{"id":1669,"date":"2020-12-09T20:52:42","date_gmt":"2020-12-09T20:52:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.radiofree.org\/?p=136319"},"modified":"2020-12-09T20:52:42","modified_gmt":"2020-12-09T20:52:42","slug":"first-person-singular-my-students-the-police","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2020\/12\/09\/first-person-singular-my-students-the-police\/","title":{"rendered":"First-Person Singular: My Students, the Police"},"content":{"rendered":"
It\u2019s the first day of the semester at Kingsborough Community College<\/a> in Brooklyn, New York, and everyone is tense and a little scared. The professor, in this case me, hands out a syllabus and then describes the course\u2014a basic English comp class\u2014pointing out deadlines before asking the students to introduce themselves.<\/p>\n It\u2019s a familiar but nerve-wracking ritual.<\/p>\n I am both humbled and horrified. How, I wonder, can these seemingly mild-mannered people show such reverence for law enforcement?<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n Typically, my classes consist of twenty-eight students between the ages of eighteen and forty-something. As they take turns saying their names, majors, and countries of origin, other students nod their heads in recognition or approval. By the end of the go-around, I\u2019m racing to pin names to faces and intended fields of study.<\/p>\n But here\u2019s another truth: After sixteen years of teaching, I\u2019m continually stunned by how many students cite criminal justice, and policing, as their career goal. <\/p>\n When I ask them to explain, they invariably say they are driven by a desire to help people. This group of American dreamers\u2014from countries as diverse as Azerbaijan, China, the Dominican Republic, Egypt, Haiti, Jamaica, Mexico, Palestine, Russia, and Syria\u2014and a smattering of the U.S.-born\u2014say that wearing the badge of the New York Police Department and taking an oath to serve and protect would be an immeasurable honor.<\/p>\n I am both humbled and horrified. How, I wonder, can these seemingly mild-mannered people show such reverence for law enforcement?<\/p>\n Over the years, I\u2019ve seen students weep over the fate of a character we\u2019ve met in a novel, lament the unfair treatment of a fictional person, and share their joy when justice is served. They\u2019ve written essays that describe hardships in their countries of origin, then language barriers, a lack of access to medical care, and immigration woes once they emigrate. Still, they usually see these obstacles as temporary and express faith that they will succeed. Attending an American college like Kingsborough, they tell me, is the fulfillment of a dream long nurtured.<\/p>\n This makes their desire to join the New York City Police Department or work for other law enforcement agencies, all the more baffling. I ask myself: Can they possibly be unaware of the never-ending cascade of unprovoked police shootings and incidents of brutality that have become heinously routine?<\/p>\n I know, of course, that careers in criminal justice, while not lucrative, are union jobs with health benefits, paid vacation, tuition reimbursements, and pensions. This has to appeal to many of Kingsborough\u2019s 19,000<\/a> students, folks with a median household income<\/a> of $47,996, a full 70 percent of them low income.<\/p>\n \u201cHistorically, government jobs are the route to the middle class, especially for African Americans,\u201d Stuart Parker, assistant professor of sociology at Kingsborough, tells me. \u201cA lot of our students are looking for a job that appears to be steady. They\u2019re trying to figure out what to do in an environment that seems to offer a dearth of choices.\u201d<\/p>\n Under the NYPD\u2019s current contract, rookie officers earn<\/a> a starting salary of $42,500. Five-and-a-half years down the road, they\u2019ll make $85,292. This is a far cry from the minimum wage<\/a> that most Kingsborough students\u2014almost all of whom work full time while attending school\u2014are currently paid.<\/p>\n Completing college does not guarantee that police will behave responsibly or without rancor. Derek Chauvin, after all, earned a degree in law enforcement in 2006 from Minnesota\u2019s Metropolitan State University.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n But the decision to become a police officer is not just about money, says my former student, NYPD officer Jonathan C., who asked that his full surname not be used. I\u2019ve known Jonathan, now a married father of one, for more than a decade; we\u2019ve stayed in touch through Facebook. He\u2019s a good man: thoughtful, kind, smart, empathetic, and hard working.<\/p>\n An NYPD officer since 2016, he tells me that he loves the job because it is never routine. I then ask if he is bothered by the many cases of excessive force and other police misconduct that have repeatedly occurred, drawing protesters to the streets.<\/p>\n \u201cIt doesn\u2019t matter if you\u2019re an officer or not, the law should be upheld, and the violators should be brought to justice,\u201d Jonathan tells me. \u201cMost of my co-workers saw the video of George Floyd being killed and we felt disgusted because that situation makes all officers look bad, even the good ones.\u201d<\/p>\n Jonathan further believes that Derek Chauvin and his Minneapolis police colleagues should be held accountable. Nonetheless, he draws the line between Floyd\u2019s horrific death and the demands of Black Lives Matter and police abolitionists.<\/p>\n \u201cBlack Lives Matter groups fuel hate and disdain for police officers and authority,\u201d he says. \u201cI get their intentions, but defunding the police means that high-crime communities all over the country will suffer. Like many fields, policing includes good people and bad people, good cops and bad cops.\u201d<\/p>\n For Jonathan, as for many police defenders, it\u2019s a matter of weeding out a few \u201cbad apples\u201d\u2014officers who are hot-headed, impulsive, or racist\u2014while leaving the overall system intact. Hearing this, I bristle at the lack of recognition of the systemic problems that let racism, sexism, homophobia, ableism, and transphobia go unchecked, and allow brutality to flourish.<\/p>\n Still, I\u2019d like to think that I can play a small role in turning out better officers, that helping people interested in law enforcement earn a college degree, with exposure to classes in the liberal arts, is worth the effort. <\/p>\n Perhaps it\u2019s na\u00efvet\u00e9, but I hold onto research that suggests that having a college diploma\u2014regardless of major\u2014can have a demonstrable impact on stemming police abuse and violence. One 2010 study<\/a>, in fact, found that college-educated officers are 40 percent less likely to use force and 30 percent less likely to fire their guns than those with less education.<\/p>\n What\u2019s more, the study affirmed that college-educated officers demonstrated better critical thinking, were more open to diversity, and exhibited better moral reasoning than those without a degree.<\/p>\n But completing college does not guarantee that police will behave responsibly or without rancor. Derek Chauvin, after all, earned<\/a> a degree in law enforcement in 2006 from Minnesota\u2019s Metropolitan State University.<\/p>\n It\u2019s unsettling, all of it. But no matter my reservations, the so-called criminal justice system is a major employer, and students who want to work in this field deserve respect and need to be seen as the individuals they are. Whether I like it or not, millions of Americans will continue to be employed<\/a> in criminal justice agencies for the foreseeable future; last year alone, 697,195 were police officers.<\/p>\n I believe they should be well trained. And well educated.<\/p>\n\n
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