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Teaching Profession Q&A

Teachers鈥 Union President: Say 鈥楴o to Censorship, and Yes to Teaching the Truth鈥

By Madeline Will 鈥 July 07, 2021 8 min read
National 91制片厂视频 Association President Becky Pringle delivers a keynote address.
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When Becky Pringle took the virtual stage at the National 91制片厂视频 Association鈥檚 annual representative assembly last week to deliver her first keynote speech as the largest teachers鈥 union鈥檚 president, she had a lot of ground to cover.

Her members had just endured a grueling year of pandemic teaching, during which teachers鈥 stress levels spiked and morale plummeted. The union is now supporting efforts to resume full-time, in-person instruction in the fall, after months in which teachers鈥 unions were blamed for keeping schoolhouse doors closed.

Also, a national fervor over how teachers talk about racism and the country鈥檚 painful past has recently taken root in statehouses across the country, and the NEA has begun taking steps to defend its members. And on top of that, in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests last summer, the nation鈥檚 schools are grappling with how to dismantle deep-seated inequities between white students and students of color.

鈥淚n this moment, as we reflect on the obvious challenges and the often hidden or yet to be discovered opportunities, we must continue to imagine the possibilities,鈥 Pringle told thousands of delegates in her speech. 鈥淲e, the NEA, will lead a movement that unites not just our members, but the entire nation to reclaim public education as a common good, and then transform it into something it was never designed to be鈥攁 racially and socially just and equitable system that prepares every student, every one, to succeed in a diverse and interdependent world.鈥

Pringle recently spoke to 91制片厂视频 Week about the union鈥檚 efforts to rethink school policing, the debate around critical race theory in the classroom, and resuming in-person instruction in the fall. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

The NEA board of directors proposed a new business item that will explore the role of law enforcement in education, which was approved by delegates. How do you feel about armed police officers in schools?

It was a comprehensive new business item that centered the safety of all of our students and centered race equity and economic equity. We know that our Black and brown communities are over-policed, which means our schools are over-policed. And we know that we have to create a safe environment that鈥檚 conducive to teaching and learning.

So we are planning, through that new business item, to work on ensuring that all educators鈥攆rom teachers to support staff to [school resource officers] to our bus drivers鈥攁re trained in restorative practices, which helps to not only center equity and safety, but also to value and respect all of the cultures that come into our classroom and work with the community and our students to ensure that when they come into our schools, they feel safe, they feel valued, they feel respected. We have a lot of work ahead to do all of those things so that our kids have a safe place where they can learn and grow and thrive.

An 91制片厂视频 Week survey found that nearly a quarter of district leaders, principals, and teachers don鈥檛 believe that systemic racism exists. What do you make of that?

Well, as with anything else, when we talk about it, then we learn more. That鈥檚 why we are focused on honesty and education because all of us need to do that continuous learning. We know that not everyone sees the systemic racism that exists within all of our social systems. So you will hear me talk about the structural racism across systems, not just the education system, because everything impacts our students鈥 ability to learn.

We鈥檙e talking about housing, and you know the history of redlining. We鈥檙e talking about the economic system, and you know the economic injustice in this country. We know that our Black and brown and Indigenous communities don鈥檛 have that kind of access to health care that others do, more privileged people do. All of those systems impact our students鈥 ability to learn. And so those are the kinds of things that we are trying to make sure that all of our educators鈥攁nd not just our educators, the entire community because we need everyone helping鈥攃ontinue to learn about, that structural racism that鈥檚 built into all of our social systems. They compound on each other in ways that impact and limit access and opportunity for our kids. And so we just have to continuously make sure that everyone鈥攅ducators, parents, community, all of them鈥攈ave that information so that we can do better for our kids.

Now, more than 25 states have proposed efforts to restrict how teachers talk about race in the classroom. What do you see as the NEA鈥檚 role in those debates?

We鈥檙e going to continue to talk about honesty and education. And here鈥檚 why. We know that, first of all, our students are amazing, and they鈥檙e smart. And we know how important it is to make sure they have the knowledge, skills, and ability to be those critical thinkers, to be able to come together and collectively solve so many of our societal problems. For that to happen, they have to have access to all of that information. They have to not only know the history of this country, but they also need to have the chance to develop their critical thinking skills in a way that they can come together to try to solve those problems.

See also

In this photo illustration, Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, left, and Becky Pringle, the president of the National 91制片厂视频 Association, right.
In this photo illustration, Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, left, and Becky Pringle, the president of the National 91制片厂视频 Association, right.
Courtesy photos

If we don鈥檛 allow them to have those difficult conversations about race and racism in this country, then they won鈥檛 be prepared to do that. And so we鈥檒l continue to do that. Of course, we will continue to work with our educators and make sure that they have the ability to lift up their voices and to fight for their right to be honest in the education that they teach. We鈥檒l continue to work to make sure they have those rights. We will continue to assess the legislation that鈥檚 proposed, as well as the laws that have passed, which are very different in different states, to ensure that it鈥檚 not limiting that right. For us, it is about saying no to censorship, and yes to teaching the truth. And that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e going to continue to do.

You鈥檝e said before that the union is considering legal action over the restrictions. Could you expand on what that would look like?

We鈥檙e considering all possibilities. We鈥檙e in the process of making sure that we clearly understand the depth and breadth of the laws. They look very, very different. It鈥檚 not only about the laws themselves, but also about the laws in those specific states that impact the curriculum in those states. It鈥檚 a state-by-state analysis, and we鈥檙e in the process of doing that. And we鈥檙e going to just leave every avenue open, because we will defend our educators鈥 right to teach the truth. We will do that.

In hindsight, do you feel like the union could have or should have come out stronger against this movement earlier?

We have been fighting against this since it started. We have supported our locals and state affiliates who are on the front lines of the attack in speaking up. And this is not new. We know that this is an attempt to not only stoke fear and division, but to draw attention away from the fact that the politicians pushing these laws have failed our schools. They have not, for decades, provided the kind of resources we need so that we can have those safe and equitable schools.

We鈥檙e not confused by that. We know what鈥檚 behind these laws, and we know why they鈥檙e doing it. And we鈥檝e been fighting that for certainly as long as I have been a leader within NEA. Every time they attempt to bring up some other way to divide us, and to stoke fear and to take [away] that light shining on them and what their failures have been, we will be there to call it out, to speak up, and to fight back.

As we look toward the next school year, given that COVID-19 is still circulating and some states have prohibited mask mandates, are you concerned about the ability to have safe in-person instruction?

I鈥檓 not. I have worked really hard to ensure that we are ready for the fall to welcome back all of our students. The [U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention], I believe, will be issuing new guidelines shortly, and we have continuously said that we are following the science. We are looking at the guidelines that the CDC is using and working together to ensure that their students and educators are safe.

See also

Blue illustration of global COVID-19 line graph and bar chart showing an increase.
iStock/Getty Images Plus

We don鈥檛 know what the new strains will bring. But we鈥檝e learned so much this year, and we鈥檙e continuing to learn. We were so appreciative of the president prioritizing educators to be vaccinated. The vast majority of our teachers and other staff are vaccinated, so they feel safer to go back to school.

And with the additional funding for [COVID-19] testing, we鈥檒l be able to stay open and isolate cases quickly. And we will avoid any shutdowns in the future.

Would you support vaccination mandates for teachers or students?

The majority of our teachers are vaccinated. [ found that 86 percent of members have had at least one shot, and only 9 percent don鈥檛 plan to get vaccinated.] And the ones who aren鈥檛, we鈥檝e really worked hard to educate them and provide them with the resources. What we learned early on was that [the vaccination process] was confusing, and they weren鈥檛 able to get access. And so we worked on that. We did see a gap in [the vaccination rates of] white teachers and Black teachers. We鈥檝e targeted that, and with our recent survey [results], we鈥檝e closed that gap, which is phenomenal. But it鈥檚 working directly with those communities to try to bring down that hesitancy and make sure they have access and opportunity.

I鈥檓 not concerned about the mandates for the teachers, honestly. With [the vaccination rate] being so high now, for the most part, we鈥檙e just talking about folks who can鈥檛 because of a medical condition.

With the students, our position at the NEA has always been that the more people, including students, who are in that education environment are vaccinated鈥攏ot just for COVID, but all of those vaccinations鈥攖he more healthy the entire community will be. And that continues to be our position. As with everything else, it is early to do that. [Only those 12 and older are currently able to be vaccinated.] We have to wait, follow the science. They鈥檙e hard at work doing that testing [for youth vaccination] and just observing it, too鈥攇iving it time to see if there are any adverse impacts. And that鈥檚 what we did in the past [with other vaccines], and then we talked about whether or not mandates were appropriate. At this point, we just don鈥檛 know yet.

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