Cheating Black Children and Their Teachers
Black South Carolina Man Shot Dead By White Policeman
Dr. Ben Joins the Elders
Lady's Man Helps Young Black Men
Pipefitters at Black Star
College Fair
If Black Teachers Should Get 20 Years In Prison for Helping Students Cheat on Tests in Atlanta, How Much Time Should Bureaucrats at the U.S. Department of Education and various State and District Boards of Education Get for Cheating Black Children Out of a Decent Education for 150 Years? "Don
't Hate the Playa--Hate the Game!" - Brittney Cooper 
 
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America is criminalizing Black teachers: Atlanta's cheating scandal and the racist underbelly of education reform Our educational system stacks the deck against Black children -- now we're throwing their teachers in jail
(Opinion of The Black Star Project) - Irony is Black women guards are forced to take away a Black woman teacher for "cheating" Black children.

 

By Brittney Cooper

April 8, 2015

 

Last week, an Atlanta jury convicted 11 teachers and school administrators of racketeering in a system-wide cheating scandal. Yes, you read that correctly. Teachers and administrators inflating student scores on standardized tests is now considered "organized crime" in this country, and is punishable by more 20 years in prison, in these cases.

 

I am an educator. I am a Black woman who may someday mother a Black child. I have taught other Black mothers' children. Much of my educational success in elementary school is directly attributable to high performance on standardized tests that caused my white teachers to notice me and intervene on my behalf to get me "tracked" into higher-achieving classrooms. I believe all children deserve access to a good, high-quality,public education.

 

Therefore, I don't have to condone cheating in any form (and I don't) to assert that what has happened in Atlanta to these teachers is a travesty. The pictures that emerged last week of handcuffed Black schoolteachers being led out of Southern courtrooms in one of the country's largest urban Black school systems were absolutely heartbreaking.

 

Scapegoating Black teachers for failing in a system that is designed for Black children, in particular, not to succeed is the real corruption here. Since the early 1990s, we have watched the deprofessionalization of teaching, achieved through the proliferation of "teacher fellow" programs and the massive conservative-led effort to defund public education in major urban areas throughout the country. There is no longer a consensus that a good public education - a hallmark of American democracy - should be considered a public good.

 

Black children have for generations been the primary victims of this continuing social mendacity about the national value of education. More than 51 percent of children who attend public schools live in poverty. In Georgia, the percentage of Black children living in poverty hovers right around 39 percent. For Latino children, the number is consistently over 40 percent. Nationally, the number for Black children is 39 percent, according to most recent data, and 33 percent for Latino youth.

 

Eighty percent of children in Atlanta Public Schools are Black. Eleven percent are white and 3 percent are Latino. However, only 50 percent of children in Atlanta's Gifted and Talented programs are Black, whereas 40 percent are white. More disturbingly, 98 percent of all students expelled from Atlanta public schools during the 2009-2010 academic school year were Black.

 

These numbers taken together paint an abysmal picture of students who are disproportionately poor, over-disciplined, and systematically "tracked" out of high-performing classrooms. And yet we expect teachers to work magic in conditions that are set up for failure.

 

But now we are expected to believe that prosecuting these teachers as racketeers is an act of justice. Nothing is just about making Black women sacrificial lambs of an educational system hellbent on throwing Black children away. The images of their handcuffed Black bodies being led in shame from the courtroom gives Black parents angry about the miseducation of their children a convenient target for their angst and outrage over a failing system. 

 

Meanwhile, the real racket - privatization and defunding of public schools, diversion of taxpayer resources away from education, and increasing political clout and payouts for school reformers proselytizing the false gospel of high stakes testing - gets obscured. And white children still get educated well, either in private schools or in suburban schools funded through a solid property tax base.

 

Click Here to Read Full Story

In Honor of Walter Scott





 

 

Dr. Yosef Alfredo Antonio Ben-Jochannan (1918-2015) Joins the Elders

 

By Patrick Delices

April 8, 2015

 

Dr. Yosef Alfredo Antonio ben-Jochannan (Dr. Ben) was the preeminent "Multi-Genius of Our Time." Therefore, he cannot be defined nor scrutinized by western academic standards given the fact that he forever altered how classical African civilizations, in particular the Nile Valley, can be viewed and examined in colleges and throughout the global African community.

 

Furthermore, Dr. Ben's contributions to academia and the global African community stand alone as he represents not the floor of our potential, but the ceiling in which we can rise to. We, the global African community, adulate Dr. Ben for his groundbreaking scholarship and unprecedented service. Moreover, we praise enthusiastically his great work and sacrifice along with his love for African people and the Nile Valley.

 

As such, when it comes to the study and understanding of the Nile Valley, no one had a greater impact on the minds and hearts of African people at a global and grand scale than Dr. Ben. As an exceptional thinker and prolific writer, Dr. Ben's scholarship regarding the Nile Valley along with his service within the global African community is not only exemplary, but unmatched - exceeding all others in terms of scholarly influence, community based impact, and global outreach.

 

In regards to the African origin of western civilization and religion, Dr. Ben's contribution to the production of knowledge is monumental as evident in his most celebrated and best-selling magna opera: The African Origins of the Major Western Religions (1970), Africa: Mother of Western Civilization (1971), The Black Man of the Nile and His Family (1972), and We, The Black Jews: Witness to the White Jewish Race Myth (1983). Lesser-known, but no less important texts include collaborations with his frequent associate Professor George E. Simmonds, The Black Man's North and East Africa (1971) and Understanding the African Philosophical Concept Behind the 'Diagram of the Law of Opposites (1975) with Evelyn Walker, Dorothy Lee Cobb and Calvin Birdsong.  As a spirited public intellectual and iconoclast, Dr. Ben published nearly fifty books and manuscripts.

 

As an engaged scholar and involved activist, Dr. Ben, like his mentors Marcus Garvey and Malcolm X, lectured gratuitously to the masses of African  people on the street corners of the United States and globally. Dr. Ben also secured teaching positions at Malcolm-King Harlem College, Marymount College, Pace University, Borough of Manhattan Community College, State University of New York at New Paltz, Temple University, Howard University, Cornell University and Al-Azhar University in Cairo.

 

The influence and presence of Dr. Ben are still felt with the likes of Dr. Leonard Jeffries, Dr. James Turner, Dr. Charles Finch, Dr. Wade Nobles, Dr. Maulana Karenga, Dr. Molefi Asante, award winning journalist Herb Boyd, Tony Browder, Ashra Kwesi, Runoko Rashidi, and Professor James Small.  Dr. Ben also had a special influence on our female scholars, public intellectuals, and activists such as Dr. Rosalind Jeffries, Dr. Patricia Newton, Dr. Vera Nobles, Dr. Iva Carruthers, Dr. Marimba Ani, Dr. Adelaide Sanford, Dr. Joy DeGruy, Dr. Jewel Pookrum, Rkhty Amen, LaTrella Thornton, and Dr. Frances Cress Welsing.  Furthermore, Dr. Ben has inspired a new generation of scholars, public intellectuals, and activists such as Bro. Reggie Mabry, Dr. Greg Carr, Dr. Mario Beatty, Nayaba Arinde, Manbo Asogwe D?w?ti D?sir, and Professor Patrick Delices among countless others.  

 

Dr. Ben is therefore recognized as the last of the great Black history scholars, public intellectuals, and activists which include the late Dr. John Henrik Clarke, Dr. Edward Scobie, Dr. Ivan Van Sertima, Dr. Charshee McIntyre, Dr. Jacob Carruthers, Dr. Richard King, Dr. Asa Hilliard, Dr. Amos Wilson, Steve Cokely, and Dr. Khalid Muhammad.

Dr. Ben's service to the community is seen by his collaboration and partnership with Minister Louis Farrakhan, Reverend Al Sharpton, and Attorney Alton Maddox. Dr. Ben also worked closely with local community leaders and elders including Sybil Williams Clarke and Drs. Mary and Arthur Lewis in addition to the masses of African people at home and abroad.

 

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A conversation for 
young Black men 
about being a man
Discussion and Book Autographing
Saturday, April 11, 2015
3:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Culture Connection 
400 W. 71st Street
Chicago, Illinois

For more information or to purchase a copy of the book, please Click Here
The Black Star Project is partnering with the Pipefitters to give interested candidates an introduction to the trade of Pipefitting.

Monday, April 20, 2015
6:30 pm
The Black Star Project
Suite 2B
3509 South King Drive
Chicago, Illinois
Please call 773.285.9600 
to RSVP for this session

Pipefitters assemble and repair pipe systems of various shapes, sizes, and pressures. Ensure proper placement and alignment according to blueprints and instructions. Require a high school diploma or its equivalent and 0-2 years of experience in the field or in a related area. Have knowledge of commonly-used concepts, practices, and procedures within a particular field. Rely on instructions and pre-established guidelines to perform the functions of the job. Work under immediate supervision. Typically reports to a supervisor.
Attend the 
2015 Black Star Project 
College Fair 
on 
Saturday, April 25, 2015
The Chicago Lake Shore Hotel
4900 South Lake Shore Drive
Chicago, Illinois
10:00 am to 1:00 pm

50 colleges and universities will exhibit including:
  1. Alabama A&M University - HBCU
  2. Benedictine University 
  3. Carthage College
  4. Central Michigan University
  5. City College of Chicago
  6. Columbia College
  7. Cornell College
  8. DePaul University
  9. Dominican University
  10. East West University
  11. Eastern Illinois University
  12. Fisk University HBCU
  13. Florida A&M University - HBCU
  14. Governors State University
  15. Harris-Stowe State University - HBCU
  16. Illinois Institute of Technology
  17. Indiana State University
  18. Indiana University Bloomington
  19. Indiana University Northwest
  20. Kentucky State University - HBCU
  21. Lane College - HBCU
  22. Lawrence University 
  23. Lincoln University - HBCU
  24. Luther College
  25. Mississippi Valley State University - HBCU
  26. Morgan State University - HBCU
  27. National Louis University
  28. New Mexico State University
  29. Northern Michigan University
  30. Northeastern Illinois University
  31. Northern Illinois University
  32. Northwestern University
  33. Prairie State College
  34. Prairie View A&M University
  35. Ripon College
  36. Robert Morris University
  37. Rust College - HBCU
  38. Southern Illinois University
  39. University of Chicago
  40. University of Illinois Chicago
  41. University of Illinois Springfield
  42. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  43. University of Southern Alabama
  44. University of Southern Indiana
  45. University of Wyoming
  46. U.S. Coast Guard
  47. U.S. Marines
  48. U.S. Naval Academy
  49. Valparaiso University
  50. Vincennes University
  51. Wilberforce University - HBCU
  52. Xavier (LA) - HBCU
The 2013 College Fair attracts more than 1,000 participants.
Students, parents and educators from  are encouraged to attend this college fair.  Please call 773.285.9600 for more information.  
Click Here to see and hear the last Black Star Project's College Fair. 
There is no reason for your child to be left behind in school or in life. You must take control of your child's education. Those who control the education of the children control the future of that race. 
The Black Star Project
is recruiting:
1) 10 male or female high school students interested in learning to build websites and in understanding code in our Youthtech program

2) 10 young men and young women in 6th to 12th grade who want to accelerate in math for our Math Bootcamp

3) 10 boys in 1st to 4th grade whose parents want them to become serious and effective readers for our Black Male Reading Academy

4) 10 young women and young men in 5th to 8th grade for our Saturday University focusing on reading, writing and math. 
Coaches Seated - Ivan Lee, Ava Myles and George Solorio
All classes are at The Black Star Project, 3509 South King Drive, Chicago, Illinois.  Please call 773.285.9600 to register for any of the above classes or for more information about these free programs. Parents must have a high level of support and engagement with our academic programs.  Enrollment is limited.