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The Regarding Race project uses documentary photography and writing
as catalysts for dialogue about race and identity, working with future
teachers who immerse themselves in diverse aspects of children's experiences
that impact interactions in the classroom. The project provides a
framework for teachers to structure explorations of race and identity
in interactive, creative, and productive ways as they develop the
personal knowledge, professional skills, and cultural competence needed
to teach diverse learners.
The project, based at the Center for Documentary Studies, works with
Teaching Fellows at the University of North Carolina–Chapel
Hill and at North Carolina Central University, a historically black
college in Durham. These Teaching Fellows receive financial support
for college as they gain their degrees and then commit to teaching
in North Carolina schools for at least four years.
Participants in Regarding Race explore their perceptions of race and
identity by making images depicting dual selves, one as they see themselves
and the second envisioning themselves as an "other," however
they choose to define this concept. The process is influenced by photographer
Wendy Ewald's Black
Self/White Self project, part of the Center for
Documentary Studies' Literacy
Through Photography program in the Durham Public Schools.
Teaching Fellows make their own dual portraits at the beginning and
end of their participation in the project, as a way of documenting
their evolution. They work in pairs over the course of a school year
with clusters of diverse middle-school students who engage in their
own exploration of race and identity through images and writing, group
discussion, and interpretation. The Fellows record their reflections
in journals and meet regularly as a group with project staff to examine
their experiences as learners and critique their practice as teachers.
The Fellows also organize an annual public forum, attended by parents,
teachers, and members of the wider community, to showcase the students'
and their own work. With the documentary process at its center, Regarding
Race helps future teachers increase their understanding about racial
perspectives that they (and their students) bring to their interactions
while providing tools for opening dialogue about race in increasingly
diverse classrooms.
Since its inception in 2001, Regarding Race has trained forty-five
Teaching Fellows who, in turn, have worked with more than three hundred
middle-school students. The project works with art teacher Robert
Hunter at Shepard Middle School in Durham and students in the sixth,
seventh, and eighth grades.
Regarding Race began as a pilot project funded by the Z. Smith Reynolds
Foundation's Race Will Not Divide Us initiative. Additional funding
has been provided by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation and the Warner
Foundation.
For more information on Regarding Race, telephone Alexandra Lightfoot,
project director, at 919-660-3694, send E-mail to alight@duke.edu,
or write to Center for Documentary Studies, Regarding Race, 1317 W.
Pettigrew Street, Durham, NC 27705.
banner image:
Photograph by Shenetta J. Loftin, Shepard Middle School. School Year
2002–2003.
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