During the 2011-2012 academic year, a math teacher at John W. North High School in Riverside, California told yearbook producers why she mocks Indigenous people as a way to teach trigonometry to her students.
"I find that if I tell them a story using math along the way, it's like a memory device!" said Candice Reed. "It just might stay with
them forever."
Unfortunately, it worked.
Ms. Reed's mnemonic method of chanting "SohCahToa" while donning a fake headdress to mimick Indigenous ways of knowing became so normalized at JW North, it was celebrated.
In a devoted yearbook spread, outgoing students thanked their teacher for her unorthodoxed teaching next to a photo of Reed decked in offensive costumery. Additional words described her as having "passion and purpose."
This week, a near decade later, the educator has relied on her lesson for hopefully the last time thanks to a brave student who used his smartphone to anonymously record her racism in
action. It's since gone viral.
In a series of spliced videos, the math teacher can be seen wearing a red headband spiked with paper replicas of feathers while gesturing the "tomahawk chop," an imitation of a violent war maneuver. She then hops around her classroom chanting "SohCahToa" while at least one student, seemingly bothered by the incident, hides his face in his hands and cowers over his desk. Others also
appear uncomfortable in the moment.
At one point, Ms. Reed perches atop her desk, closes her eyes and reaches her arms to the sky. "Water Goddess," she says. "Please send me the secret Indian chant," then giggles about how ridiculous her scenario is playing out. But it doesn't end there. To finish the obscenities, she reaches for a collection of stones as a way to conjure up a "Rock God" that somehow completes
her story of "SohCahToa."
Out of respect for the reconciliation process, I'm not linking to the video; it's easily Googleable. But I am linking to the Riverside Unified School District (RUSD) Board of Education meeting from Thursday night. There, a young
Indigenous girl named Meztli took to the mic, and at the end of her allotted two-minute remarks, received an audience-wide standing ovation.