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The Power in the Room
- Radical Education Through Youth Organizing and Employment
- Narrated by: Ron Butler
- Length: 7 hrs and 11 mins
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Summary
How community-centered, peer-to-peer, youth knowledge exchanges are evolving into a strong economic and political foundation on which to build radical public education.
Following in the rich traditions in African American cooperative economic and educational thought, teacher-organizer Jay Gillen describes the Baltimore Algebra Project (BAP) as a youth-run cooperative enterprise in which young people direct their peers' and their own learning for a wage. BAP and similar enterprises are creating an educational network of empowered, employed students.
Gillen argues that this is a proactive political, economic, and educational structure that builds relationships among and between students and their communities. It's a structure that meets communal needs - material and social, economic and political - both now and in the future. Through the story of the Baltimore Algebra Project, listeners will learn why youth employment is a priority, how to develop democratic norms and cultures, how to foster positive community roles for 20- to 30-year-olds, and how to implement educational accountability from below.
Critic reviews
“The Power in the Room is a visionary tour de force built on a rock-solid foundation of teaching and organizing young people in communities marked for failure. Here, Jay Gillen applies the ‘two-eyed approach’: one eye focused unblinkingly on the mud and muck of the world as it really is, while the other eye envisions an expansive world that could be or should be, but is not yet. He dives headfirst into that contradiction and illuminates essential steps toward an earned and effective insurgency. For those targeted and crushed by the system of racial capitalism, the message is clear: you have every right to be here, you need no one’s permission to interrogate the world, and the power to understand and transform all that you see before you is in your own capable hands. (William Ayers, Distinguished Professor of Education (retired) at the University of Illinois at Chicago and coauthor of “You Can’t Fire the Bad Ones!”: And 18 Other Myths about Teachers, Teachers Unions, and Public Education)
“This is the kind of nuanced and hopeful book that could only be written by someone with decades of experience working with youth the country refuses to invest in. Anyone who wants to learn how to support youth development outside the dominant paradigms needs to wrestle with Gillen’s argument that economic empowerment, political activism, and education aren’t three different things; for Black people, they are three aspects of one thing. At a moment when even people who understand the connection between education and activism may be losing a sense of struggle as an intensely democratic process, this is an extraordinarily important book, one Ella Baker would have loved.” (Charles Payne, author of I’ve Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing Tradition in the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement)
“The Power in the Room is an important, critical book written by an educator who, for over 20 years, led the Baltimore Algebra Project. It is a must-read for activists and theorists who are concerned about democratic life in contemporary America. Capturing the vision of Bob Moses, the quintessential representative of the organizing tradition of the modern Black Freedom Struggle, The Power in the Room also links the tradition of cooperative economics practiced by Ella Baker and many Southern Black communities to the demands and economic realities of contemporary Black communities. Situating Black youth as knowledge workers/math workers in our contemporary society, the book represents a powerful implementation of the historic African American philosophy of education - education for freedom, racial uplift, leadership, and citizenship.” (Theresa Perry, author of Young, Gifted, and Black: Promoting High Achievement Among African-American Students)