
Eating Ice Cream




I went to visit a sister friend in the hospital who just gave birth to twins. This art was on the elevator doors.

The fourth and fifth graders took a trip to the Bronx Museum. It was a wonderful joyous event. They visited many different museums throughout New York City but never visited a museum to meet up with a friend of their teacher.

Mr. Cook and I met a couple of years ago in Brooklyn at Prospect Park. I traveled there to see Art in the Park. When I arrived, I ran into his friend on a bicycle who told me I was going the wrong way. He slowed down and bicycled-walked with me ( I know that’s not a word but it should be!). He slowly rode while I walked keeping up the conversation. He didn’t even stumble as I would have on a skinny wheel bicycle.
“It sounds like I need to introduce you to my friend Chris. Y’all would get along.”
When we arrived the event had already started.
Afterwards, he introduced us and Chris and I have been working together ever since. He visited the school several times creating a wonderful relationship with the children. When I told the children about the next trip, they were overjoyed to hear that they actually knew the artist.

We arrived an hour early and took a walk to the Andrew Freeman home. Mr. Freeman owned the baseball team, the Giants, during the early 20th century. His dilapidated house-home sits there with very little going on with it besides remodel promises from the city.

By the time we circled the Block, it was time to view Mr. Cook’s work.

After the museum preliminaries, Mr. Cook started off with fun questions to get them thinking.
Next Mr. Cook and I took turns teaching about other artist who were in the same exhibition.


After spending some time on Kim Dacres’ work, the students created self portraits using pencil and feathers.







We also viewed work by Syd Abady and saw moving images from another artist. These works the students spoke about.
When it was time to view Mr. Cooks work, I taught first. Once again beginning with open ended inquiry.

After they explored his work, he spoke openly about the creation process, the ownership structure, and the political messages.

After viewing and discussing his work, students created their own newspaper or magazine cover addressing an in issue their community using neon colored index cards.








When it was time to leave the students were complaining that they still had more questions for Mr. Cook. The most popular question was- how did he get his art into a museum? But some other questions were: Why is Mr. Cook’s work being taken down? What will the museum show next? How you make art out of materials when there are no materials?
The time we are living in is somewhat blissful. My students had so many opportunities and great ones lately and I don’t know if they understand that it’s not only apropos but unprecedented and unbelievable.



Ms. Hurley, why do you like Charlie Brown?
That’s what my third graders ask me every year.
God bless their hearts. They come into the third grade innocent. Taking everything at face value.
I never answer that question, because I never thought I liked Charlie Brown. I just think it’s a good tool to use to teach third graders about race in America.
Before school starts, I use my Amazon points to purchase classroom items such as posters, stickers, door décor, awards, window stickers and a new grade book -all decorated with Peanuts characters.




There is a huge welcome poster that hangs above the cozy classroom library. It’s the first poster the children see when they walk in. It says welcome in huge red letters, and features every Charlie Brown character-except Franklin.

There is a poster at the front of the room that states “In a good conversation, one person talks while the other listens,” and there you see Charlie Brown in a good conversation…

There is a Snoopy poster. It has a yellow backdrop and it reminds the children how to be a perfect friend. Lucy has a poster. Linus has a poster. There are posters with the whole gang- except Franklin. As a matter of fact, I can count on one hand how many posters Franklin is in…

So I ask the children to create a poster for Franklin.

As the year goes by the children mature. The calendar at the front of the room finally has a picture of Franklin…

Around this time they are introduced to my Charlie Brown library.
I built the library by searching on eBay and Etsy for Charlie Brown memorabilia. I came across a set of old Charlie Brown books. They are so old the children have to ask special permission to read them and they MUST handle the books with care.

The ones who love to read try to keep them. Before they leave for the summer, I have to search their desks to make sure each one is returned.
During the year, I watch them silently read. It warms my heart to see them understand the humor from the Peanuts characters. Once they start to laugh and enjoy the content, I begin to ask them questions about the images and where they see themselves.
I then pull out the Charlie Brown dictionary- which always amazes them. (It amazed me too!) I add it to our classroom set of dictionaries. As time passes and they learn to define words and use them, I allow them to search the Charlie Brown dictionary.

As the year continues, the class grows older. The students are not new to third grade. They are fully third graders now.
Then one day, someone asks a question about identity – this always happens…someone is always curious about his or her self– and the class begins to argue and no one can come to a consensus. They turn to me and I turn to the dictionaries that they learned to trust and ask them if they ever looked up the words black or white. What do they think it means in a dictionary such as this one? I pull down the Charlie Brown dictionary.
The classroom is usually silent. Everyone thinking.
Then I flip the pages to white.
And read: White is the color of snow. Ducks have white feathers. The sheets on my bed are white. Marshmallows are white.

Next I turn the pages to black and read,
Franklin is Charlie Brown’s little black friend. He is talking to Charlie Brown on the telephone. Black is a color. Black is also another word for Negro, a person with dark skin. The words in this book are black.

The next thing that usually happens is a series of questions. Questions about what is in books and what images we accept without questions.
One year, the conversation happened after a trip to the New York Historical Society. The children were stunned to see a white educator – rather than a black one- teaching them about slavery in New York. They stood, uncertain, and couldn’t answer her questions. When we returned to the classroom, they expressed their discomfort with having a white educator telling them about their history.
Why did you feel uncomfortable? I asked.
Because, what was her ancestors doing when my ancestors were slaves? one little boy said quietly.
What do you think they were doing and why didn’t you ask her that?
A bossy girl at the front of the room replied, Because, that’s rude Ms. Hurley!
Why is that rude? Weren’t you uncomfortable? Was it okay for her to make you feel uncomfortable in your own skin? I’m not telling you to be rude. I am telling you to think. Think about your history and your stories and who is telling them and who will tell them if you don’t learn who you are.
Another year the conversation happened after singing the Black National Anthem. That was two years ago, when Trevor Noah and Roy Wood Jr. celebrated Franklin’s 50th year on the Daily Show. That was the same year the children learned the word stereotype.
Last year COVID happened right when the children started having the conversations. I thought, How can I introduce ‘race in America’ without the setting of the classroom? America quickly answered that question for me. Instead of discussing Franklin and Charlie Brown we cried about Floyd and Michael Brown, Jr.




As tradition has it, every first Monday of each month, my school would gather for assembly. We will lift our voices and sing the anthem.
This Monday we were muted. We listed to a muffled Dr. Roland Carter version.
We listened to our Principal tell us the virtue of the month, Resilience. Resilience.
And, just like that, Assembly was over.
When the question was asked, anyone have anything to say, the students unmuted their microphones and said hi. Cries of children saying hi as if they wouldn’t have an opportunity to be heard. Calling teacher names and saying they missed them.
This was the first assembly I cried. The first assembly I didn’t have to speak to any children nor lead them in a rendition of the Black National Anthem.
Another voice came. Assembly is over, please hang up.
No one moved. Everyone stayed. No one spoke. just stayed in the call. Until the call was dropped.
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