The Little Light Of Mine (On EdCampBrooklyn and Movement Building)

redlight

Yesterday, I had the chance to go to EdCampBrooklyn, the first EdCamp in the borough of Robinson, Wallace, and Carter (among others). When the founder, Juli-Anne Benjamin, asked me to come through, I only asked when, not if. The trek from Harlem to Brooklyn was two trains, about an hour and a half on a Saturday morning. But the conversations and the energy were more than worth it. Educators across the country, especially those of us who attend these conferences on our “free” time understand that unconferencing isn’t an exercise in gaining more followers or creating a profile for ourselves, but to create synergy around pedagogy and practice. This specific EdCamp was important for me to attend because I knew that the educators who attended this conference were focused intently on working with the most marginalized students in our system, the ones that won’t show up on the brochures and city halls. Doing this on a Saturday gives us only Sunday to re-gather ourselves and implement the energy from this event back into our classroom.


You’re right: this work is difficult.


continue reading

The post The Little Light Of Mine (On EdCampBrooklyn and Movement Building) appeared first on The Jose Vilson.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 18, 2016 09:09
No comments have been added yet.