Kamala Harris Just Made Leadership Real for Girls and Women in Schools Everywhere

Aug 13, 2020 12:00:00 AM

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Although the teaching profession is female dominated, many positions above school level are held by men. We see this in administration, at the district level, and our superintendents across the nation. The message for educators and our female students seems to be that we can come to the table, but we cannot sit at the head of the table. 

As an educator, it is important for me to speak life into my students and encourage them to pursue any career path that they want to, but we have to understand that we are operating in a system that is oppressive to people of color and one that pays women less than men in 2020. 

In a year where we have witnessed the disparities of COVID-19 in communities of people of color as well as a time where we have seen racial injustice, the nomination of Kamala Harris as the first woman of color to be nominated for national office by a major political party is historic and monumental. 

This moment of herstory, regardless of political affiliation, deserves a pause and acknowledgment, as [pullquote position="right"]this has shown our young girls across this nation that they can aspire to anything.[/pullquote] 

Upon hearing the announcement, I found myself emotional, as it made me reflect on my time as an assistant principal. At the time, I was the only person of color in my school. Daily I had parents tell me how grateful they were to have a person there who their children could identify with and reinforced the notion that representation truly does matter, especially when looking at student performance. For our girls of color, who are disproportionately affected by disparate discipline systems, this representation matters even more.

As a proponent for dismantling disparate discipline systems, I am keenly aware of the truancy law that Senator Harris supported during her tenure as a state attorney general in California. While the intent of the law was to eliminate the propensity for students to enter the criminal justice system as adults, in some parts of the state it did lead to parents being prosecuted. She has expressed remorse for the cavalier approach that was taken that criminalized parents and led to their incarceration. 

Discipline is multifaceted and should be approached from a whole child stance—one that ensures that the outcome addresses the behavior and restores students to ensure that they are healthy, safe, engaged, challenged and supported as a whole child.  

I used to teach a lesson to my eighth-graders in which we would examine the views of our lawmakers and how, overtime and with deeper understanding, their views changed. Notably, we would study Lincoln’s early views on emancipation, and how, through education and time spent with Frederick Douglass, his thinking evolved and his views changed. The underlying point of the lesson was that [pullquote]our leaders can change and we can change as well. [/pullquote]Harris has expressed regret for that law and has stated that she would not support it at the national level today.

Like many leaders before her, Harris’ views have evolved. Ultimately, I hope that this monumental achievement leads to closing the pay gap for our female students who will enter the workforce in the future, creating more representation in our education system in which we can see ourselves represented at each level, and allowing our students to know that there are no boundaries that can hold them back from anything they aspire to. In this moment of herstory, I hope this is not just the ceiling that we end, but the floor to which OUR story can begin.  

Kelisa Wing

Kelisa Wing is the author of "Weeds & Seeds: How To Stay Positive in the Midst of Life’s Storms" and "Promises and Possibilities: Dismantling the School to Prison Pipeline" (both available on Amazon). She also is a 2017 State Teacher of the year, speaker, teacher and activist for discipline reform. Kelisa holds a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Maryland University College, a master of arts in secondary education and an educational specialist degree with a concentration in curriculum, instruction and educational leadership from the University of Phoenix. She is currently enrolled at Walden University in the doctor of education program. All views expressed are her own and do not reflect the views of any others.

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