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North King News

Friday, January 31, 2025

Fulfilling his teaching destiny

Marcus Johnson says teaching is his destiny. “It is a destiny in  which my curiosity, passion and imagination flood my mind with endless  questions and also allows me moments to

reflect on my journey through  life,” said the alumnus of the University of Washington Bothell.  

That journey, he said, is largely informed by race. A Black man,  Johnson said that ever since he can remember, he has been keenly aware  of the lack of representation of people of

color in educational  leadership roles. “I have experienced firsthand how the academic  environment can be unwelcoming due to not seeing representation of  individuals who look like

me in the classroom, or in a mentorship or  leadership capacity,” he said.  

Johnson received his bachelor’s degree in Global Studies in 2013 and a  master’s degree in Cultural Studies in 2016, both from UW Bothell’s  School of Interdisciplinary Arts &

Sciences. Now a doctoral  candidate in the UW's Department of Communication in Seattle, he  strives to give his students the representation and knowledge he never  had. 

“My mission is to create a classroom where students feel both safe  and brave,” he said. “I have had many students of color open up and  share painful experiences they have never

spoken about before, which is  huge and can be incredibly healing.” 

In recognition of the significant impact Johnson has had on his students, he was awarded the UW Excellence in Teaching Award, one of two presented in 2022 as part of the

University’s annual Awards of Excellence.  

Transformative teaching   

This excellence award recognizes extraordinary teaching by graduate  students. The recipients are honored for demonstrating exceptional  teaching ability as graduate instructors or as graduate teaching  assistants. 

“Marcus infuses activism into scholarship and scholarship into  activism,” said Dr. Ralina Joseph, professor in the Department of  Communication and Johnson’s mentor, in her letter

of endorsement. “He  establishes the classroom as a liberatory space for all students, and  for Black and Brown students in particular. 

“Marcus is currently the only Black male graduate student in the  Communication Department, and one of four Black men to have ever been  graduate students in the department’s

more than 50 years,” she noted.  “Furthermore, the Communication Department does not now have, nor have  we ever had, any Black male professors. This means that Marcus is

the  only Black male Communication instructor our students ever experience.  And he has set the bar high.” 

Johnson has a taught number of classes, including African American  History, Asian American History, American Ethnic Studies and Black  Cultural Studies — which he admits was

his favorite. “In my opinion, it  is one of the most transformative courses students take when they come  into the Communication Department,” Johnson said. “I have seen many

 students go on to change their focus and studies because of this  class.”  

Healing knowledge  

The class, Black Cultural Studies, is especially transformative for  students of color as they learn more about their history, some for the  first time. It even helped one student repair

her relationship with her  father, Johnson said. 

“We were about four or five weeks into the quarter when one of my  students came up to me after class and said, ‘My dad wants me to tell  you thank you,’” he recalled. “I was like,

your dad? Can you say more?” 

The student disclosed to Johnson that before taking this class, she  and her father had a very rocky relationship and barely spoke to one  another. “Her dad carried a lot of

generational trauma that got in the  way of their relationship, but when she took this class she started  learning what her father had lived through and was able to empathize  with

him,” he said.  

By the end of the quarter, Johnson said, the student and her father  often talked for hours on end. “From those conversations she learned  that members of her family were activists in

the civil rights movement  and Black Panther Party,” he said.  

“Teaching is pretty cool if it can help facilitate all of that.”  

Safe space   

In addition to making peace with others, the class also helps  students make peace with their past, most notably through weekly  discussions about race, representation, power and

privilege. “These are  topics a lot of students have never talked about before in a public  forum either out of embarrassment, vulnerability or to avoid conflict,”  he said. 

“But most everyone who comes into my classroom has experienced  microaggressions, and they don’t know how to move through their  feelings. When then they come to my

class,” Johnson said, “they get to  learn by speaking up and sharing how it has impacted them. I have had a  lot of students tell me how transformative it is to just be seen, heard  and

validated.” 

Another class he is particularly proud of creating and teaching was  Ferguson and Beyond: Race, Police and Protest in the Contemporary U.S., a  course at UW Bothell that Johnson

co-led with faculty. “It emerged as  an expression of solidarity with UW Bothell students and alumni who were  trying to understand and respond thoughtfully to important current

 events concerning violence, racial injustice and protests following the  shooting of Michael Brown in 2014,” Johnson said. 

In the class, students followed current events and engaged in public  conversations about the aforementioned topics, as well as contemporary  policing, incarceration and racialized

state violence. By the end of the  class, Johnson said students were able to gain a more in-depth  understanding of the historical and systemically racial components that  led to the

mass protests taking place across the United States. 

“The course provided a space for students to voice their feelings  about the political and social climate, and how these moments directly  affected them,” Johnson said. “Their

fearlessness and dedication were  inspiring to see.” 

Making a difference  

When he is not teaching, Johnson can be found working alongside his  mentor Joseph at the Center for Communication, Difference, and Equity, a  space where UW students,

faculty, staff and alumni gather to make a  positive difference in their communities. His involvement centers around  nurturing the leadership skills of underrepresented students of

color,  particularly those active in Rainier Scholars and in Boys & Girls  Clubs of King County. Coincidentally, Joseph also received an Award of  Excellence this year, the Marsha L.

Landolt Distinguished Graduate  Mentor Award.  

Johnson said he is honored to receive his award and views it as proof  that his efforts matter. “I try to put in the extra effort to support  students and help them get across that finish

line,” he said.  

“I hope to make a difference in the lives of underrepresented people  and institutions that are striving to push toward diversity and  inclusion.” 

Original source can be found here.

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