Call Me MISTER!
A Program that Recruits, Trains, Certifies, and Secures Employment for
African-American Men as Teachers
by Ross Norton
The
statistic is alarming: less than 1 percent, or fewer than 200, of South
Carolina's 20,300 elementary school teachers are African-American men. A unique
partnership is changing that. The Call Me MISTER program has received national
attention and could become a model for similar efforts to increase the number of
Black male teachers coast to coast.
National numbers are little better than those in South
Carolina. According to an October 2004 report by the National Collaborative on
Diversity in the Teaching Force, only 6 percent of the country's public school
teachers are African American. The national Education Association reports that
25.8 percent of U.S. teachers are men. Only 9 percent of elementary school
teachers are men. The numbers for Black males are even lower.
South Carolina's answer was launched when Clemson
University and three historically Black colleges — Benedict College, Claflin
University and Morris College — created the Call Me MISTER program to recruit,
train, certify and secure employment for African-American men as teachers in the
State's public elementary schools. The first class of MISTERs graduated in May
2004 and entered classrooms as strong, positive role models, mentors and
leaders.
Another senior institution, South Carolina State
University, and four two-year colleges, Midlands Technical College,
Orangeburg/Calhoun Technical College, Tri-County Technical College and Trident
Technical College, now join the four founding members of the partnership.
Clemson is responsible for overall marketing and development, but each school is
responsible for recruiting for its program.
The program appeals to young men who want to use their
lives to change the lives of other African-American males. Recruits most often
hear of Call Me MISTER while still in high school. The partner institution and
its teacher education program first must accept students. After they're on
campus, they apply to become program participants, or MISTERs.
Prospective MISTERs must demonstrate a commitment to
becoming a teacher and submit to an interview before being admitted. The program
includes about $5,000 in tuition assistance, but its real value to the MISTERs —
and their future elementary students — is a high degree of personal development.
According to Call Me MISTER director Roy I. Jones, the
MISTERs learn values, leadership skills, mentoring and how to be role models.
They learn to be men. And it is those skills, paired with their academic
preparation that will make them distinctive in the classroom.
"They have to know to and for whom they are to be good
teachers," Jones says. "Teachers who don't know who they are don't need to be in
the classroom."
Students in the modern elementary classroom are rife with
personal and developmental problems. Many children are dealing with broken or
dysfunctional homes. In their personal lives they are exposed to drugs,
violence, a lack of supervision and, perhaps most significant, the lack of
positive male role models.
For minority and non-minority children, the MISTER leading
his class represents something they don't have in sports stars and entertainers:
a Black man of authority whom they can reach out and touch.
"The MISTERs will have a different perspective than most of
the other teachers," Jones says. "Some of them come from a dysfunctional
background themselves. All of them represent a new breed of teacher: one
uniquely prepared to address the whole child."
In a State where African-American men, although a
significant part of the population, represent a blip on the elementary teacher
rolls and 65 percent of the prison population, Jones believes Call Me MISTER
will shatter stereotypes while it kicks open doors across the nation.
In 2001, Call Me MISTER was featured on The Oprah
Winfrey Show and selected to be part of Oprah's Angel Network. The program
also has received widespread recognition from former U.S. Secretary of Education
Rod Paige and has been featured in such national media outlets as USA Today,
TIME Magazine and National Public Radio's "All Things Considered."
Call Me MISTER sponsored a national conference on
"Innovations in Recruitment, training and Retention of African-American Male
Teachers" on March 18-20 in Greenville, S.C. The conference urged participants,
who represented various higher educational institutions from several states, to
form collaborative and strategic partnerships based on the Call Me MISTER model
and experience. Attendees were given CDs, which included a PowerPoint
presentation of the program components.
Speakers included former U.S. Secretary of Education and
former South Carolina Governor Richard E. Riley; Dr. Jawanza Kunjufu, founder
and publisher of African American Images and author of more than 20
books; Abigail Thernstrom, vice chair of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and
co-author of several books, including No Excuses: Closing the Racial Gap in
Learning; and Crystal Keykendall, educator, lawyer and author of several
books, including From Rage to Hope: Reclaiming Black and Hispanic Students.
"I'm convinced we are on the brink of a breakthrough with
the Call Me MISTER program in addressing, to some degree, the very critical
issues confronting our children in school. I am very proud of our MISTERs in
training as well as our graduates who are now teaching in several elementary
schools," Jones says. "We are on a mission that we believe will transform every
life that the program and its participants touch."
For more information about the Call Me MISTER program,
visit the Web site:
www.callmemister.clemson.edu or telephone 864-656-4646.
Ross Norton is director of news at Clemson University.