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Henry Adeoye Teaches Citizenship
Henry Adeoye, MAHG student and US History Teacher at Moorhead Junior High School in Conroe, Texas

Henry Adeoye Teaches Citizenship

ByEllen Tucker
On October 11, 2022

Henry Adeoye, an immigrant to America from Nigeria, teaches American history to eighth graders, most of whom are growing up in families who immigrated to America from Mexico or Central America. Adeoye also teaches the value of American citizenship to his students, a large percentage of whom come from low-income families. To those who appear uneasily caught between America and their family鈥檚 nation of origin, Adeoye offers a pep talk. 鈥淢ost of us here are immigrants,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 see me flying a Nigerian flag on my desk, do you? We came here because, where we came from, there was no security over there. You are here, you are safe, and you have a nice school and free lunch! I went to school in Nigeria for twelve years and never got free lunch one day.

鈥淲hen your parents arrived here, they had to hit the ground running, in order to take care of you. They didn鈥檛 have the choice to have an education. But you do have that choice. We鈥檙e giving you that opportunity. You should take pride in America.鈥

Adeoye鈥檚 Immigrant Experience

“You should take pride in America,” Adeoye tells his students. Adeoye became a naturalized citizen in May, 2010.

Over two decades ago, when Adeoye himself arrived in Houston, he needed 鈥渢o think fast鈥 on how to make a living. He had already earned two university degrees, yet his training in philosophy and in international law and diplomacy didn鈥檛 qualify him for the opportunities open to him. Having taught English, religious studies, and government for three years in Nigeria, he wondered about secondary school teaching. To 鈥済et a feel for the American classroom, without being in charge of it,鈥 he took a position at a high school as a teacher鈥檚 aide.

He found American students far less obedient and respectful of authority than Nigerian students. This did not deter him. The lively interactions he witnessed between American teachers and students made teaching work more interesting than he had found it before. Working in classrooms in a range of disciplines, he realized that 鈥渢eaching math is not for me!鈥 American history, however, interested him a great deal鈥攎uch more than the history he had taught in Nigeria. After watching a history teacher capture students鈥 imagination in a lesson on President John F. Kennedy, he realized he wanted to teach social studies.

Adeoye enrolled in a teacher certification program offered through the  Cypress-Fairbanks  branch of the Lone Star Community College system. He became certified to teach special education from early childhood through 12th grade.

Teaching in a Changing School Environment

In 2005, Adeoye landed a job in the social studies department at Moorhead Junior High School in Conroe (a suburb of Houston). He has taught there ever since. Currently he teaches six sections of the early half of American history (from 1607-1877). The students he teaches range in readiness; some are in regular education, others in Honors, others in special education.  With his Honors classes, he can dive into primary source analysis in depth.  

Over the years, demographics at the school have shifted, a majority white student body becoming majority Latino. Adeoye鈥檚 teaching approach has also changed. The transformation began when he started attending seminars offered by 澳门六合彩开奖直播.  鈥淭hey opened my eyes to the value of the primary source in teaching history,鈥 he says. Participating in TAH seminar discussions helped him figure out how to incorporate such sources in his teaching. He relied less on the textbook and spent more classroom time helping students read the words of those who lived in the past.

It helped a great deal to learn that TAH offers a free online library of primary documents. Now he knows where to find the documents that will enliven a lesson, 鈥渨ithout searching all over the internet.鈥

Committing to Further Education

Faculty
Professor Jason W. Stevens

Last spring, Adeoye attended a weekend colloquium  in Northampton, Massachusetts on 鈥淭he Political Theory of the American Founding.鈥 Taught by Professor Jason Stevens, the seminar covered the Declaration, the Constitution, and several Federalists鈥 and Antifederalists鈥 arguments. It also included later reflections on the founders鈥 political convictions:  Lincoln鈥檚 Fragment on the Constitution and Union, and his Gettysburg Address; Woodrow Wilson, 鈥The Author and Signers of the Declaration鈥; and  Calvin Coolidge鈥檚 Speech on the 150th Anniversary of the Declaration. 鈥淭he seminar got me really thinking about the founding documents,鈥 Adeoye said.

When Professor Stevens spoke of the MAHG program, Adeoye was intrigued. He inquired further, and Stevens encouraged Adeoye to enroll. Soon MAHG Director Christian Pascarella was advising Adeoye of scholarship opportunities. Adeoye began the program in July, attending three week-long sessions of the summer in-residence program at Ashland University.

Each week, teachers participate in sixteen 90-minute seminar discussions of primary documents on a specific era or theme in US history or government. Each hour-and-a-half discussion spans 40 to 60 pages of reading; teachers are advised to complete as much of the reading as possible before the week begins, so they may spend evenings reviewing the readings for the following day. 鈥淭hree weeks was a long time鈥 to spend in this intense kind of study, Adeoye said, 鈥渂ut I enjoyed every minute of it.鈥

Adeoye participates in a MAHG seminar on Sectionalism and Civil War.

He found the professors engaging. Drawn from a wide variety of specialty areas and from schools all over the country, they offered a variety of perspectives and teaching energies. He enjoyed Professor Joseph Fornieri鈥檚 passionate interest in Lincoln鈥檚 statesmanship; Professor Robert MacDonald鈥檚 deep knowledge of the early Republic, from a Jeffersonian perspective; and Professor Jeremy Bailey鈥檚 philosophic insights into the evolution of the American president鈥檚 role and powers. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 wait to go back next summer,鈥 Adeoye said.

An Inspirational Moment

Each summer MAHG session features a special buffet dinner on Sunday, the first night of the week, with students sitting in conversational groups at round tables. No one dresses up for this occasion, yet the cloth-draped tables and formal place settings communicate to all a thoughtful welcome. As dessert is served, program staff and faculty are introduced and procedures for the week reviewed. This year, the first night of Session Two fell on Independence Day. To celebrate the occasion, MAHG Program Chairman John Moser invited volunteers to join in reading the Declaration aloud. One by one, teachers rose and walked to the microphone, reading several sentences of the document before passing it on to the next volunteer. Adeoye read the passage,

Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such now is the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. . . .

Over a hundred Masters students, faculty and staff listened intently, until the last volunteer read:

And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred honor.

Adeoye, moved by this experience, went back to Texas determined to share it with his own students.

What Self-Government Entails

Before students read the Declaration aloud, Adeoye shows them the Virginia Declaration of Rights, written by George Mason, so that they can see the ideas Jefferson borrowed from Mason and understand the Declaration as an “expression of the American Mind.”

He began preparing the ground soon after the year began, presenting students with excerpts of the Magna Carta, the Mayflower Compact, the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, Thomas Paine鈥檚 pamphlet Common Sense, and John Locke鈥檚 Second Treatise on Government, often cited as a source for the Revolutionary generation鈥檚 political ideals. He spoke about the Stamp Act and other instances of 鈥渢axation without representation鈥 that roused the American colonists to rebel. Finally, the class began dissecting the Declaration, sentence by sentence.

鈥淗ow do we give our consent to be governed?鈥 he asked students. When students ventured uncertain answers, Adeoye pointed to a sign on the wall of his classroom, showing a word printed in bold letters鈥V O T E. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 your consent,鈥 he told them. 鈥淚鈥檓 not teaching you history simply for you to know the story. When you guys turn 18, I strongly encourage you to be responsible citizens鈥攖o vote. Don’t say, 鈥楳y vote doesn’t count.鈥 If you stay at home, those who go to vote may elect someone who does not represent your interest.鈥

鈥淲hat if we don鈥檛 like either candidate?鈥 a student asked.

鈥淭he only advice I can give you is the moral advice I apply in all situations,鈥 Adeoye replied. 鈥淚f you are faced with a choice between evils, choose the lesser! But in order to decide which candidate better represents your interests, you must seek out information about them. Watch the news. Research their policy stances. Don鈥檛 base your choice on the candidate鈥檚 skin color or ethnic identity. Base it on their political agenda.鈥

Adeoye keeps driving home the message of a citizen鈥檚 responsibility. His goal is that, by the time his students have worked their way carefully through the entire Declaration, they will read it aloud with pride鈥攏ot as views unique to Jefferson, but as, in Jefferson鈥檚 own words, 鈥渁n expression of the American mind.鈥 He hopes they will understand the significance of the pledge the American revolutionaries made: that 鈥渋n signing that document, they were signing their lives away鈥 in the event their effort failed.  

Being a citizen 鈥渋s not just about yourself and your own rights,鈥 Adeoye says. 鈥淩ecently we discussed the experience of the soldiers at Valley Forge, how they fought without supplies. I told students, 鈥楾hose people did not live to enjoy the freedom you enjoy today. They sacrificed so that you would enjoy it. So, we must try to continue that legacy.鈥欌

An immigrant teaches immigrants about the founding of America: Adeoye and his students reenacting the Sons and Daughters of Liberty, protesting British taxation policies.
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