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Equity & Diversity Opinion

Stop Demonizing Black Boys. Let Them Play, Too

The play of Black boys is judged different鈥攎ore dangerous, more violent鈥攖han that of peers
By Altheria Caldera 鈥 November 04, 2022 4 min read
Conceptual illustration of a black boy looking through a dream door at a glowing stairway.
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As I sat in an airport rental car center waiting for my husband to reach the agency鈥檚 counter, I noticed two toddlers pull on the stanchions used to keep customers in queue. The boys鈥 guardian got up from her seat, where she was holding a baby, to reprimand the boys several times. Still, the toddler boys tried to swing their little bodies on the retracting belt barriers. Their play went on for at least 20 minutes. Eventually, they pulled the whole mechanism down, their bodies falling to the floor. Their guardian sprang quickly to her feet and, using her one empty hand, forcefully grabbed one boy at a time and shoved them in the chairs next to her.

None of the customers in line seemed to be irritated. They didn鈥檛 appear to label the boys鈥 play as misbehavior. No agency attendant came over to scold the children or to admonish their guardian for failure to discipline her children. The boys鈥 actions seem to be interpreted as what they likely were鈥攖he necessary energy release of two little children who had been confined in an airplane for at least a couple of hours.

Being a scholar who studies the impact that children鈥檚 race has on their schooling experiences, I couldn鈥檛 help but wonder how the response to these boys鈥 play might鈥檝e been different had the boys, and their guardian, been Black. Quite honestly, I fear what might have happened if the boys had been Black. History justifies my worry. I think of Emmett Till. I think of Trayvon Martin. I think of Tamir Rice. All of whom were killed for simply existing as boys in Black bodies and doing things boys do.

I also thought about the recently revealed comments by Nury Martinez, who, until she resigned from both positions, was a Los Angeles City Council member and the council president. In leaked audio, Martinez was caught referring to her colleague鈥檚 Black son playing on a parade float this way: 鈥淭hey鈥檙e raising him like a little white kid, which鈥擨 was like, 鈥楾his kid needs a beatdown. Let me take him around the corner, and then I鈥檒l bring him back.鈥欌

Martinez鈥檚 comments open the door for educators to reignite conversations about ways anti-Black racism is enacted in school policies and practices. Data show that Black boys in Martinez鈥檚 state are victimized in schools. In a 2021 on how disciplinary practices impact Black students in California鈥檚 public schools, the authors found that 鈥渢he patterns of higher levels of disproportionate impact for Black boys in K-3 is reprehensible.鈥

Unpacking Martinez鈥檚 comments reveals important insights about the ways Black boys are pathologized. First, although there鈥檚 no evidence apart from Martinez鈥檚 report about the boy鈥檚 behavior, we do know that Martinez perceived it as misbehavior. Next, she seems to insinuate that Black boys either don鈥檛 deserve to be raised like their white peers or that white parents (such as this boy鈥檚 father) don鈥檛 know the right way to raise a Black child. Finally, she explicitly states physical abuse is the only appropriate discipline response鈥攚ith the possible implication that this is the way Black boys in particular should be treated. Unfortunately, Martinez鈥檚 harmful beliefs are pervasive in schools and among school leaders.

Unpacking Martinez鈥檚 comments reveals important insights about the ways Black boys are pathologized.

Moreover, Martinez described the Black boy as 鈥渁 little monkey,鈥 furthering a about people of African descent.

, an expert on Black boys in the early grades, drew on considerable research when he gave a of how Black boys are typically perceived.
鈥淭hroughout the United States,鈥 he wrote, 鈥淏lack boys tend to be viewed as troublemakers from a very young age. Adults often see Black boys as older and less innocent than their White peers (a practice called adultification), and their play is perceived as more dangerous, violent, and not developmentally appropriate.鈥

Martinez鈥檚 comment about beating the Black son of her colleague is especially distressing given that in schools is still on the books in 19 states. Morgan Craven, the director of policy and advocacy for the Intercultural Development Research Association and a vocal critic of corporal punishment, expresses concern about how such punishment policies impact Black students, who are already more punished than their peers.

Education Opinion 4 Troubling Truths About Black Boys and the U.S. Educational System
Matthew Lynch, August 26, 2015
5 min read

In a 2020 article, I argued for an analysis of racism that is particular to Black students because of historical characterizations of Black culture as deficient and Black citizens as problematic. Analysis specific to anti-Black racism helps show the full range of racial disparities and the best ways to eradicate them. Here are two important things that schools should do:

  • Ensure that Black students are treated with an understanding of and respect for Black culture.
  • Recognize the strengths of Black culture and see Black culture as an asset.

Had Nury Martinez witnessed what I did at the airport rental car center, she would have likely thought exactly what I thought鈥攖hat the boys were just rambunctious children doing what children do. This would鈥檝e been my reaction regardless of the boys鈥 race. Martinez鈥檚 words suggest that she wouldn鈥檛 have allowed Black boys such grace. Her comments lead me to assume that Martinez would have judged the boys harshly had they been Black.

It is important to point out that school discipline data suggest that Martinez鈥檚 views are not an anomaly. Far too many educators contribute to the pathologizing of Black boys. Educators鈥 hypersurveillance and disproportionate suspensions have been documented for decades by scholars and practitioners trying to interrupt the .

As a Black woman, a racial-equity scholar, and an aunt to Black nephews, I鈥檝e seen the devastation that this incarceration pipeline has brought to our community. It鈥檚 way past time that educators treat play as play and become part of the solution.

A version of this article appeared in the November 23, 2022 edition of Education Week as Stop Demonizing Black Boys. Let Them Play, Too

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