Mr. Johnson’s Profile
Caylei Pirtle, Caleb Syke, Claire Wicke, Kayla Coghlan
Due to how busy he usually is, we could only schedule a small window of time for a follow-up session with Mr. Johnson.
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“Coming here was like moving into a country club,” -Mr. Johnson
Robert Johnson grew up in inner city Detroit, Michigan, and originally wanted to move to
Georgia where majority of his extended family was. He didn't have any relatives in Detroit
besides his parents, so really, he wanted to be closer to his extended family. During
events he eventually decided to give another place a try.
“In high school, when there was an after school activity or game, it would have to be
immediately after school so rival gangs from across town couldn’t come and
create fights.” He said in an interview. Passing his peers in the hallways at school he
would hear racial slurs, police officers were everywhere, and there were
even metal detectors at every entrance and exit, “They made us go through metal
detectors before entering school most days, which meant multiple people would end up
throwing things out of their pockets and even running the opposite way. Some people
even kept blades in their mouths.” He explained later on. Johnson ultimately went to
a “99% african american school,” so seeing this violent place for most of his life, then
suddenly coming to a more public community everyday, was a drastic change of
environment. Here in Cedar Rapids, kids could walk in and out whenever, keep anything
in your bags, coat pockets, and other clothing without being questioned or searched,
and being trusted to do really whatever he or she wanted. “Coming here was like moving
into a country club.” Johnson added.
He enjoys his job here because he likes the safe community it brings. The culture change
was something he had difficulty adapting to, but eventually got used to the atmosphere
of Kennedy. “I was always seen as the big, scary, tough looking guy..,” for enforcing the
rules to the students. Everybody needs a little discipline and enforcing that shouldn't
make someone the ‘bad guy’. At first he really didn't feel accepted but eventually learned
that it was easier than he thought. Over time he started to fit in more to the flow of
kennedy as a school, it's who he was as a person. He was patient with the students and
gave himself a fair shot. He believes kids need to grow up in a safe environment and
in his eyes that's what Kennedy is. It might have been challenging on some occasions,
but he wouldn’t change it for anything.