Just
got through in credible experience at Sheepshead Bay HS in Brooklyn, where I was
invited to talk about the history of hip hop to two classes of special needs
students one led by my wonderful former student Anne Brewka. The day began with
my passing through a scanner and a metal detector, which I always set off
because of my artificial hip, after which Anne met me and gave me a heads up on
the group I would be talking to. Many of the young people in the group in the
two classes were physically disabled, some less so, and twelve of the twenty
plus in the group had their own paras, some because they were in wheelchairs,
some because of behavioral issues.
What
happened was a living embodiment of the principle "never judge a book by its
cover" and even more so of the principle, "every child has magnificent gifts to
offer the world." In the course of a 90 plus minute presentation in which I
lectured, asked questions, played music, and rapped, the students in the class
turned what began as a lecture into an old school hip hop party with students
rapping, dancing, creating complex rhythms on their desks and on the floor and
asking great questions. Freed from some of the restraints and discipline more
"socialized" students display, these young people let loose with an explosion of
talent and of joyous creativity that blew everyone in the room, away even the
paras, who started the day somewhat dour and then clapped their hands with the
beat and cheered their students on. And the teachers just let the party going
on. It reached it's high point when I put on Afrika Bambatta's "Looking for a
Perfect Beat" and a 7 minute b-boy b-girl battle began.
I
have had great experiences speaking to high school groups where people dances,
rapped and beatboxed. But nothing like this. Nothing like brilliant questions
coming from a young man in a wheelchair who understood the essence of what hip
hop lyricism can mean to disfranchised young people who are routinely treated
with contempt. Or three young men in a special needs class creating beats on a
desk for another one of their peers who rapped brilliantly. Or two young men
trading b-boy moves that would have gotten them dollar tips on the subway
This
is education. This is what should happen in our schools. Every day. It is art
that unlocks the key to the mind and the soul. Not for some students. For all of
them
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