You
are visiting
www.rawfoodinfo.com
http://urbanhabitat.org/node/1196
www.margotpepper.com
Seven-Year-Olds
Lead a Strike
by Margot Pepper
For
over a decade Ive been teaching my six-, seven-, and eight-year-old students
to strike against me in the classroom. I drew the inspiration from the
Yummy Pizza company labor unit1 and my own experience as a teacher and
writer. Instead of producing pizzas, students at Pepper Ink. produce
laminated bookmarks of the best poem theyve written in a year-long study
of the genre. This year, however, the experience took a different turn when
one of our potential Pepper Ink. workers was forcibly removed from the school.
Students begin the year in my second grade two-way Spanish immersion class by
comparing indigenous and first world points of view on the conquest of the Americas,
go on to study Africa, women, and finally civil rights and labor heroes. They
engage in internet and library research for their own books, questioning contradicting
sources, and examining information critically. They sit in heterogeneous cooperative
groups in which they rotate the job of teacher, who is to assist anyone needing
help, if the group cannot. They can also file complaints in a box about one
anothers abuse of power, including mine. From this process, my students
develop a healthy sense of justice and participatory-style democracy. Students
often refer to the Doug Minkler poster on our wall, which includes the slogan,
All of Us or None.
In the initial days of Pepper Ink., students typically fill out skills preference
surveys and job applications. Next, they interview for one of four positions
in our bookmark factory: artist, color-er, glue-er, and inspector. Student observers
coach one another on how to improve.
Im a good artist, only sometimes my mommy helps me and sometimes
I dont like to, one child responded.
Hands went up immediately. Just say youre a good artist.
Pepper Ink. workers are typically offered specific jobs and a contract to sign
with the terms: bookmarks will be distributed to sell for $2; workers keep one
dollar as pay, the other dollar is for class funds toward a party, prizes, or
game. After a couple of days, I announce that Pepper Ink. has made, say, $20
towards the purchase of a classroom set of Legos, but now I want more for myself;
workers will have to produce twice as much. This means no talking, no getting
out of their seats. My supervisors are to issue warnings to violators of company
rules and keep workers from striking. Grudgingly, students sign the new contract.
Usually, a couple wont hand it in. It then becomes wonderfully quiet on
the floor as Pepper Ink. workers work diligently, silently, sullen-faced. The
supervisors prance about, issuing yellow and red warnings, getting the workers
increasingly annoyed with their peers abuse of power.
As lunch time approaches, I offer my supervisors an irresistible snack. Popcorn
works well; my office microwave flooding the factory with the tantalizing aroma.
Responses have ranged from outright defiance and strike threats to secret lunch
meetings during which, something akin to a union is formed. With particularly
well-behaved students like this years, I have to give workers hints, like
reading Si Se Puede by Diana Cohn, about the Los Angeles Janitors strike,
or encouraging them to engage in a tug of war with me over a jump rope in which
they all have to join together to bring me down. One year, the students snuck
into the classroom and made picket signs out of construction paper, masking
tape, and poles made of linked markers or meter sticks. Ive found its
best to demote supervisors to a non-managerial position just as we go to lunch,
so they will feel a sense of solidarity with workers, instead of terrorizing
them into complacency, as nearly happened this year.
Once workers realize Im powerless before their united action, they immediately
overthrow all class rules. They scream until I surrender. After the class quiets
down, I quickly explain that some rules exist to benefit the boss, the others,
for the good of all. They ratify each rule anew, and have consistently thrown
out the new contract as benefiting only their employer. This year, my second
graders decided to rewrite the contract to exclude supervisors altogether, as
well as specific job assignments. During the three miserable hours toiling under
the contract which drove them to strike, they produced five quality bookmarks.
Now, organizing their own labor, they produced twenty in the first half hour.
Deportation Hits the Classroom
This year the classroom project took a different turn since the family of one
of our top workers, Gerardo Espinoza, was ordered deported by ICE,
Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Under the law, as a United States citizen,
Gerardo could have stayed behind, but for all intents and purposes, he too was
deported. My last day as his teacher was on Valentines Day.
In the week that followed his forced removal, I saw visible signs of trauma
in my students similar to the kinds of fears I had heard expressed after the
September 11 tragedy. They began having nightmares and even my Anglo students
expressed fear that ICE would come for them next for having been friends with
Gerardo and other Latinos.
Drawing on all the lessons Id taught them based on my decade of work with
California Poets in the Schools, the students wrote moving poems in Spanish
about and for Gerardo. Then, with the help of John Oliver Simons Poetry
Inside Out program, they translated them to English for Pepper Ink.s bookmarks.
The art work they produced for these colored, laminated bookmarks surpassed
anything ever produced at Pepper Ink. I, in turn, wrote a letter trying to convince
a judge to allow Gerardo to stay. My letter was translated into Spanish and
was published in newspapers and circulated on the internet.
Before long, the story of Gerardos unjust disappearance, along with his
older brothers Felipe and José, hit other media, including the San Francisco
Chronicle. This fostered an outcry of community support. Aided largely by Berkeley
Organizing Congregations for Action and with the help of Le Conte Parent Teachers
Association President Cary Sanders and the Berekely Federation of Teachers,
we organized a large immigrant rights teach-in. Parents, teachers, labor activists,
and city officials packed the Rosa Parks multi-purpose room. My students performed
the poems they had read for Gerardo and recited quotes by Cesar Chávez
and Rosa Parks.
We sold so many of their beautiful Pepper Ink. bookmarks that we raised 300
dollars for the Espinoza family. We raised yet more when two of my students
joined me for a talk about Gerardo in honor of Cesar Chavez before a panel which
included the Berkeley Mayor and labor leaders. I called the Espinozas with the
good news. They seemed to take some solace in the fact that their tears have
been the seeds germinating a reinvigorated immigrant rights movement in Berkeley.
Our teach-in and pressure from the community culminated in Berkeleys strengthening
its City of Refuge resolution, the teachers union approving a resolution
to educate and protect immigrant school parents, and our raising over $1000
for Gerardo. Then Flavio Lacayo and Univisión came to our classroom to
film a special on immigrants, which aired in July. Our collective statements
on the television drove home to many the injustice of United States immigration
policy.
On the last day of school, reminiscing about the year, Flynn Michael-Legg spoke
up, almost in verse, to share his thoughts with the parents we had invited to
join us in a farewell. I feel powerful. Small doesnt matter. Big
doesnt matter. Your voice matters. Birds can fly and so can I with my
voice!
Wounded
Little Bird
By Flynn Michael-Legg, age 8
Gerardo,
You are deeply wounded
like a little bird falling
into the depths of water.
You cant breathe.
You try to reach the surface to breathe
but cant.
Poor little bird,
when are you going to fly and make a new rainbow
for me again?
When the water has swallowed you,
there will be no songs in my heart.
Poor little bird,
Please dont forget me.
Little Angel
By Alejandro González, age 7
I met him as a silver sun shining with the stars.
I knew him furiously defending his family with love.
I knew him marching and fighting with his words.
I knew him like an upside down u with two dots inside
I knew him escaping from the guns of la Migra.
I knew him walking in a field without flowers.
I knew him playing like an angel,
flying without love nor peace.
I knew him crying at the border
because he wanted to be with his friends.
I knew him saying, I am a wall of shade
the corn of a sick eagle.
I knew him rising from the dark peel
which falls from the rising moon.
I knew him riding a horse holding
the flag of Cesar Chávez
I knew him united with the Latino race
fighting for our freedom.
Margot
Pepper is a Mexican-born writer published frequently in journals such as Utne
Reader,
Monthly Review, Z-net, Counterpunch, and the San Francisco Bay Guardian. You
can find links at:
www.margotpepper.com.
The poems above were created in Margot Pepper and Regina Maradiegues 2nd
grade
Spanish Immersion Class at Rosa Parks School. Poet Teachers: John Oliver Simon
and Margot Pepper.
1. Yummy Pizza Company written by Bill Morgan, Sam Frankel, Fred Glass, Phyllis Chiu, Tom Edminster, John McDowell, June McMahon,and Linda Tubach, a committee of the California Federation of Teachers.
By permission of author.
Back
to Articles/Wisdom of Children
Top of the Page
Home |
New to Raw?
|
Hotline |
Action Forum |
|
Multi/Media |
Events |
Press/Media
|