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12-year-old's assignment on field trip? Act like a slave

When James Baker heard the words "Nature's Classroom" in reference to the Massachusetts location of his 12-year-old daughter's forthcoming four-day field trip,

When James Baker heard the words "Nature's Classroom" in reference to the Massachusetts location of his 12-year-old daughter's forthcoming four-day field trip, he thought she and her fellow students would "just be going to learn what side of the tree moss grows on." Instead, as he and his wife Sandra described Sunday on Melissa Harris-Perry, his daughter was terrified by the slavery re-enactment she and her classmates had participated in during the last day of the trip.

News of the activity came as a shock both to Sandra Baker—and according to her, the students themselves.

"They spent three days having fun before they even brought the kids to the field to do the experiment," Baker told Harris-Perry. "The kids had no indication this was going to happen. They surprised them."

According to testimony the Bakers offered in conjunction with their human rights complaint filed last week with the Hartford Board of Education, their daughter said that she was packed together with other students in a dark room to simulate being on a slave ship and hiding in the woods from their "white masters," and instructors told her things such as "We don't need any sick slaves. If you get sick, we will throw you overboard." The 12-year-old was told to play a slave in the Underground Railroad, and heard things like "n*gger, if you can read, there is a problem," "Dumb, dark skinned Negro person, how dare you look at me?"

Nature's Classroom offered a lengthy online statement explaining that the organization first developed the Underground Railroad activity "about 20 years ago." Harris-Perry argued that schools would never permit students to learn about rape or the September 11 attacks by re-enacting them. Khalil Muhammad, director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem, offered the example of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum as a way to illustrate historical horror effectively, yet without the emotional trauma associated with the actual experience, and cited the Schomburg Center's recent course for young people at a pace appropriate for each age level.

Muhammad added that a lack of understanding of the experience of enslaved Africans is why teaching slavery to young people has to be handled so carefully.

"It's built into our DNA, this contrasting metaphor between liberty and slavery," Muhammad said on Sunday's MHP. "But also the economic footprint of slavery made America the wealthiest nation in the world, and shortened the time for that development. So we've got to start dealing with the importance of slavery from the very beginning...it can't be some random Wednesday on some random field trip where all of a sudden, you drop down and you're in the middle of the Underground Railroad reenactment."

Harris-Perry closed out the interview with a tongue-in-cheek message for educators who'd consider similar role-playing activities.

"Folks, if you want to do a re-enactment of slavery in your school, how about Nat Turner's rebellion?"

Watch Harris-Perry's essay above, and her interview with the Baker family and Muhammad below.