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  • My name is Brooke Brown,

  • and I work at Washington High School

  • in Tacoma, Washington,

  • and I teach ethnic studies.

  • Tell me a little bit about the course

  • and what you do.

  • We're really looking at things like identity,

  • looking at race,

  • a lot about my students learning

  • how to love themselves,

  • to appreciate their own past

  • and their culture and their ethnicity.

  • Discussions about race, equity, and inclusion

  • are really difficult.

  • I'm biracial and just struggled always to fit in

  • so I've been on my own journey

  • of learning how to love and accept myself.

  • And then I'm able to do

  • the same thing for my students.

  • I really try to create

  • a sense of community in my classroom.

  • We ask children from a very young age,

  • what do they want to be?

  • I've reframed that in my classroom

  • and develop who students want to be.

  • When you look in the mirror,

  • you're satisfied with who looks back at you,

  • not because you've done everything right,

  • but because you've learned

  • how to take responsibility when you don't.

  • This is an assignment

  • and it's a way for students

  • to start to think about their identity.

  • I give students the blank piece of paper

  • with some sunglasses on them.

  • If you could,

  • you can take a pencil or a pen,

  • and write down a quote

  • about how you aspire

  • to live your life,

  • something that inspires you.

  • I have a quote from Bono,

  • "We're one but we're not the same."

  • Perfect.

  • Okay, so then on the inside,

  • we're going to take some time

  • and think about what are parts of our identity

  • that impact how we see the world.

  • Here's mine.

  • I put some of the roles that I have.

  • I'm a wife. I'm a mom.

  • I have four kids. I'm part Jamaican.

  • Social justice is the reason

  • why I do everything.

  • And I'm a learner.

  • I love pizza and ice cream.

  • I like coffee.

  • And I love watching sports.

  • My faith is important to me.

  • I'm a daughter, a sister, an educator,

  • an advocate, and a bridge builder.

  • Wow.

  • What are a few things

  • that you would put in your lenses

  • that inspire the way you see the world?

  • Well, draw a little personal computer.

  • I'm not the world's best drawer.

  • I got the books.

  • That's the continent of Africa.

  • That's a vaccine, a tennis racket.

  • That's a father, of course, it's clear.

  • That looks great.

  • You know, when I went to high school,

  • we did not have ethnic studies

  • so it's fascinating to hear that that's

  • an important class for the kids.

  • Talking to students,

  • there was this enormous weight

  • that they felt.

  • Feeling the pressure of the pandemic,

  • the murder of George Floyd,

  • and this reckoning as a country with racism.

  • My goal is always to say,

  • "Look, you don't have to change the entire world.

  • But if you change the world

  • for those around you,

  • then you have changed the world

  • because you've changed the world for one person."

  • But it sounds like you like creating

  • new ideas and you're willing to try things out.

  • I just want to do whatever our students need.

  • Education is about futures,

  • education is about the legacies of our students,

  • and education is about humanity.

  • And I think when we put our students' humanity first,

  • the sky's the limit for how far our kids can go.

My name is Brooke Brown,

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