Radical Equations
Civil Rights from Mississippi to the Algebra Project
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Narrated by:
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Langston Darby
At a time when popular solutions to the educational plight of poor children of color are imposed from the outside, the acclaimed Algebra Project and its founder, Robert Moses, offer a vision of school reform based in the power of communities. Founded on the belief that math-science literacy is a prerequisite for full citizenship in society, the Project works with entire communities—parents, teachers, and especially students—to create a culture of literacy around algebra, a crucial stepping-stone to college math and opportunity.
Telling the story of this remarkable program, Robert Moses draws on lessons from the 1960s Southern voter registration he famously helped organize: "Everyone said sharecroppers didn't want to vote. It wasn't until we got them demanding to vote that we got attention. Today, when kids are falling wholesale through the cracks, people say they don't want to learn. We have to get the kids themselves to demand what everyone says they don't want."
We see the Algebra Project organizing community by community. Older kids serve as coaches for younger students and build a self-sustained tradition of leadership. And we see the remarkable success stories of schools like the predominately poor Hart School in Bessemer, Alabama, which outscored the city's middle-class flagship school in just three years.
©2001 The Algebra Project (P)2022 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
This book bridges historical civil rights organizing with modern institutional practice. By examining Moses’s transition from the 1964 Mississippi Freedom Summer voter registration drives to the founding of the Algebra Project, the review extracts a grassroots "movement-driven" pedagogical framework. This framework treats math education as a tool for community mobilization and economic liberation, specifically targeting the systemic "caste system" that historically tracks low-income and minority students away from high-level STEM pathways.
Inspiration and insights that I glean from this book have served as a direct operational blueprint for the 2026 development and implementation of The Algebra Project at Simmons College of Kentucky. In active collaboration with national leadership from The Algebra Project, Inc.—specifically Benjamin Moynihan and Bill Crombie—our Simmons initiative demonstrates how Moses’s legacy is being operationalized locally to support the visionary leadership of HBCU presidential leadership of Dr. Kevin W. Cosby, at Simmons.
The lessons that Moses and Cobb teach us demonstrate that this philosophical commitment is finding its physical and systemic manifestation through the launch of the Simmons Westover STEAM Center. This applied math and science division of Simmons is being developed to function as a modern "Freedom School," integrating science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics with community organizing to anchor neighborhood revitalization in intellectual capital.
In this review, I conclude that Radical Equations remains an essential, active field manual for educational leaders. I assert that true grassroots community empowerment and neighborhood revitalization within economically marginalized cannot occur without universal access to the "intellectual DNA" of mathematical literacy, positioning the partnership between Simmons College and the Algebra Project as a scalable national model for urban HBCUs.
Reviewer: Dr. Kevin E. Fields, Sr., President & CEO, Louisville Central Community Centers, Inc.
Institution: Simmons College of Kentucky (2026)
Math literacy is a civil right!
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