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Affirming Blackness in academic spaces

“Our classrooms need more Black educators.”

Photographer: Sharmeen Somani

Editor’s Note: High-impact reporting doesn’t have an expiration date. We are throwing it back to a news moment that completely defined the season; read it for the vibe, not the calendar.

A strong cross-section of school administrators, academics, educators, students, and community leaders gathered on Tuesday, January 27th, 2026, for the Second Annual Black Education Symposium, an event anchored in purpose, scholarship, and vision.

This year’s theme “Affirming Blackness in Academia: Past, Present & Future” reflected the mission of the Centre for Black Studies in Education, a creative research centre making meaningful waves across educational spaces.

In the program booklet, Dr. Andrew B. Campbell, BFEP Coordinator, underscored the urgency of the work, “Our classrooms need more Black educators. BFEP is a direct response to this need, and I am honoured to be the BFEP coordinator.”

Dr. Campbell noted with pride that 79 Black future educators were present, marking the second year of partnership between BFEP and the Centre to bring the symposium to life.

The day featured three dynamic panels, each exploring Black presence, research, and futurity in education.

Panel 1: Black Canadian Studies in Higher Education

Panelists:

Dr. Andrew Allen, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education, University of Windsor
Dr. Ann E. Lopez, Professor of Educational Leadership and Policy, OISE, University of Toronto
Dr. Linda Iwenofu, Assistant Professor, Department of Applied Psychology and Human Development, OISE

Moderator:

Dr. Qui Alexander, Assistant Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Trans Studies in Curriculum and Pedagogy, OISE

The panelists explored the challenges and complexities of teaching Black Canadian Studies within mainstream Eurocentric institutions. Their discussion highlighted the tensions, resistance, and necessity of sustaining Black knowledge in higher education spaces.

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Panel 2: Affirming Blackness in Academia Through Research

Panelists:

Dr. Darren Hamilton, Assistant Professor of Music Education, University of Toronto, and Lead Writer of #BlackMusicMatters: Hip Hop and Social Justice in Canada
Dr. Stephanie Fearon, Assistant Professor of Black Thriving and Education, Faculty of Education, York University

Dr. Leland Harper, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Siena Heights University
Mohamed Rage, Graduate Assistant with BFEP and Master of Teaching student at OISE

Moderator:

Dr. Tanitia Munroe, Research Coordinator, Centre of Excellence for Black Student Achievement, Toronto District School Board

This panel grounded the conversation in evidence-based research and pedagogy. The speakers shared practical frameworks drawn from their work as scholars and practitioners shaping Black academic futures.

Panel 3: Freedom Dreaming for Black Futures

Panelists:

Dr. Marie A. Green, Ontario Certified Teacher, Department of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning
Rasulan Q. Hoppie, Superintendent of Education, Peel District School Board
Karen Murray, System Superintendent for Equity, Anti-Racism and Anti-Oppression, TDSB
Shelly-Ann Skinner, Educator, Consultant, and Founder of UPlift Black Centre for Social Justice & Inclusion

Moderator:

Kai Butterfield, PhD Candidate, Department of Social Justice Education, OISE

The panel explored the power of imagination and freedom dreaming in shaping Black futures. Their insights, rooted in lived experience across public education systems, offered both emotional resonance and strategic direction.

Together, the symposium affirmed that Black brilliance in education is present, active, and essential.

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With a last name that means “Faithful and loyal,” it is no wonder that Paul Junor has become a welcomed addition to the Toronto Caribbean Newspaper Team. Since 1992, Paul has dedicated his life to become what you call a great teacher. Throughout the years, he has formed strong relationships with his students and continues to show them that he cares about them as people. Paul is a warm, accessible, enthusiastic and caring individual who not only makes himself available for his students, but for his community as well.

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