BIOGRAPHY
Emery is interested in the ways educators, artists, and youth connect their assets to bring about the world they wish to experience, even for a short period of time. He is at his best in intergenerational art, expression, and learning spaces where youth and adults make things together — especially beats, sounds, songs, and beautiful noise. He plays the role of curator and conduit in these spaces, linking together the relational and material assets for teaching, learning, and living. Emery’s scholarship and community work have been supported by the Spencer Foundation, the Faculty Development Network at New York University, and partnerships with Ableton and Koala Sampler.
Emery’s third and fourth books addressed the racial diversity of the teaching profession. Navigating Teacher Licensure Exams (Routledge, 2019) looked at the experiences aspiring teachers of color have with the high stakes standardized exams that can keep them out of the profession. Emery’s work in this area received the Innovations in Research on Equity and Social Justice in Teacher Education Award from Division K of the American Educational Research Association. Teacher Education Across Minority Serving Institutions (Rutgers University Press, 2018) consolidated scholarship from institutions that play the largest roles putting Black and Brown teachers in classrooms: Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Tribal Colleges and Universities, Hispanic Serving Institutions, and Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institutions. The first of its kind, the book received the Exemplary Research in Teaching and Teacher Education Award from Division K of the American Educational Research Association.
Emery teaches courses on language, literacy, and culture; writing pedagogies; urban education; hip-hop literature and aesthetics; participatory research; and young adult literature. His courses regularly collaborate with artists, classroom teachers, and community organizers. Moving across disciplinary norms, his courses activate social design, performance, hacking, sound design, and art making. Antiracism, education justice, and ethical community partnerships are common themes in his courses. Emery has received teaching awards as a high school English teacher and college professor, including the Board of Trustees Distinguished Teaching Award at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, the first historically Black university in the United States.
Before joining the faculty at Teachers College, Columbia University, Emery spent eight years as a tenured professor at Michigan State University, where he also served as coordinator of the English Education program.
As a consultant, Emery has designed antiracist learning programs for statewide instructional coaching networks, academic departments, and school districts. He has carried out participatory evaluations for million-dollar racial equity grants in the nonprofit sector. Emery does not work alone in these capacities. He applies principles of cooperativism to his consulting work, which he learned through four life-changing years as a worker-owner with Derute, a majority Black and women owned cooperative.