EBOOK

Slam School

Learning Through Conflict in the Hip-Hop and Spoken Word Classroom

Bronwen Low
5
(1)
Pages
208
Year
2011
Language
English

About

Mainstream rap's seductive blend of sexuality, violence, and bravado hardly seems the stuff of school curricula. And chances are good that the progressive and revolutionary "underground" hip-hop of artists such as The Roots or Mos Def is not on the playlists of most high-school students. That said, hip-hop culture remains a profound influence on contemporary urban youth culture and a growing number of teachers are developing strategies for integrating it into their classrooms. While most of these are hip-hop generation members who cannot imagine leaving the culture at the door, this book tells the story of a white teacher who stepped outside his comfort zone into the rich and messy realm of student popular investments and abilities. Slam School takes the reader into the heart of a poetry course in an urban high school to make the case for critical hip-hop pedagogies. Pairing rap music with its less controversial cousins, spoken word and slam poetry, this course honored and extended student interests. It also confronted the barriers of race, class, gender, and generation that can separate white teachers from classrooms of predominantly black and Latino students and students from each other. Bronwen Low builds a surprising argument: the very reasons teachers might resist the introduction of hip-hop into the planned curriculum are what make hip-hop so pedagogically vital. Class discussions on topics such as what one can and cannot say in the school auditorium or who can use the N-word raised pressing and difficult questions about language, culture and identity. As she reveals, an innovative, student-centered pedagogy based on spoken word curriculum that is willing to tolerate conflict, as well as ambivalence, has the potential to air tensions and lead to new insights and understandings for both teachers and students.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"Low's Slam School gives hope to teachers by offering an alternative to standard language forms while also empowering students' identities, cultures, and language (in its many forms) through a student-centered pedagogy based on hip-hop and spoken word."
International Journal of Multicultural Education
"Slam School is a welcome and necessary addition to the current literature on hip-hop based education. Drawing from an impressive range of intellectual traditions, the book also adds a sorely needed layer of theoretical complexity and practical insight to the current conversations around youth culture, pedagogy, and identity. Low's careful, wide-ranging, and reflexive analysis will be instructive
Author of Beats, Rhymes, and Classroom Life: Hip-hop Pedagogy and the Politics of Identity
"Low imparts an insightful account of how slam poetry provided students with an essential critical space to acknowledge shared identifications, negotiate new meanings, and witness displays of each other's academic and social strengths . . . [T]his book will inspire practitioners to afford learners with creative, culturally relevant, and meaningful ways to express their realities."
Journal of Anthropological Research

Artists