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Research Article

The 1964 freedom schools as neglected chapter in Geography education

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Pages 411-431 | Received 31 Oct 2021, Accepted 14 Apr 2022, Published online: 13 Jun 2022
 

ABSTRACT

Our paper revisits a neglected chapter in the history of geographic education–the civil rights organization SNCC and the Freedom Schools it helped establish in 1964. An alternative to Mississippi’s racially segregated public schools, Freedom Schools addressed basic educational needs of Black children while also creating a curriculum to empower them to become active citizens against White supremacy. Emerging out of a history of Black fugitive learning, Freedom Schools produced a critical regional pedagogy to help students identify the geographic conditions and power structures behind their oppression in the South and use regional comparisons to raise their political consciousness and expand their relational sense of place. Freedom Schools have important implications for higher educators, especially as contemporary conservative leaders seek to rid critical discussions of race from classrooms. They offer an evocative case study of the spatial imagination of the Black Freedom Struggle while pushing us to interrogate the inherent contradictions, if not antagonisms, between public higher education and emancipatory teaching and learning. Freedom Schools prompt a rethinking and expansion of what counts as geographic learning, whose lives matter in our curriculum, where and for whom we teach, and what social work should pedagogy accomplish.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1. A search for “Freedom Schools’’ within articles published in the Journal of Geography and Journal of Geography in Higher Education, two leading outlets for those specializing in educational practice and research, returns no results.

2. There is insufficient space here to carry out a full tracing of the development, operation, and impact of Freedom Schools, and readers are encouraged to consult the outstanding work of Hale (Citation2016) and historians such as Sturkey (Citation2010), K.Y. Taylor (Citation2012), and Etienne (Citation2013) for further background.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation; Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences [1660274].

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