When teachers write and heal together

Using critical race theory and historically responsive literacy in digital 3rd space

Authors

  • Vanessa E. Vega University of South Florida Author
  • Tonya B. Perry Red Mountain Writing Project Author
  • Naomi Pryor Greenville High School Author
  • Sonjanika Henderson-Green Huffman Middle School Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/wap.24337

Keywords:

National Writing Project, critical race theory, historically responsive literacy, digital 3rd space, COVID-19

Abstract

The spring and summer of 2020 were rife with tension emanating from hate speech, racial violence, and a global health pandemic. Educators deliberated over the uncertainties of equitable access to learning, healthcare, and wellbeing. This article will describe how the Red Mountain Writing Project created a third space (Gutierrez, 2008) grounded by Critical Race Theory (CRT) in education (Solorzano & Delgado Bernal, 2001; Solorzano & Yosso, 2001) and Historically Responsive Literacy (Muhammad, 2020) to center the lives of teachers, their experiences, and their stories during a tumultuous time. The authors will share how they built and maintained a supportive virtual space for teachers to critically examine and reflect on their lived experiences, social awareness, sense of agency, and anti-racist teaching and writing practices. Now, after more than two years, teacher-writer communities are especially needed – third spaces where teachers from diverse backgrounds can hold space together and engage in writing to heal, find joy, empathize, and amplify their experiential knowledges.

Author Biographies

  • Vanessa E. Vega, University of South Florida

    Vanessa E. Vega is a visiting Assistant Professor of Instruction of Social Foundations of Education at the University of South Florida. She received her BA from Purdue University, an M.Ed. from Rutgers University, and an Ed.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Her primary research interests center Latina teachers and the use of social justice-oriented young adult literature to explore counter-narratives and lived experiences. She is committed to exploring experiential knowledge by stretching notions of ‘traditional’ academic writing by way of creative non-fiction. Her creative work often examines her own lived experiences of navigating murky spaces and swimming contra la corriente.

  • Tonya B. Perry, Red Mountain Writing Project

    Tonya B. Perry is the Director for the Red Mountain Writing Project, located in Birmingham, Alabama. She is the co-author of Teaching for Racial Equity: Creating Interrupters (Stenhouse), and the vice president-elect of the National Council of the Teachers of English. She also is the Vice Provost of Faculty Affairs at Miles College, a Historically Black College and University, in the Birmingham area.

  • Naomi Pryor, Greenville High School

    Naomi Pryor is a classroom teacher at Greenville High School in Greenville, Alabama. She received her BA from the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and an MA from the University of Alabama in Huntsville. During her sixteen years as a classroom teacher, she has held numerous positions within her school and district, and is currently serving as English Department Chair, and was the 2021 Secondary Teacher of the Year for the district. Teaching in a Title I school district for her entire career, Naomi discovered her passion for helping all students find their voices and individual paths for success. She is married to the local middle school band director, and they have two sons, ages 21 and 17.

  • Sonjanika Henderson-Green, Huffman Middle School

    Sonjanika Henderson-Green is a member of the Red Mountain Writing Project and Co-Director of Summer Institute under the direction of Dr. Tonya Perry. Sonjanika is entering her twenty-fourth year in education where she has served as a classroom teacher, a gifted specialist, and currently an instructional coach. Despite her professional capacity, she has always been passionate about instruction challenging teachers to delve into the purpose of their instruction and to reflect on its effectiveness.

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Published

2023-08-16

Issue

Section

Caring for a Network of Teacher-Writers in a Time of Covid: Part 2

How to Cite

Vega, V. E., Perry, T. B., Pryor, N., & Henderson-Green, S. (2023). When teachers write and heal together: Using critical race theory and historically responsive literacy in digital 3rd space. Writing and Pedagogy, 15(1-2), 181-196. https://doi.org/10.1558/wap.24337