What should an educator do if she sees racial injustice occurs in school? What should you do when you hear the word “nigger” used in the classroom? Everyday Antiracism tackles these complex, often controversial issues. Everyday Antiracism, edited by Mica Pollock, is a compilation of essays written by the most renowned educators in the United States. It identifies pressing issues of racism in school and offers suggestions for educators. The “educators”—in this case are different from those to whom the book refers—are professors, teachers, principals, parents, and most importantly, students, the product of the educational system. Everyday Antiracism is extremely insightful in describing race in the classroom and provides excellent suggestions for everyone.
Everyday Antiracism is ambivalent about the problems in education, educational policy, school reform, and racism in the classroom, and provides thorough analysis of each issue. Each essay is its own entity, and, collectively, the compilation attempts to answer this question: how do teachers promote antiracism in schools? Antiracism, the notion to “counteract racial injustice and racism in society” (Introduction, xvii), is the thesis of each essay. The topics include racial invisibility, achievement gap, positive and negative stereotypes, and much more. The book is a sea of information. In talking about specific issues, however, Everyday Antiracism presents a clear answer for teachers. For example, in one of its essays, “Moving Beyond Quick Cultural Explanation”, the author experiences difficulty in countering stereotypes in education. She states that educators can be “taken aback… [by] the notion that they had contradicted” (258) and that educators can combat racism by analyzing stereotypes in individuals. The book provides specific answers as well as present thinking questions and suggestions for the readers to consider to resolve the issue discussed in each essay.
Everyday Antiracism is not a guidebook or manual for educators, rather a reference book of current case studies and strategies. It offers no clear, concise answer for the big question, but offers every day actions educators take to help he cause. The book tackles the most ambiguous questions through reflection, analysis, and contemplation. Educators (i.e. parents, teachers, principals, professors, academics) who are interested in a comprehensive research about racism in education would definitely find insights in Everyday Antiracism. ~ Student: Zhao C.