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Education

The Committee on Education:

  1. Seeks to eliminate segregation and other discriminatory practices in public education; 

  2. Studies local educational conditions affecting minority groups; 

  3. Investigates the public school system and school zoning; 

  4. Familiarizes itself with textbook material that is racially derogatory; 

  5. Seeks to stimulate school attendance; 

  6. Keeps informed of school conditions and strive to correct abuses where found; 

  7. Investigates the effects of standardized and high-stakes testing practices; 

  8. Promotes teacher certification; 

  9. Promotes parental involvement in education; and 

  10. Aims to be a center of popular education on the race question and on the work of the Association.

Meetings: Second Wednesday of the month, 5:30pm - 6:30pm

Chair: Deborah Travis

Education Allies

 

Education Committee Goals

* 2022 Draft Goals and Strategies


Virginia NAACP

Virginia Conference 2021* Education Legislative Agenda:

National NAACP

 

Communication Toolkit

The Communication Toolkit provides resources for community members to add their voices to public conversations on specific education topics by speaking to school boards and writing in response to topics.

 

Current Topics

Re-Examining History

​“Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.”

― James Baldwin

Traditionally, history has been told through the perspective and to the advantage of the people whose position and privilege have given them the dominate voice.  The purpose of this page is to provide history resources that: 

a)   examine or challenge the traditionally presented view of history, and/or 

b)   include the voices of people whose lived experiences have been misrepresented or excluded.

.
Resource Type
Asian American and Pacific Islander Materials: A Resource Guide, Library of Congress, website.
Asian Americans Advancing Justice, Asian American Civil Rights website.
Asian Americans K-12 Education Curriculum with lesson plans, OCA – Asian Pacific American Advocates website.
Asian Americans, PBS LearningMedia, Collection of 37 videos with Lesson Plans.
Barbara Johns of Farmville, Virginia, The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow, PBS LearningMedia, Collection, video. 
Barracoon: The Story of the Last “Black Cargo” by Zora Neale Hurston.
Before Rosa Parks, There Was Claudette Colvin, article and audio, npr Radio.
Behind the Lynching of Emmett Louis Till by Louis Burnham, a 1959 publication available online.
Best Practices for African American Boys presented by Jawanza Kunjufu, video.
Better Lives, Bitter Lies, National Park Service, podcast.
Black Invisibility and Racism in Appalachia: An Informal Survey by Edward J. Cabbell, Appalachian Journal, Vol 8 pp. 48-54. Found in JSTOR; sign up to read free 100 articles a month.


Black Lives Matter at School: An Uprising for Educational Justice, by Jesse Hagopian and Denisha Jones. 
Black Roanoke:  Our Story by John Davis, online publication, Roanoke City, webpage.
Black Students on Strike! Farmville, Virginia, Separate Is Not Equal: Brown vs. Board of Education, Smithsonian National Museum of American History.
Black Wall Street 100’: Tulsa Author-historian Reviews Century of ‘Grappling’ with Lingering ‘Wound’ of 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre by Tim Stanley, Tulsa World.
Booker T. Washington National Monument website, “A Birthplace That Experienced Slavery, The Civil War and Emancipation,” “From Slave Cabin to Hall of Fame,” “Rise of the Colonial Plantation System,” “Alabama: Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site,” Hardy, VA. 
Booker T. Washington: An Appreciation of the Man and his Times by Barry Mackintosh, National Park Service, online publication. 
Booker T. Washington: An Appreciation of the Man and his Times by Barry Mackintosh, National Park Service, online publication. 
Booker T. Washington: An Appreciation of the Man and his Times by Barry Mackintosh, National Park Service, online publication. 
Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936 to 1938
Brief History of How Racism Shaped Interstate Highways, npr, audio and article. 
Brief History of Several Coal Mines in Montgomery County, Jimmie Price and Garland Proco, Self-Published, 1994.  (Link goes to list of local libraries from which the book may be requested.  For a $5.00 postage fee, a branch of the Montgomery-Floyd Regional Library will request for patrons.)​
Brief History of the St. Luke and Odd Fellows Hall, (historical location for the African American community in and around Blacksburg) website.
Bringing Black History Into Your Classroom throughout the Year – Facing History and Ourselves:
Brown's Battleground: Students, Segregationists, and the Struggle for Justice in Prince Edward County, Virginia by Jill Ogline Titus.

School Division and School Board Information

Information includes processes for communicating with school board members and division administrators as well as attending school board meeting.

Montgomery County Public Schools is led by a School Board of seven members, all elected by popular vote.

Meetings are normally held on the first and third Tuesday of each month at 7:00 p.m. Typically, meetings are located at the Montgomery County Government Center, 755 Roanoke Street, Christiansburg, VA. Occasionally meeting times and/or locations change. Please refer to the meeting page for the most current information.



 

Student Support and Conduct

In January of 2021, the Virginia Board of Education approved revisions to the Student Code of Conduct Policy Guidelines, including renaming the document:  Model Guidance for Positive and Preventative Code of Student Conduct Policy and Alternatives.  Pages 11-12, state


​The goal of the document is to provide school boards with guidance to revise local student codes of conduct to create a positive and preventive approach to student conduct. 

Research has shown that frequent out of school suspensions, zero-tolerance policies, and “get-tough” approaches to school safety are “ineffective and increase the risk for negative social and academic outcomes, especially for children from historically disadvantaged groups.”
The 2017-2818 revision was undertaken to create a document that:

Focuses on prevention;
Recognizes the needs for instructional interventions and behavioral supports when students do not meet behavioral expectations; and 
Defines equitable approaches to school discipline.


Local school boards are required to adopt and revise regulations on codes of student conduct that are consistent with, but may be more stringent than, these Guidelines.

Contact Us:

NAACP Montgomery-Radford-Floyd Branch

PO Box 6044

Christiansburg, Virginia 24068

info@mrfnaacp.org 

(540) 382-6751

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