Experiential Learning: Teaching Race, Religion, and Ethnicity
By Karen Johnson. It
is Palm Sunday in the heart of Chicago’s Austin community, a west-side
inner-city neighborhood. Children
welcome the congregation into the gym, one dressed as Jesus riding on a donkey
(for all you Color of Christ fans,
Jesus, in this case, is black). Pastor
Robert Stevenson encourages the congregation to sing their praises to God,
dance their praises to God, play instruments in praise to God. Technical difficulties prevent a song from playing
well from the speaker system. The
atmosphere lacks the professionalism of most suburban churches, but the praise
is heartfelt. People pass babies. My own son makes it to the front of the
church when Pastor asks the man holding him to pray over the service. The prayer quiets the congregation, a moment
of comfort for many of the visitors in the audience who are my students from a
suburban liberal arts college. For many,
this is a cross-cultural experience. The
students are part of my class on the history of race and ethnicity in the
United States, and they are on an experiential learning field trip.
Why
a field trip – especially with all the work it requires? The answer lies in our calling as
teachers. “To accept one’s past – one’s
history – is not the same thing as drowning in it; it is learning how to use
it,” said James Baldwin. This semester,
we have studied the history of race and ethnicity not only to learn it, but to
learn how to use it. But how do we “use”
history without being presentists? Part
of the answer lies in the question of why we teach. Teaching should not just transfer knowledge,
but help students be transformed.
Experiences teach students in ways that reading and analysis cannot. As one student commented, “a woman who had
attended the church for over 20 years said, ‘Sunday’s the most segregated day
of the week.’ It struck me not only that
there was some truth to that statement, but that I have lived my entire life
experiencing segregated Sunday church services.” The present has a history– to understand why
Sunday is so segregated, and why Rock Church was such a powerful experience for
the students, they needed to know the history.
This
course was structured around the question “how does the history of race and
ethnicity change what we know about American history?” I joined the class halfway through (back from
maternity leave!) and started us off with the transition from white races to
“the white race.” We used primary sources from Matthew Frye Jacobson's Whiteness of a Different Color, watched Al Jolson put on black face
in The Jazz Singer as he distanced himself
from his Jewish heritage, and critiqued The Gentleman’s Agreement in which the main character, a Gentile, passes for a Jew, all the while
proclaiming Jewishness as a religion and not a race. Then we shifted our focus to the civil rights
movement and learned about the extent of white supremacy by reading oral
histories of civil rights workers in Mississippi and James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time. Baldwin’s work was very powerful for
students, many commenting that it helped them see in a personal way the
insidious way the “innocents” perpetuate destruction. Throughout, we have used Ed Blum’s and Paul
Harvey’s The Color of Christ, which students
reported they planned to keep on their shelves.
(One word to the wise, students do better when reading the book if they
have context going into the chapter, and analyzing the images on the book’s
website was very fruitful.) In our final
weeks of the course, we will look at the historiographical debate (primarily
using Christians and the Color Line) set off by Michael Emerson’s and
Christian Smith’s Divided By Faith in order to explore the connections between
evangelicalism and race.
Our
field trip set us up for the last part of our class, looking at how the history
of race shapes our understanding of evangelicalism. My intent in taking the class there was
twofold. First, I wanted students to see
how race has been inscribed in geography.
Rock Church is located in Chicago’s Austin community, where the per
capita income is $16,289, compared to, say, Lincoln Park (home of the Chicago
History Museum) where per capita income is $73,130 (for more data on Chicago, go here).
Austin transitioned from a nearly all-white neighborhood to an all-black
neighborhood block by block in just a few years in the late 1960s. We took the train and walked Austin’s streets
so students could get a feel for the neighborhood. This puts flesh on the overview of housing and
mortgages we’re exploring (for the classic work on that, see Kenneth Jackson’s Crabgrass Frontier But
in order to counter the stereotypes of race and class that so many have about
Austin, I had students talk with members of the church who lived in the community. One student commented, “It seems you really
need to be embedded in the community and engage in intentional relationships
for misperceptions to be corrected.” My
second intent was to give the students some hope. The history they have explored can make
things seem hopeless sometimes. They
have been exploring a history that is largely about the (unstable) creation and
maintenance of whiteness and “non-white’s” often creative responses to the oppression. Rock Church is an interracial church whose
members largely acknowledge the past and their racial experiences, but also
seek to move beyond the past to create what Chris Rice calls a “new we.”
This
field trip took all of us out of our comfort zone. As a historian, I have only occasionally done
ethnographic work, but I required that of my students. At a liberal arts college, crossing
disciplines and making connections should be a way of life. If you’re considering leading students on a
field trip like this, I’d recommend drawing from Studying Congregations
for guidance. I also spent a day
preparing the students for the field trip and a day debriefing the field
trip. This time allowed us to process
the experience, assess the extent of their learning, and find ways to enhance
the entire experience for future trips.
Students
saw racial hierarchies broken down. One
said, “The most revered man was the pastor, a young black man. This is powerful in undermining social
hierarchies of race, which have been in place in America for hundreds of
years.” Another commented that, “this
field trip made more concrete the subject of race and concept of racial
brokenness/reconciliation.” Another wrote
that she learned from a church member that “no one is ignorant about race;
people are just ignorant about how to talk about race in a healthy constructive
way.”
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