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29 comfortable sending their children to.” Even once a job is found, problems can  continue. Black teachers often face harass- ment, negative comments from parents and  coteachers and even campaigns to have them  replaced. Hernandez, from New Jersey, says she  constantly has trouble with the management  at her hagwon in Gangnam. She says she’s  faced a constant barrage of criticism from  her bosses over “my hair, about my skin, my  weight. It’s constant here.” Parents are a driving force. Hernandez says  parents ganged up on her and were forever  trying to get her to leave her job, or get the  bosses to fire her, even though she insists  the kids “loved” her classes. These problems  didn’t seem to affect the white teachers at the  school. “The teacher that I replaced, all he did was  play games,” Hernandez says, adding that the  teacher had been there for two years. “Me,  just getting there, (the parents) wanted me  fired after three months.” Brendan Spencer, 28 and from St. Louis,  feels he gets a “lack of regard or respect”  from his coteachers — “like I’m lesser,” he  says. When he was asked to make morning  broadcasts at his school — outside of his  contract obligations — he did it at first, but  then said he was too busy planning his class- es to continue. “They were pretty upset about it,” Spencer  says. “Whereas when the previous (white)  teacher was asked, he just flat (out) said no.  And that got a pass.” Spencer adds that when he disagrees with  the other teachers or asserts his rights, Kore- ans often get much more emotional with him  than with others. “I just feel that if I were a  Korean person or a non-black person, that  kind of vitriol or emotion wouldn’t be there,”  he says. Scott Meech, a white, Korean-speaking  Canadian who worked in 2009 as a head  teacher and human resources manager for  a company that sent foreign teachers to dif- ferent hagwon every week, has witnessed  discrimination against black teachers on the  ground level. In one instance, he started re- ceiving complaints about a black teacher,  and went to observe that teacher’s classes.  He says he saw nothing at all wrong with his  teaching. “He was a good teacher with nice class- room manners and a connection with the  students,” Meech says. “I had a meeting with  the various directors, asking exactly what was  wrong, and was told that many of the stu- dents were afraid of black people. They were  afraid of losing students.” Meech tried to defend the teacher as  “great,” but was told to fire him anyway. He  refused and stepped down from his position.  He warned the teacher, and a month later, the  black teacher was fired. Many Korean parents have complained that  their kids are afraid of black teachers. Elliott  Ashby thinks the truth is different: Korean  kids are not afraid of black teachers — their  parents are. “When I did parent-teacher conferences,  some of the parents would ask, ‘Are my chil- dren afraid of you?’” says Ashby, 30, from  Phoenix. “I’d say, ‘No, but you might be.’” Ashby says kids don’t know racism on their  own. Some of his students would notice his  dark skin, or the difference in skin tones on  the palm and back of his hand. Sometimes  kids would ask, “Why are you black?” and  he’d answer, “Just ate a lot of chocolate!”  But this is not hate — it’s curiosity, and black  teachers should understand that, he says. “They say every bigot was once a child with- out prejudice,” Ashby said. “Kids, they don’t  know the difference.” But sometimes miseducation comes before  a black teacher does. Some teachers report  students who couldn’t believe a black person  could be from America and not Africa. Epps describes how at her school, the stu- dents were used to black American teachers.  But then came a new first grader who looked  at her strangely and wouldn’t speak to her.  One day, the girl told her, “You’re Africa.” “I didn’t even have to say anything,” Epps  says. “The other students responded and  said, ‘Babo (dummy), no, she’s American.’”  Epps set out to educate her, showing her pic- tures of her white South African friends on  Facebook, and showing her Chicago on a  map of the United States. Hernandez says she does her best to ed- ucate the children, but she feels it’s a Sisy- phean battle. She believes that educating  children about race is important, and says,  “I’ve tried that with my own students. … I tell  them, ‘Curly hair is okay’; ‘You’re not dirty just  because your hair is like this’; ‘People are dif- ferent.’ Then they go home and their parents  talk to them, and then their parents say, ‘No,  they’re different. That’s not normal.’ They re- educate them.” It’s a cycle Hernandez feels  she can never escape. ‘A lot of (Koreans) are really  ignorant about what we  have in Africa. … They fnd  it weird that we actually  speak English, and they  wonder how we even  got here. When they get  to know that I’m on a  scholarship, they’re like,  “Wow!”’  — John, student, from Ghana