What happened to the Africana Studies Lecture and Workshop Series?

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Tag Philly

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Oct 13, 2025, 5:39:10 PM10/13/25
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This is the question we're asking ourselves:  a high quality, high impact, culturally responsive, well established professional development opportunity removed from District Programming?  Read on to see TAG member Nick Palazzollo's letter to School District leaders requesting the reinstatement of the series. If you have testimony to add or want to learn more about how to push back against the District's move, share here and we'll be in touch.  Below Nick's letter, find an opportunity to engage with the Africana Studies Lecture and Workshop Series online on October 18, unaffiliated with the School District. Finally, find information about an upcoming Chapter Organizing workshop for PFT members on October 25.

Reinstate the Africana Studies Lecture and Workshop Series, Support here

Dear Superintendent Dr. Watlington and SDP Board of Education Members: 


My name is Nick Palazzolo and I teach history at Central High School. I am writing to communicate my dismay in the cancellation of the Africana Studies Lecture and Workshop Series. I’ve attended every one of the series’ Saturday events since its founding, and I can testify to the positive, transformative impact this initiative has had on teachers and students. It is imperative that the District unapologetically defend teaching Black history in the face of authoritarian attack on schools: the first step is to reinstate the Africana Studies Lecture and Workshop Series.

Ismael Jimenez developed the Africana Studies Lecture and Workshop Series with a sincerely held belief that this “field of study can offer teachers the intellectual tools to develop an entirely new conceptual framework of education—one that is liberating and more humane for everyone.” My experience exemplifies the power of this idea. The Africana Studies lecture that most directly and dramatically reshaped my own thinking and teaching was Dr. Jarvis Givens’ talk on his book, Fugitive Pedagogy: Carter G. Woodson and the Art of Black Teaching. My unit on Jim Crow used to focus heavily on the story of oppression. I would teach a lesson on the Daughters of the Confederacy to demonstrate how the Lost Cause narrative became so widespread. One year, a student asked me if Black teachers actually taught these narratives to Black students too; I had no sufficient answer. The Africana Studies series provided me with an answer the following year. 

Dr. Givens spoke of the Black teachers who discreetly challenged Jim Crow era curriculum in order to engage their students in a study of the achievement, resilience, resistance, and citizenship of Black communities. After hearing him speak, I ordered a copy that afternoon and got to work writing new lessons for my students. I wrote a lesson to illustrate the agency and legacy of Black teachers. I went on to revise my entire Jim Crow unit, now called Pursuing Freedom from 1880 to 1950. 

By exposing me to the fugitive pedagogy of Black teachers in the Jim Crow era, the Africana Studies series equipped me with the tools to design a unit that was more honest about the fuller range of Black experience. I then facilitated a workshop at the Africana Studies series to introduce teachers to the very lesson I wrote inspired by the Givens keynote. 

While I am not certain of the District’s reasons for cancelling the series, I cannot help thinking about one of Dr. Timothy Snyder’s lessons from On Tyranny: do not obey in advance. In January, I gave testimony at the Board of Education meeting, warning about the White House’s coming assault on honest and truthful education. I asked the Board how you would defend the leading African-American History curriculum developed under Jimenez’ leadership. It seems I have your answer in the cancellation of the Africana Studies series in the middle of Trump’s assault on schools and the rise of what Ezra Klein has called a Blue Scare. We must not freely give authoritarians their power.

Will you show our students, our teachers, and our city that the District has what it takes to defend the teaching of Black history in the face of an authoritarian attack on schools? Will you reinstate the Africana Studies Lecture and Workshop Series? 


Peace,

Nick Palazzolo (Mr. P)
Social Studies Teacher 
IB Diploma Program Coordinator
National Board Certified Teacher 
Central High School 


Africana Studies Network and Lecture Series, October 18, 10 - 12, Online

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Friends of the Tanner House is proud to be a launch partner with the free, virtual, open-to-the-public Africana Studies Network & Lecture Series. This project is a  community-driven initiative. While many educators and students may participate, this program is not affiliated with nor officially sponsored by the School District of Philadelphia. 

In 2024, Tanner family descendant Dr. Rae Alexander-Minter awakened us to some incredible history associated with the Henry Ossawa Tanner House: The formidable historian Dr. Carter G. Woodson once described Bishop Tanner’s home [2908 W. Diamond St (https://www.google.com/maps/search/2908+W.+Diamond+St?entry=gmail&source=g).] as "the center of the African American intellectual community of Philadelphia and the Northeast United States." We as an organization seek to re-activate this legacy at this crucial time in our country's history, where opportunities for truthful learning about the Black historical struggle are being challenged, compromised, and dismantled within the public sphere. We will continue to fight against these attempted erasures, building on our recent sign-on to the Preservation Alliance for Greater Philadelphia-led advocacy letter. We believe, as the life-work of Bishop Benjamin Tucker Tanner showed us, we must continue to craft spaces to come together, study, reflect, write, make, and further organize toward freedom. We are grateful to be welcomed as a supporting partner within the Africana Studies Network & Lecture Series.

PFT Chapter Organizing Workshop, October 25, 1:30 - 4:00, RSVP here 

This training is run by rank-and-file PFT members, and will focus on how to build active, democratic PFT chapters that can effectively take on issues in our buildings, worksites, and beyond. Whether you are just starting out as an active PFT member, or an experienced BR or BC member, this workshop is for you! 

At this workshop we will discuss the impact of the new contract on our schools, and share best practices for building a democratic chapter in your building, including running effective chapter meetings, mapping your building, and organizing around building issues. 

Time: 1:30-4:00 PM
*Snacks/signing in/getting settled will be 1:30-2:00
*The training will be from 2:00-4:00 with a couple of short breaks
Address: TBD
Childcare: We will have childcare on site.  If your children have any specific activities they enjoy - please bring them!    
Snacks: We'll have lots of snacks and drinks (seltzer, soda) for all
Materials: We will have print outs of all materials; it might be helpful to have a laptop in case you want to use it to take notes.  
Check out this sample agenda for chapter and BC-admin meetings, and a sample chapter issue survey.


In solidarity,
TAG



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TAG Philadelphia works to strengthen the influence of educators within schools and over policy decisions.

While partnering with parent, student, and community groups, TAG is committed to fostering positive school transformation, environments where students and teachers can thrive, and community ownership and influence within education.




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