- a local presentation at UK on bullying
- a local presentation at EKU on the legal history of inequity in Kentucky schools
- a national publication (accepted with revisions) on M A Cassidy
- a book chapter (accepted)on Education Reform in Kentucky: Just What the Court Ordered
- an international paper and presentation (accepted)on the legal and political hurdles to late 20th century school reform in Kentucky
- an international presentation on bullying (in the works)
- a handbook for EKU's new 200 hour co-op - part of our expanding clinical pre-service teaching experience
- a redesign of my course EDF 203: Philosophical and Historical Foundations of Education
A web-based destination for aggregated news and commentary related to public school education in Kentucky and related topics.
Tuesday, April 03, 2012
Light Blogging Ahead
Well, not "from now on," but blogging is going to have to take a backseat to scholarship in the near future. I've just had several proposed efforts hit all at once. In the immediate future my attention is going to have to go to
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2 comments:
Let us never forget who M.A. Cassidy was or his insensitivity to black Lexintonians!
Kolan Morelock's "Taking the Town"
After seeing Birth of a Nation, Cassidy "said yesterday he believed the picture contained unusual educational qualities, and endorsed its presentation in Lexington."
page 155
Thanks for the reference. I didn't have that one.
But before you settle on this one remark as being definitive of him as a man, I hope you'll balance that with his long history - surprising perhaps - of working to bring black schools up to the same standards as white schools in Lexington and his strong support for other progressive initiatives.
But I will also attempt to show how, even that support, may fit into one type of "new south" accomodationist white supremacy.
Cassidy was an unapologetic ex-confederate sympathist, sure enough. My article will cite some of his racist comments and efforts to revise Confederate history as told in the schools. But it will also document a much more complex set of circumstances in Kentucky, and Lexington in particular, at the close of the 19th century.
It would appear that finding a racist in Kentucky at that time was a lot like finding a speeder at Indy.
My effort will be to present the facts of his superintendency in context with the larger movements going on in the "new south" at the time. It's a lot more nuanced than I originally thought. I hope readers will come to see that too.
I've about come to the conclusion that Cassidy represents, in one individual person, much of the confusion that attended Kentucky's shift from a Union state before the Civil War, to the neutral state that bred both presidents during the war, to a Confederate state after the war, as ex-confederates dominated the political structures.
If there was some concern that I might whitewash his record and only show the sizable quantity of "good news" from his administration, since he is the namesake of my former school - don't worry. That's not how I work.
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