University Of Delaware Student Launching Black Boarding School

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Wilmington DE

04 March, 2022

3:22 AM

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Press release from the University of Delaware: February 28, 2022 Chanel Gaither continues a powerful legacy In fifth grade, Chanel Gaither's teacher called her the N-word. The moment still stings. Thirty years later, she can picture it in raw, vivid detail. How a woman, an educator tasked with shaping impressionable young minds, stood before a classroom in Queens, New York, and insisted that America's slaves had been compensated for their labor. Gaither, an eager student wearing pigtails that day, had raised her hand to protest: "I don't think that's accurate." She can still hear the word "liar" hurled back at her, followed by the most egregious of racial slurs. Gaither's instinct — naturally, at the tender age of 9 — was to speak with her parents. She reached for a phone mounted to the wall of the classroom. And that's when the teacher struck her. Continuing a legacy The idea for opening her own Black boarding school came into focus for Gaither in 2019, when she worked as the assistant dean of outreach and admissions for her undergraduate alma mater, the University of Virginia. In this role, she visited area high schools to speak with teenagers about their future. In one rural Virginia location, teaching staff told Gaither that their students "would be lucky to even graduate." "I left, I cried and I felt so defeated," Gaither says. "If this is the level of expectation for students when they walk into the building, if this is the culture, how do we anticipate kids will fare in — forget college — life?" Gaither made a promise to herself: Instead of standing by and letting life happen to her community, she would take matters into her own hands. In 2020, she enrolled in the doctoral program at UD, where Black boarding schools became the focus of her dissertation research. Plans for the Ascend Legacy Academy began to crystallize. Then, a police officer murdered George Floyd. Uprisings around the country reignited a national discussion about America's roiling history of white violence, and Gaither's project became personal — or, at least, more personal. As the founder of the Minorities Achieving Collegiate Success (MACS) nonprofit, based in Wilmington, Gaither has helped hundreds of teenage students across the nation and abroad navigate the college admissions process. At a protest during the ongoing racial reckoning of 2020, an officer sprayed one of her mentees in the face with Mace. "Words cannot express the weight I feel as a woman of color and an educator helping 15-, 16-, 17-year-olds process their emotions through this period," Gaither says. "I am also the aunt of three Black boys — nephews I have to constantly affirm, because I can't bear the thought of this world stealing their joy." She began working overtime (frequently waking up at 3:30 a.m.) on the launch of the Ascend Legacy Academy, a school named for the way future students, ninth through 12th-grade boys, are expected to lift up and improve their communities after graduating. Gaither secured an investor necessary for a $300,000 pre-operative phase, she commissioned architectural drawings for a $25 million building, and she launched a fundraising campaign. Meanwhile, she has secured a temporary site for Ascend's pilot program in Exton, Pennsylvania, where up to 25 potential pupils will get an inside look at the operation this summer. Gaither also assembled an executive board comprising a Google employee, a MACS alumna/Microsoft employee, a former aide to U.S. Sen. Cory Booker and two lawyers who, like Gaither, graduated with undergraduate degrees from University of Virginia — in other words, all prominent members of the Black community committed to mentoring Ascend students. Consulting with former teachers of her own, Gaither then compiled what is known as a progressive education curriculum, a pedagogical model that prioritizes globalization, experiential learning, entrepreneurship and critical thinking. While much of this curriculum is fairly standard (multivariate calculus, algebra, geometry, literature), much of it is unorthodox. As part of a wellness component, students will do yoga, grow their own food and engage in spiritual exploration. Ascend will partner with a yet-to-be-determined nondenominational church, and an on-site chaplain will help students grow in their faith — whatever that faith may be. In the grand tradition of the Black boarding schools that came before, Ascend will set high expectations for its pupils… mind, body and spirit. "Today in education, we seem to talk about Black and brown students only in terms of their deficits," Gaither says. "But if you set the bar low, they won't aim high. Let's talk about the strengths they do have. Let's speak life into them." A nonnegotiable requirement will be a study abroad experience in Dubai, where Gaither plans to open an affiliate school — she has extensive ties in the United Arab Emirates due to the college counseling workshops she has conducted in that part of the world through her MACS nonprofit. Crucially, Ascend high schoolers will also study critical race theory. "It amazes me there is even a debate in this country surrounding whether or not to teach Black students their history," Gaither says. "Affirming children is so important, and you can't affirm someone if they don't know who they are." Sparking dialogue At the age of 39, after nearly two decades in the field of education, Gaither still sometimes can't believe how far she's come. "I was a first-generation college student, so the idea of this little Black girl in pigtails from New York obtaining her doctorate? There are times I feel like I don't know if I can do this," she says. "It doesn't feel real." But, during any moments of doubt, mentors at UD have provided crucial validation and guidance. Gaither points especially to Kenneth Shores, assistant professor of education policy: "He has been an instrumental sounding board and thought partner. To have someone like him believing in this project… that keeps me pushing." But not everyone has been so supportive. "My peers have questioned whether this is reverse racism," Gaither says. "It is almost a form of cognitive dissonance. On the one hand, people say segregation is awful. But, on the other hand, white families flee their communities rather than send their kids to school with children of color. The country is more segregated now than before integration." The assertion is backed up by data. According to a nationwide analysis from researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, more than 80% of America's large metropolitan areas were more segregated in 2019 than 1990. And, between 1996 and 2016, the number of Black children enrolled in racially segregated schools, in which less than 40% of students are white, rose from 59 to 71%. "So why is it wrong to want to be intentional about the way this is happening to my community?" Gaither says. To move the needle of public opinion, she is producing a documentary chronicling the opening of Ascend as well as the mission of the nation's other Black boarding schools. Set for release this spring, in-person showings will be held at still-to-be-determined locations. If this all sounds like an uphill climb — affirming the identity of young Black men at a time when they're presumed guilty until proven innocent, persisting in the face of judgment from discomfited critics, launching a new school with an unconventional curriculum — then yes, that's a fair assessment. But Gaither isn't worried. While society has continually failed to learn from history, she believes, the upcoming generation is ready and eager to learn, to heal, to ascend. "It is time to create generational wealth and break generational curses," Gaither says. "This world is about to be astounded by what our children can do." This press release was produced by the University of Delaware. The views expressed here are the author's own.

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