"Nuth, there is nothing you are going to be able to
teach me in this class that's going to make me like Arabs," remarked
Austin.
He was one of my more outspoken sophomores a few years back, and I distinctly remember him saying this
rather enthusiastically immediately after I passed out The Arab-American Handbook by Nawar Shora, one of the many texts I use in my Global
Studies/English class.
I hastily responded, "Austin, I bet you five bucks that
you have a broader perspective by the end of year." He said, "It's on," and we shook
hands.
On the last day of school, right after school, Austin came
into my classroom and walked up to my desk.
He asked me to put out my hand, and into it he slipped a $5 bill. I had forgotten all about our bet. He told me that I won, and that he would
never be able to view people in same, narrow way again. He looked me straight in the eye, and Austin told me that it was our class he thanks for that. We hugged and had a little cry together.
It was one of my most moving experiences as an educator.
Global education makes young people more aware of their
cultural lenses and the ways in which their cultural lenses shape their beliefs
and perspectives. It helps them
understand that the nature of culture and conflict is complex and that there
are never clear-cut "good guys" and "bad guys." It exposes to them the danger of single
narratives of a group of people. It
makes them aware of the ways in which adhering to singular sources of identity
contributes to violence.
But you would have no way of seeing or experiencing this if
you were not in the classroom. The
dominant rationale for global education coming from policy makers, various
private organizations, NGOs, and non-profits, is that we need to teach globally
so that the United States can remain economically competitive in a global
marketplace. I think that it must not be
forgotten that there is a whole body of more compelling rationale for global
education related to enabling our students to challenge their own assumptions,
stereotypes, and single narratives, to challenge the idea of American
exceptionalism, and to encourage our students to engage in important debates
and conversations about the state of our democracy and human rights.