by Robin L. Flanigan
Sometimes it pays to go straight to the source.
After teaching an adolescent education course eight times at Nazareth College, Associate Professor of Adolescence Education Brian Bailey '01G, Ph.D., last fall pitched his syllabus to have students not only learn about teenagers, but withâand fromâthem.
The result: 15 Nazareth students and 17 students from Spencerport, Irondequoit, Fairport, and Rochester high schools enrolled in Adolescence Development and Social Justice, which looked at gender identity, racial segregation, stereotyping, and other topics teens deal with on a regular basis.
âWe know learning is much deeper when kids are engaged in the community, when itâs thoughtful,â says Bailey. âThis is the most meaningful course Iâve ever taught.â
Itâs also as democratic a class as Bailey could make it. Except for a few non-negotiable rules, all decisions about content are made together. For example, the class is split into five groups that look at the various social constructs that define present-day adolescence. When the group in charge of academic content for the week was the one focused on educationâin particular the relationship between district lines and school choiceâit shared an article about what innovative classrooms look like. Bailey piggybacked on the theme with a research study on how educators are creating a generation of superficial learners.
âBut we didnât want to stop with learning for ourselves,â explains Bailey, who had volunteer help with the class from a Brighton High School teacher and a retired Rochester City School District teacher. âWe said, âHow can we spread an idea like this to the larger community?ââ
The answer to that took months of planning and resulted in contributions to the Rochester Teen Summit, in which high school and college students used music, research, journalism, poetry, film, performance, and other art forms in 10- to 15-minute public presentations about teens and social justice. The presentations were modeled after TED Talks, video-recorded discussions about innovative ideas popularized by the nonprofit organization TED.
âWe get to be creative and share our thoughts about things that people donât usually want to hear,â says English literature/adolescence education major Zach Smith â15.
At times, tackling tough subjects like racial stereotypes in class, even among each other, was uncomfortable. (Diversity among the high school studentsâeight of them white, nine of them blackâwas intentional.)
âWe want to increase understanding,â says Bailey. âWe made it clear that no one sitting in that classroom created these conditions, but we have the power to change them.â
More than 200 people learned how to do just that at the summit, which drew presenters from as far away as Pittsburgh. The 11 presentations included five from Baileyâs class. More personal than preachy, sometimes funny and often poignant, they challenged the audience to rethink the way school district lines are drawn, question assumptions about people based on skin color or street address, realize that the words used in passing to describe people can have a much deeper impact than intended, and more. In âWe Go to a Segregated School,â for example, students pointed out that suburban kids view city kids as inferior and always skipping school, while city kids see their suburban counterparts as arrogant and living off their parents. âWatch Your Words,â meanwhile, pointed out that successful men are often considered ambitious while successful women are often described as bossy.
âIt was nerve-wracking at first, but I think we accomplished more than we expected,â says Maggie Enos, a Fairport High School senior. âHearing the audience reaction at the end, it was pretty clear they understood the message.â
Enos earned some personal accomplishments as well: âMore responsibility, a little more maturity, time management, and quick thinking skills. I got so much more out of it than I thought I would.â
Required to do a senior capstone project at World of Inquiry School No. 58, Branwyn Wilkinson created a podcast about education as a social justice issue inspired by her class at Nazareth. âWhatâs really great about the class is that itâs an open environment for discussion,â she says. âIâm not as hesitant to share my ideas out loud there as I have been in other situations.â
Bailey hopes to reproduce the courseâs results on a larger scale. Heâs talking to organizers of TEDx FlourCity about a potential day-long youth event that would feature TED Talks by a diverse mix of young people. And he wants to have his students assist with a film heâs making with two local filmmakers about Rochesterâs Urban-Suburban Interdistrict Transfer Program, to highlight the problem of segregation and concentrated poverty in Monroe County schools.
âThis experience changes who you are, and thatâs the most profound form of learning,â says Bailey, adding that the summit will go down as one of the best days of his life. âThatâs the beauty of this class.â
The students evolved together over the course of the semester, proving that they can learn from each other no matter their age.
High-schoolers âhave ideas that I have never once thought about,â says Sarah Getsy â15, a double major in biology and inclusive education. âAs the semester continued we grew not just [separately] as high school students and college students, but instead as just a class full of peers.â
Robin L. Flanigan is a freelance writer in Rochester, New York.
College, high school, and elementary school students warn the Teen Summit audience to "Watch Your Words."
25 North dance company performs "Say My Name"