Abstract

Gentrification impacts many cities across the nation. Affordable housing task forces and legislation meant to address housing inequities are becoming more common, yet the authentic experiences of those affected are often unacknowledged. Absent from the discussion of gentrification are the voices of those deeply impacted, some who are at the center of the work to maintain communities: Black teachers, Black students, and Black families. In many school districts, teachers do not have the opportunity to address the systemic issues that impact their students and communities. Still, it is impossible to ignore the ways societal injustice seeps into the classroom. This article discusses our work as a teacher participatory action research collective exploring the intersection of housing and educational displacement in a rapidly gentrifying community in Southwest Atlanta, Georgia. We highlight our roles as community-centered educators and detail how we intentionally and thoughtfully worked to create a reciprocal space to engage communities in Community Listening Exchanges. We present Community Listening Exchanges as a justice-centered innovation to community-engaged research and scholarship. Our critical and collaborative approach to generating and analyzing data allowed us to uncover how housing and educational displacement relies on deficit narratives to justify the removal of marginalized people. We offer CLEs as a reciprocal research tool that deviates from traditional qualitative research and resists anti-Black, damage-centered narratives.

Highlights

  • We are four community-centered teachers—three Black women and one JewishAmerican woman—who teach, live, and work in rapidly gentrifying, Black neighborhoods and schools

  • This paper details Community Listening Exchanges (CLEs), in which we examined the intersection of urban education reform and gentrification1 in Southwest Atlanta

  • We proposed a Community Listening Exchange instead of interviews or surveys because we saw it as a reciprocal data collection method where participants would provide us with data

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Summary

Introduction

We are four community-centered teachers—three Black women and one JewishAmerican woman—who teach, live, and work in rapidly gentrifying, Black neighborhoods and schools. Our Southwest Atlanta neighborhood and schools are riddled with poachers—those who lurk from the outside, wait for the prime opportunity (read: return on investment potential), and pounce on minoritized and marginalized residents who have begged city officials for resources for decades. This is how some in our neighborhood and schools experience gentrification. We decided to stand in the gap of urban education reform and gentrification even as it impacts our personal and professional lives It is with this lived experience that we approach research in our communities. Our paper aims to detail Community Listening Exchanges (CLEs) as a justice-centered, innovative qualitative research method to authentically engage communities and eliminate the hegemonic gaze in traditional qualitative research

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