Friday, December 18, 2009

Kudos to the 'Hood, Snoop Dogg and the Homies



Crenshaw High School
Los Angeles, California

What a great story to share with you! Especially due to the bond created by my personal history with the school and the community that surrounds it. I taught at Crenshaw High School for many years in the '90s. And years earlier, I grew up and went to school in the Crenshaw/Baldwin Hills/Leimert Park community. So it's with great legitimacy that I can call the area "my 'hood".

That accolade of "'hood", was made popular by film director John Singleton, also a product of this community. He blew the power of the lives of folks coming out of this neighborhood wide open, when he projected it worldwide on the big screen, in his 1991 film 'Boyz 'n the Hood'. And it's significance was cemented when it was nominated for both Best Director and Original Screenplay during the 1991 Academy Awards, making Singleton the youngest person ever nominated for Best Director and the first African–American to be nominated for the award.


Boyz 'n the Hood poster


I spent many years teaching in long-term assignments, and as a day-to-day substitute at Crenshaw High School. It became a home base of sorts for me, as I lived very near and was constantly requested to teach for the various special programs that were offered at the campus.

The school was also well known for it's Horticulture/Garden Program that morphed into a well run business that raised college funds for those students that were involved. You may have even tasted some of their products, as from selling produce that they grew at Farmer's Markets, the students expanded their business by creating and marketed delicious salad dressing under the name, "Food From the Hood". This salad dressing was sold in the major super markets.
As a mentor for the program, I was present when Prince Charles of England visited the campus. Charles has always been ecologically conscious, and owns bio-dynamic farms in the U.K. Because of the Food From the Hood Garden Program organic gardening methods, he wanted to visit inner-city Crenshaw High, and it was the only school that he visited while in Los Angeles.

I was invited to mentor in that program out of the relationships I'd made with faculty members. The school had teachers that possessed a wealth of talents, experience and abilities, outside the realms of their 7:30 - 3:30 profession.
I served on the faculty for a few years. I taught in the Newcomer Center, which were the classes dedicated to new students of high school age that were attending school for the first time in the United States. At this time, the majority of these pupils were from Mexico and Latin America.

I also taught in the Teacher Training Program, where students that early on in their academic career expressed an interest in becoming future teachers were centralized in a program that was academically organized to support them in that pursuit.


Then there were semesters spent teaching the Advanced Placement classes, and the classes in their Gifted Program. Crenshaw also had the distinction of being a school with a high proportion of students functioning above average grade level skills. It was actually one of the best schools for African-American and Latino kids in the inner city. At the time that I was there, the principals, counselors, faculty and staff were all outstanding and doing their utmost to make sure their students would be able to compete successfully after high school.

Crenshaw's sports programs always brought the school recognition, but as I recall it was more so for basketball. Both the boys and girls from Crenshaw were excellent athletes and league winners. It's great to hear that that tradition is being stablized in football by the private support of Snoop Dogg and his Football League which focuses on inner-city youth.


Snoop with his Youth League teams

If you have skills to donate to the League, or Crenshaw High School, don't hesitate to make 2010 the year that you share some of your talents and love in their direction. Here's the link to their website.http://www.snoopyfl.net/


If you think about it, Snoop is just 'doing what comes natural'.....letting his love for two of his passions flow ~ coaching and supporting kids, in playing football ~ both of which he loves dearly. (Note his quote in the older article that follows.)

As I think about re-read the article, this program is really an example of excellence in action. I mean it just really works for everyone. Allowing kids to play, and bond and be guided by their fathers and in the process of learning discipline and good sportsman is really wonderful. The fact that Snoop and those who created the League were smart enough, to make their own rules is a big step in seizing the autonomy that we as people have a right to. And consequently their rules are based in the reality of the moment --- of the true circumstances of people living in the communities which the League targets for participation.


I love to learn that things like this are happening and love even more seeing it succeed and spread.
What a pleasure to witness conscious evolution...right before our very eyes.

loveu~
Kentke




Calif. School Team's Success Linked to Snoop Dogg




By CHRISTINA HOAG,


Associated Press Writer


Fri Dec 18, 7:14 am ET






















In this photo taken on Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009. Crenshaw High School football quarterback, Marquis Thompson practices at the Crenshaw High School in Los Angeles. He, and six others on the team, went through rapper Snoop Dogg's Snoop Youth Football League. Snoop started a kiddie football league five years ago in South Los Angeles, now the league has turned beleaguered Crenshaw High School's Cougars into contenders for the state bowl championship and Snoop players are getting attention from major college recruiters.


(AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

LOS ANGELES – Football has long been the athletic stepchild at inner-city Crenshaw High School. Trophy cases are crammed with basketball awards. Gym walls are lined with hoops championship flags.



But the football team is undefeated this season and headed for the California state championship bowl game this weekend, and the coach attributes part of the success to an unlikely off-field source: rapper Snoop Dogg.



Nine of this year's Crenshaw High School Cougars went through the 5-year-old Snoop Youth Football League, representing the first crop of varsity players to cut their teeth in the program. The league has produced standouts at other schools, but none has more players or a better record than Crenshaw.



The league has made Snoop Dogg, whose real name is Calvin Broadus, a savior of sorts for football in an impoverished area of Los Angeles where gangs roam many of the streets.
"It is more of an advantage to have kids who played in the Snoop Dogg league," coach Robert Garrett said. "They also have the experience, the fundamentals and the attitude that guys who started from scratch don't have."


Broadus' reputation for raunchy lyrics and run-ins with the law brought some initial apprehension from the mostly single mothers who wanted to enroll their sons.



"It was kind of hard to separate Snoop Dogg the entertainer from Snoop Dogg the coach, the father," league Commissioner Haamid Wadood said.



But the league soon caught on, especially when fathers with criminal records learned they could coach, unlike most other youth sports. Broadus, himself a former gang member, has several convictions for drugs and weapons offenses, and if the league didn't allow ex-cons, there wouldn't be enough coaches.


"When you look at the demographics of the area, this is the reality of the situation," Wadood said. "We don't condone any of that, but we look at the nature of the offense, how recent it was."
Sex offenders and domestic violence convicts, for instance, are banned from the sidelines.



The coaching exception has also reconnected boys with their dads, or at least with positive male role models in neighborhoods where fathers are often behind bars or otherwise absent.


The dads, many of them members of the rival Bloods and Crips, must agree to leave their gang disputes away from the field.


"This is kind of like a peace treaty," Wadood said. "Everybody wants something better for their kids."


Broadus, 38, launched the league in 2005 with $1 million of his own money after noticing that much of urban Los Angeles had no football for boys ages 5 to 13. He's since invested about $300,000, Wadood said. The league now has 2,500 kids enrolled.



Broadus, who was promoting his new album "Malice in Wonderland" this week, would not comment.



The camaraderie that developed from playing together in the Snoop league has made the Crenshaw team a more cohesive, confident unit on and off the field. In a steamroller season, the Cougars have earned a 14-0 record, nabbing the Los Angeles city title.

"It's like a big family," said running back De'Anthony Thomas, a junior who sports a big gold and diamond cross pendant around his neck and who got his nickname "Black Mamba" in the Snoop league because of his speedy agility similar to the dangerous African snake.
Geno Hall







It also helps team members fend off peer pressure to join gangs.







"It keeps me out of trouble, from hanging in places I shouldn't be," said wide receiver Geno Hall, a senior with diamond stud earrings. "It's helped me to grow mentally."




While Broadus' larger-than-life figure was not the motivation for the kids to play football, his personal involvement boosts the self-esteem of boys who often receive little attention at home. The rapper attends games and allows his bodyguards to let players approach him freely.
Those intangibles, said coach Garrett, are invaluable for inner-city youth. The burly coach sees his job as much about taking a troubled team member home for food or clothing as it is about football. He lectures about keeping up grades and has imposed a rule requiring neckties, dress shirts and trousers on Fridays during season to get players out of the "hood culture."















In this photo taken on Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009 Crenshaw High School football coach Robert Garrett poses after practice at the Crenshaw High School in Los Angeles. Coach Garrett attributes part of the team's success to an unlikely off-field force: gangsta rapper Snoop Dogg.(AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)


The success of Crenshaw and the Snoop league is capturing widespread attention.




College recruiters have already approached players such as Thomas and Hall, and the league is fielding calls from cities such as Dallas and Pittsburgh that want to replicate the Snoop model.



In the short term, though, all eyes are on Saturday's championship game against Concord De La Salle, to be televised statewide from the 27,000-seat Home Depot Center in nearby Carson.
For Crenshaw, where almost 40 percent of students drop out and about 70 percent of students receive free or cheaper lunches, excitement is high.



Students have held fundraisers to buy tickets for families who cannot afford them and provide bus transportation to the game. News crews have trooped across campus to film the team, but players are working to stay focused.


"I just get down on the field and play football," Thomas said. "I'm blocking all that out."


###




Snoop Dogg Coaches Son's Football Team






9/15/2003 12:01 AM
HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. (AP) —







To his fans, he's a pioneering rap artist, to authorities who have tangled with him, he's a felon. But to players and parents in the Orange County Junior All America Football League, he's just coach Dogg.

"Teaching kids is something fun," said Snoop Dogg, who watched Saturday night as his son's Rowland Heights Raiders defeated the Huntington Beach Dolphins 18-0.

"I give them a lot of strength and vision," added the rapper, who is a former football player and who attended a clinic to become certified as a coach.

"I am falling in love with these kids," he added.


Snoop, whose real name is Calvin Broadus, made a name for himself rapping about street violence, gangs, sex and marijuana, and in 1990 he was convicted of possessing cocaine for sale.

Earlier this year, someone shot at a convoy he was traveling in, and he arrived at Saturday's game surrounded by six bodyguards.

But parents and players alike said they were impressed with Snoop's dedication to his 8- to 10-year-old charges.

Dolphins team mom Jennifer Gutierrez won't let her son listen to Snoop's music, but is happy to see him at the games.

"I think it's great that he does this for his kid," she said.




Coach Dogg

Jan. 04, 2008

3 comments:

  1. Yes Snoop and Crenshaw High have been on the news in the news. It is quite an accomplishment, it makes me proud.
    A. Y.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sounds like teaching was very natural for you.
    Sam

    ReplyDelete
  3. You know what Sweet Sam...you hit it right on the nose.

    I've never wanted to be a teacher.
    When I described myself to people, I'd always say "I'm a teacher by nature, not by chosen profession."
    I still am not interested at all in going back into that field. I'm ofcourse always willing to share what I've obtained in understanding, but only with adults that want what I can share. Those years as an inner-city educator with K-12 kids was like 'doing time' for me. Some days Sam, I felt like I was a Christian, going into the arena to present myself to the lions to be eaten --- so unloving and unkind were some of those students.

    And really, it was also that I was betraying my True Self, by going there to take that $165-200 a day for 6 hours. In a sense it was easy money because I was very good at the job, but it was still not what my sense of my highest Self was supposed to be about.

    ReplyDelete

Labels

Absence of citizen online privacy protection by U S government (1) achievements of women (1) Africa human rights (1) africa political violence (1) African Muslims want peace (1) African politics (1) African refugee assisting homeland (1) African violence and corruption (1) African-American art (1) agriculture biotechnology industry (1) alQaida in Africa (1) American economic system (1) American education (1) American labor movement (2) American prison system (1) American racism (1) animals (1) Animals and humans (3) anti-American Middle Eastern cyber hijackers (1) apartheid 20 years gone (1) Arnold (1) Art by artists of African descent both continental (1) Atlanta (1) Avatar (1) Barack Obama (2) BeeSweet Lemonade (1) beneficial presence in the world (1) Bill Clinton (1) biogenetics (1) birthday (1) Black male role models (1) Black men unjustly incarcerated (1) Black people worldwide (1) busting American myths (1) buyer beware (1) Caribbean Literature Book Club 2010 reading list (1) champions (1) change for america world (1) charity (1) charter schools (2) China (1) classy artists (1) Congo (1) Consumer Rights (1) consumerism (1) Cornel West (1) Cosmos (1) coups in Africa (1) creativity built from our culture (1) credit game (1) Crenshaw community (1) cyberspace brought into wars (1) Dark Matter (1) David Bowie (1) Dedan Gills (1) delusions of the American masse (1) democracy in the world (1) destroying myths that no longer serve the good (1) Dialogue in America (1) diaspora (1) Disgust; Being our true selves (1) distribution of wealth (1) donating (1) earthworms (1) ecologically smart cars; green lifestyle (1) ecology (1) economic meltdown (1) economics (1) Edge intellectuals (1) Education in America (1) Egypt (1) elevating consciousness of American people (1) endangered Mountain Gorillas (1) European internet privacy (1) Excellent athletes (1) expanding consciousness (1) fear and greed of white people (1) female corporate/ multinational CEOs (1) first blog of the year (1) freedom of the press (1) French and Mali troops roust al-Qaida Islamist invaders (1) G-20 (1) gardeners (1) giving (1) global immigration issues; Israel (1) golf (1) Good works in Africa by her children in the diaspora (1) gospel music (1) Gratitude (1) Groups doing great work (1) Haitian Earthquake relief effort (2) helping others globally (1) History of issue of race in America (1) Homophobia (1) Human omniaction (1) ignorance (1) imperialism (1) indigenious people (1) influencing purchasing trends with priming (1) Iraqi drones compromised (1) Islam (1) Islamic extremests in African; Timbuktu (2) jokes (1) Kenya bloggers (1) latest scientific discoveries (1) law (1) Los Angeles life; architecture; African-Americans in Los Angeles (2) lost world cultures (1) Love (1) Malcolm X Civil Rights Leader (1) Mali (3) Mali 2013 (1) manipulating the food of the world (1) manuscripts of Africa's past (1) men of integrity (1) men standing strong (1) Mikhail Khodorkovsky (1) military power in Afrcia (1) military power in Africa (1) Monsanto (1) MTV (1) Mugabe (2) my travels (1) Natalie Cole (1) National Parks (1) Native Americans (1) Nature at It's Best File (3) Nelson Mandela (1) Neuromelanin (1) New Yorker Magazine (1) Nigerian terrorist (1) Nobel Peace Prize winners (1) Obama as a balm (1) Obama diplomacy (1) Obama foreign diplomacy (1) Obama in Europe (1) Obama nobel prize winner (1) Obama policies regarding average citizens (1) Obama's ability to control and steer his administration (1) Octavvia E. Butler (1) order (1) organic (1) outstanding Black authors (1) Pan-African authors (1) personal fulfillment (1) Pharonic sacred science (1) photography - wildlife (1) Plant sentience (1) policies that endanger animal welfare (2) politics (1) positive life lessons (1) post-neocolonialism in Africa (1) poverty field studies in India (1) prejudice (1) priming (1) professionals (1) public protest of economic policies (1) race (1) race and housing (2) race in America (1) Racism in Hollywood (1) religious bigotry (1) right wing christians (1) right-wing fundamentalism (1) Russia (1) Russian politics (1) Sarah Palin's politics (1) Science - intelligent creative bacteria (1) scientific ignorance perpetuated in 2012 (1) sibling rivalry (1) Snoop Dogg (2) soil science (1) Somalia (1) South Africa labor problems (1) South side Chicago (1) Spring poetry (1) Stanford University (1) successful women (1) Sudan (2) technology (1) tennis (2) Thanksgiving Day (1) The Bigs/multinational corporations (1) the failure of No Child Left Behind (1) the wealthy (1) things that make you go 'hhmmm' (1) Tiger Woods (1) Timbuktu libraries (1) time (1) Toni Morrison (1) true meaning of dogsledding. (1) Tuskegee Airmen (1) Twitter hijacked (1) U S History (1) vegan (1) vegetarianism (1) Virunga Park (1) ways to help Africa (1) weak results re: campaign promises (1) wealth in America (1) wholesome food sources (2) wildlife and their habitats (1) Williams sisters (2) Wimbledon (1) wolves (1) women leaders (1) world economy (1) writing (1) Xmas 2009 (1) yahoo (1) young Black entrepreneurs (1) Zimbabwe election (1)