Silenced by Shakespeare Class
 In high school my hand was always in the air waving confidently
In high school my hand was always in the air waving confidently
I never noticed silence, I had much to say
 comfortable with being, at home in school
As a sophomore in college, my hand refused to go up
 I became silent, studying Shakespeare
 in a class where everyone’s English was schooled-to-be
 smarter than me
To be or not to be?
I was silent, unable to understand even
 the questions asked by other students
 whose parents had once been in college
 where my parents had never been … but I became their daughter then,
 silenced in school, not at-home there
Learning for the first time
 the meaning of class,
 joining “the silent majority”
 on the other side
 of the great divide
 between those who “participated” in class,
 and those who did not …
Now, years later, as teacher with classes of my own,
 I listen for/in/to multi-cultural silences,
 embracing many ways of being,
 even Shakespeare’s
— Emily Jane VandenBos Style, 1993
In Seeding the Process of Multicultural Education, Minnesota Inclusiveness Project, ed. Cathy Nelson and Kim Wilson, 1998.