• Advertise
  • Donate
  • Subscribe
    • Become a print subscriber
    • Sign up for e-Newsletter
    • e-Editions
Tuesday, March 28, 2023
No Result
View All Result
Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder
  • News & Features
    • National
    • Local
  • All Sections
    • Opinion
      • Mellaneous by Mel Reeves
      • Word on the Street
      • Reaching Out From Within
    • Health + Wellness
      • Minnesota Cancer Alliance Breast Cancer Gaps Project
    • Sports
      • Timberwolves/NBA
      • Lynx/WNBA
        • 20 in 20
      • Twins/MLB
      • MN Wild/NHL
      • Vikings/NFL
    • Business
      • Black Business Spotlight
      • Finances FYI
    • Arts + Culture
    • Photo Galleries
    • MSR Forefront Digital Roundtable Series
      • MSR Forefront Highlights
    • Go Green
    • Education
    • Bulletin
    • Jobs & Opportunities
      • Legals
  • Events
    • Submit an event!
  • Obits
  • Sister Spokesman
  • e-Editions
Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder
  • News & Features
    • National
    • Local
  • All Sections
    • Opinion
      • Mellaneous by Mel Reeves
      • Word on the Street
      • Reaching Out From Within
    • Health + Wellness
      • Minnesota Cancer Alliance Breast Cancer Gaps Project
    • Sports
      • Timberwolves/NBA
      • Lynx/WNBA
        • 20 in 20
      • Twins/MLB
      • MN Wild/NHL
      • Vikings/NFL
    • Business
      • Black Business Spotlight
      • Finances FYI
    • Arts + Culture
    • Photo Galleries
    • MSR Forefront Digital Roundtable Series
      • MSR Forefront Highlights
    • Go Green
    • Education
    • Bulletin
    • Jobs & Opportunities
      • Legals
  • Events
    • Submit an event!
  • Obits
  • Sister Spokesman
  • e-Editions
No Result
View All Result
Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder
No Result
View All Result

Message to Parents Introduction

by MSR News Online
April 6, 2016
64
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on LinkedIn

Parents are the First Teachers and Home the First School

Above, Message to Parents Contributors (l-r): Atum Azzahir, James C. Burroughs II, Dr. Wendy Johnson, Gevonee Ford, Eric Mahmoud and Carolyn Smallwood
Above, Message to Parents Contributors (l-r): Atum Azzahir, James C. Burroughs II, Dr. Wendy Johnson, Gevonee Ford, Eric Mahmoud and Carolyn Smallwood

MSR aims to improve the educational success of our youth through their parents

Welcome, MSR readers, to our latest effort to keep the Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder’s journalism focused on the most critical issues affecting our community. This new section, which will appear every other week, supplements the reporting we have done and will continue to do on the devastating educational achievement gap that is leaving so many of our youth ill-prepared for the challenges of the modern world.

Our reflections on what has been done and is being done by many individuals and organizations to address the achievement gap led us to conclude that our most helpful role in this effort would be to apply the mission that has carried the MSR through more than 80 years of community service — to listen, record and share what we learn with the community, specifically with the parents and other family members of our school-age youth.

As we have been reminded by our partners, parents are the first teachers and homes the first schools. With this focus in mind — the need for parents to have as much information and as many tools as possible to fulfill their roles as their children’s first teachers — we have assembled a group of partner-advisors with expertise and experience in just this kind of parental support. In the weeks ahead they will share what they have found most helpful to parents and other family members in ensuring our youths’ educational success.

One of our partner-advisors, Elder Atum Azzahir, is the founder and director of the Cultural Wellness Center. As such, she explains, “The expressions in our articles [to be written for this section] are from a repository of notes consciously written as well as spiritually absorbed over almost three decades. In my views and approaches, I am offering a look at the challenges we as a people face in attempting to commit to the education and development of African American children within the European-directed public school systems.

- ADVERTISEMENT -

“These institutions have maintained, through perpetuation of popular ignorance, a lack of knowledge of African Americans having a human history, a mode of thought, a sacred beginning, and a language,” says Azzahir. “I am now able to catalogue and compile a set of concepts in these writings which speak to a set of fundamental studies for and from African scholars who have been invisible or made irrelevant in the dialogues on the African conception of education toward the development of human potential.”

Another of our partner-advisors, Carolyn Smallwood, is the executive director of Way to Grow. “Faith, hope, hard work, and education have always been the cornerstones of communities like ours,” says Smallwood of her participation in this effort. “As a young person growing up, I watched my mother work six days a week with my little brother, who was labeled as ‘special education,’ to ensure he succeeded in school. She was told it couldn’t be done.

“My hope is that we can inspire and encourage you with tools to help you move forward with preparing your children for the future, and that as a community we can make sure that every child has an equal opportunity to succeed in school and life. I assure you, it can be done.”

Another of our partner-advisors, Gevonee Ford, says, “As a representative of Network for the Development of Children of African Descent (NdCAD), I am honored to be part of MSR’s effort to lift up our community’s long-standing commitment to and value of education, with special attention given to the role that parents play in our children’s educational process.

“I am pleased to contribute some of what NdCAD has and continues to learn about the important issue of literacy development and how it affects not only our children’s schooling but also how literacy is connected to forming healthy cultural identity — in children, parents, and all members of our village.

- ADVERTISEMENT -

“While it certainly takes a village to raise and educate our children, an important issue that drives our work is paying attention to how we heal, prepare and equip our community so that the village can raise our children. Forming healthy cultural identity and teaching truth about the history and heritage of our people is central to this community- and village-building work.

“Literacy is a critical key to this work,” says Ford. “As we share our contributions to this MSR education section, we will attempt to use a broad and comprehensive definition of literacy.

“We define literacy as consisting of seven individual skills that are interconnected and work together. These seven literacy skills are: Reading, Writing, Speaking, Listening, Viewing, Thinking and Applying.

“Our work has taught us that when we help our children make the connection between each of these literacy skills and the importance of gaining knowledge of self and community, they become self-motivated to learn and achieve in school, at home and in the community.

“Again, we look forward to sharing stories from our work and lessons we have learned about working with our children, parents and families in the pursuit of self-knowledge and educational success.”

- ADVERTISEMENT -

Also partnering with us to get this “Message” out to parents is Dr. Wendy Johnson, who plans to contribute by “educating parents on what it takes to effectively communicate, interact with, and build relationships with the teachers and administrative staff” of our public schools.  “I have worked in education for years and have a nonprofit organization that works with students and parents. I understand the academic dynamic and what it takes for parents and staff to productively exist so that students can successfully matriculate through the academic process.”

We look forward to additional contributions from Shatona Groves of the Black Parents Group, Eric Mahmoud, President and CEO of Harvest Network of Schools, and James C. Burroughs II.

Sharing the wisdom of our partner-advisors as well as information provided by our own writers, the MSR dedicates our “Message to Parents” to the upcoming generations who will inherit the earth from us. We want all of you to become as literate and well-educated and fully prepared as possible to take up the life challenges ahead. To that end we are reaching out to your parents with the best information and advice we can find to support your first teachers as they help you discover and achieve your highest potential.

 

Questions or comments about Message to Parents may be directed to Jerry Freeman, MSR senior editor, jfreeman@spokesman-recorder.com, 612-827-4021.

- ADVERTISEMENT -

 

ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Protesters react to county attorney’s decision in Jamar Clark case

Next Post

The parent is the first teacher

MSR News Online

Reach the MSR staff at msrnewsonline@spokesman-recorder.com.

You Might Also Like

Report: Apprenticeship programs need to improve for Black workers
Local

Report: Apprenticeship programs need to improve for Black workers

Boyz II Men and Chaka Khan join MN State Fair Grandstand lineup
Arts & Culture

Boyz II Men and Chaka Khan join MN State Fair Grandstand lineup

Women’s History Month Salute: Dorothy Bridges
Women's History Month

Women’s History Month Salute: Dorothy Bridges

Alexander O’Neal announces farewell tour – ‘Time To Say Goodbye’
Arts & Culture

Alexander O’Neal announces farewell tour – ‘Time To Say Goodbye’

Fab Five Photos: State Tournament action
Sports

Fab Five Photos: State Tournament action

Trump ramps up attack on Manhattan DA with violent imagery and call for ‘death’ and ‘destruction’
National

Trump ramps up attack on Manhattan DA with violent imagery and call for ‘death’ and ‘destruction’

Next Post
The parent is the first teacher

The parent is the first teacher

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
ADVERTISEMENT

The Latest News

Report: Apprenticeship programs need to improve for Black workers

Report: Apprenticeship programs need to improve for Black workers

Boyz II Men and Chaka Khan join MN State Fair Grandstand lineup

Boyz II Men and Chaka Khan join MN State Fair Grandstand lineup

Women’s History Month Salute: Dorothy Bridges

Women’s History Month Salute: Dorothy Bridges

Alexander O’Neal announces farewell tour – ‘Time To Say Goodbye’

Alexander O’Neal announces farewell tour – ‘Time To Say Goodbye’

Fab Five Photos: State Tournament action

Fab Five Photos: State Tournament action

Trump ramps up attack on Manhattan DA with violent imagery and call for ‘death’ and ‘destruction’

Trump ramps up attack on Manhattan DA with violent imagery and call for ‘death’ and ‘destruction’

Minneapolis
◉
30°
Cloudy
7:00 am7:35 pm CDT
WedThuFriSatSun
30/14°F
39/34°F
39/21°F
37/27°F
54/32°F
Weather forecast Minneapolis, Minnesota ▸
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Upcoming Events

Mar 30
6:00 pm-7:30 pm

TESTIFY Storytelling Slam – TESTIFY: Americana from Slavery to Today

Mar 31
March 31 @ 10:00 am-April 8 @ 9:00 pm

Twin Cities Auto Show

Mar 31
8:00 pm-10:00 pm Recurring

Lemi Ponifasio: Love to Death (Amor a la muerte)

Mar 31
8:30 pm-10:00 pm

March Star Party

View Calendar

Read our latest e-Edition!

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe

  • Home/Office Delivery
  • Weekly e-newsletter
  • e-Editions

Support

  • Donate
  • Subscribe
  • MSR Newsstand Locations

Connect

  • About
    • MSR Staff
  • Contact
  • Send a news tip
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms

© 2023 Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder

No Result
View All Result
  • News & Features
    • Local
    • National
  • All Sections
    • Arts & Culture
    • Health & Wellness
      • MN Cancer Alliance Breast Cancer Gaps Project
    • Business
      • Black Business Spotlight
      • Finances FYI
    • Opinion
    • Sports
  • Events
  • Obits
  • Sister Spokesman
  • Donate
  • Subscribe

© 2023 Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder

 

Loading Comments...