No Excuses: Race and Reckoning at a Chicago Charter School

Specials | Nov 26, 2022

Producer DJ Cashmere spent seven years teaching Black and brown students at a Noble Street charter high school in Chicago. At the time, Noble followed a popular model called "no excuses." Its schools required strict discipline but promised low-income students a better shot at college.

After DJ left the classroom to become a journalist, Noble disavowed its own policies — calling them "assimilationist, patriarchal, white supremacist and anti-Black."

In this hour, DJ, who is white, revisits his old school as it tries to reinvent itself as an anti-racist institution. And he seeks out his former students to ask them how they felt about being on the receiving end of all that education reform, and what they think now about the time they spent in his classroom.

WNYC Homepage - Top Stories

The unlikely organizers: Even NYC luxury renters are starting tenant associations

Why New York Bagel and Pizza Recipes May Change

The U.F.C. President, Dana White, on Donald Trump: “He’s Not a Racist”

Episode 4 of American Emergency; The Movement to Kill FEMA

YOU ARE ONLINE