, Godfred Boateng and Lawrence Goodridge. Photo by Shayne Phillips

One of the main messages was that structural change is needed to address the architecture that skews the playing field. While ending math streaming for Grade 9 students, particularly Black students, into the applied or academic level at high school is great, 鈥淏lack students need to feel welcome, they need to feel they belong in these educational spaces,鈥 says Osibodu.

Panellists also discussed how colonizers took credit for indigenous knowledge across their colonies. When the French and English first landed on the West Coast of Africa, Indigenous Black people taught them how to treat tropical diseases. In places such as South America, the colonists learned of an indigenous malaria cure 鈥 quinine 鈥 using the bark of the Cinchona tree, says Boateng. The colonizers later used that knowledge to create synthetic anti-malarials such as Chloroquine, which was then sold back to people in these colonies.

鈥淪ome of the things that were learned were not ascribed to the indigenous [populace]. It became sort of the property or the proprietary of those who came to the land. It was stolen, plagiarized.鈥

Assistant Professor Godfred Boateng, University of Guelph Professor Lawrence Goodridge, and 快播视频 Assistant Professor Molade Osibodu
From left, Godfred Boateng, Lawrence Goodridge and Molade Osibodu. Photo by Shayne Phillips

A more recent example was the discovery of the Ebola virus, which should have been attributed to a Congolese doctor Jean-Jacques Muyembe, but was instead to Dr. Peter Piot of Belgium at the time, says Goodridge.

Biases also play a huge role in which diseases get funding to create vaccines. Boateng also takes issue with the huge influx of resources to create a vaccine for COVID-19. While he doesn鈥檛 begrudge a vaccine being developed for SARS-CoV-2, he does question the scale of worldwide resources dedicated to it when malaria has killed millions, more than 600,000 in 2022 alone, mostly in Africa, with 78 per cent of them children under the age of five, according to the latest World Health Organization (WHO) figures. The first malaria vaccine wasn鈥檛 recommended for public use by the WHO until 2021.

Panel moderator, York Assistant Professor Bianca Beauchemin, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies. Photo by Shayne Phillips

Many universities now have Black studies programs, including York, but Mohammed says the first Black studies department began at San Francisco State University in 1968, although informally it started years before and the work is also happening in spaces beyond academia. One of the questions Mohammed had is: 鈥淗ow do we organize to create more opportunities, not just for Black education, but for our community to learn and have the language and development to challenge and create change.鈥

Despite everything, several panellists believe there is hope.

鈥淲hile the beginnings have not been that great. Today we can speak of black educators making an impact or having an impact in their field,鈥 says Boateng. 鈥淚 believe that if we are empowered, it becomes easier for us to tell you the story.鈥

Banner photo by Shayne Phillips

About 快播视频

快播视频 is a modern, multi-campus, urban university located in Toronto, Ontario. Backed by a diverse group of students, faculty, staff, alumni and partners, we bring a uniquely global perspective to help solve societal challenges, drive positive change, and prepare our students for success. York's fully bilingual Glendon Campus is home to Southern Ontario's Centre of Excellence for French Language and Bilingual Postsecondary Education. York鈥檚 campuses in Costa Rica and India offer students exceptional transnational learning opportunities and innovative programs. Together, we can make things right for our communities, our planet, and our future.

Media Contact: Sandra McLean, 快播视频 Media Relations, 416-272-6317,鈥sandramc@yorku.ca