If you're reading this blog and you're between the ages of 25-35 the title "Higher Learning" may take you back to the mid 90's to the film that featured Omar Epps and Tyra Banks. If you're like me you flashback to college. If you're an ECU grad you know our college lives were much like the film. Just for a moment I wanna take you back a few more years. Let's try elementary school. I'm talking about when you lost your first tooth and the check yes or no if you want to be my girlfriend or boyfriend letters were in. Yea, those days.
Higher Learning is what it is. Stay with me. Some will agree with me that it's the process in which one retains information and applies it to real life.
If you agree raise your hand. Okay all of you can put your hands down now. Raise your hand if you agree that we all needed someone to teach us the alphabet, phonics, sentence structure, math, science and the basic fundamentals of speaking. Okay you can put your hands down.
I have a ton of friends in the field of Early Childhood Education and from what I've been told they get paid peanuts... Yes, I said peanuts. I don't mean that in the sense that they're broke. I mean that in the sense that they're in the process of being broken... Earlier I made mention of my fellow ECU Alumni, how many of you know there would be no fellow Alumni if there weren't any teachers and principals that cared for me or you. Especially, when we didn't understand what "Higher Learning" meant. By no means am I a writer, but Mrs. Gravlee made me believe I was or could become one. Mrs. Hatcher taught me that "A Raisin in the Sun" didn't mean you had to wither and be lost. Coach Burke taught me that "Othello" was a hero and not a greek word and that football was a vehicle and not a lifestyle.
Higher Learning. If mom and dad don't start the process 99% of the time it's someone in Early Childhood Education that supplies a child with the knowledge of what a dream is. I had a conversation with some friends this past week and they reminded me of my personal responsibility to the world of education. Like them I can't help save everyone but I have no excuse not to contribute. So this past Friday I used my vehicle to help remind all of us of what High Learning is. Below are a few stills and captions of what Vision Beyond The Lens means.
Support your local schools.
Baltimore City School P.S. #63
On my way out of the school this young man ran up to the principal and hugged him and thanked him for caring about him.
These two little guys said they would be best friends forever.
In the spirit of Black History month and the appointment of President Obama. I saw this one as the American Dream.
Comments
your work is really infusing itself and producing a genre of its own it's more than photography...it's life infused with passion, purpose and respect
Thanks for this post!
Selina