Another black student has been humiliated by school faculty over hair.
Pearland Independent School District in Texas is being hit with a lawsuit by parents Dante Trice and Angela Washington, who say faculty at Berry Miller Junior High School disciplined their son, J.T., by using a black Sharpie marker to color in the boy’s fade haircut, which staffers allege violates the school’s dress code.
According to the suit, the 13-year-old got a “fade haircut with a design line” on April 16, featuring a track — like an artificial hair part — resembling the letter M.
“The haircut did not depict anything violent, gang-related, obscene or otherwise offensive or inappropriate in any manner. J.T. did not believe the haircut violated any school policy,” the suit stated, according to NBC News.
On April 15, principal Tony Barcelona (then the assistant principal) ordered J.T. to go to the discipline office because he was “out of dress code.” Berry Miller’s discipline clerk, Helen Day, told J.T. he could either take in-school suspension, which would cause the seventh-grader to miss classes and lose his place on the track team, or have the design disguised with marker.
He decided to take the latter punishment “under great duress,” as the student had never before been disciplined at school, and didn’t want to “have a first time suspension on his school record and be kicked out of track,” the lawsuit said.
Adding to his mortification, a teacher, Jeanette Peterson, joined Day and Barcelona in taking turns coloring his fade, allegedly laughing while doing so.
“The jet-black markings did not cover the haircut design line but made the design more prominent and such was obvious to those present at the very beginning of the scalp blackening process,” the suit stated.
It continued, “It is commonly understood among scholars and the general public that depicting African Americans with jet black skin is a negative racial stereotype.”