Freakonomics Radio - 387. Hello, My Name Is Marijuana Pepsi!
Episode Date: August 15, 2019Research shows that having a distinctively black name doesn’t affect your economic future. But what is the day-to-day reality of living with such a name? Marijuana Pepsi Vandyck, a newly-minted Ph.D...., is well-qualified to answer this question. Her verdict: the data don’t tell the whole story.
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You never know what's going to inspire an interesting piece of academic research.
Imagine, for instance, that you are a third grade teacher at the very beginning of a new school year.
There was a teacher sitting at the table in front of me.
My test scores are going to be SHIT. I'm sick of this SHIT.
This was in Atlanta.
Correct. I came to a new school and they had just passed out the class list.
And on my class list, I had the first and last name of the student.
And then we had the gender.
And we were to use the class list to make the name tags.
That's when she heard the other teacher worrying about her test scores.
And she was angry.
Every effing year, I get these bad A students,
and my test scores are going to be in the toilet. And she ran over to the principal,
and they had it out. And I am sitting there, this new teacher at this school,
looking at the front and back of my paper, because clearly I'm missing some sheets of paper.
Clearly she's received something
with more information than I have.
I'm like, okay, wait, what am I missing?
What is the, what does she know about her test scores?
I don't have any test scores.
Where are the test scores?
They're like, look at the names.
Look at the names.
What kind of names did these kids have?
Jamar, Jamiah, Jaleah, Linnea, Kenea, Daquan, Laquan.
They had distinctively African-American names,
which apparently led the angry teacher, who was white,
to surmise that they would be poor students and that they'd make her look bad.
And that is the catalyst that started this research project.
That research project would eventually turn into a PhD dissertation. Its title? Black Names in White
Classrooms, Teacher Behaviors and Student Perceptions. And the author of this dissertation?
Dr. Marijuana Pepsi Van Dyke. If anyone could understand the friction created by a teacher's expectations over a student's name,
it might be a Black woman who grew up with that name, Marijuana Pepsi.
Last week on Freakonomics Radio, we asked, how much does a name really matter?
So the ultimate question we wanted to answer is,
does your name matter
for the economic life that you end up leading? That's Steve Levitt, my Freakonomics friend and
co-author. Are people who are, quote, saddled with distinctively black names facing a burden
when they enter the labor market? Levitt, along with the economist Roland Fryer, analyzed a large, rich set of data.
It encompassed the birth certificate of every person born in the state of California between 1960 and the year 2000.
And it included the name of the baby, the first and last name of the mother, along with a lot of other information that gave you a hint at some of the economic circumstances. The researchers could then track these babies as they grew up
and see whether their first name affected their economic outcomes.
And we were able to see something quite remarkable,
which is that the name that you were given at birth
seemed not to matter at all to your economic life.
So I know their conclusions,
and I am also in agreement
with their conclusions
just based on my own research.
However, I can see
where someone might question that.
That's the thing with research.
We're only interested in the end result.
The study shows this,
but we miss everything in between,
which is why I like the qualitative in addition to the quantitative, because the quantitative gives us those numbers, but the qualitative tells that story.
Today on Freakonomics Radio, the story of Marijuana Pepsi Van Dyke and what she's learned about the power of a name.
I'm looking at them like, what's wrong with you?
Why are you messing with me?
From Stitcher and Dubner Productions, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
A couple months ago, Marijuana Pepsi Van Dyke received her doctorate in higher education leadership from Cardinal Stritch University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
This generated quite a bit of media attention.
Marijuana Pepsi Van Dyke has become Dr. Marijuana.
Earned her Ph.D. from Cardinal Stritch University.
Marijuana Pepsi Van Dyke. Yes, that's a real name.
Well, I have been in the news quite a while from the time I graduated from high school.
And the world has kind of followed me through high school graduation, my master's.
And now, you know, you can't get a Ph.D. without following up on the other stories.
And so here we are.
She got her Ph.D. at age 46.
It took about eight years total, some starts and stops and, you know, job changes.
And so life, yeah.
What was her graduation day like?
It was surreal.
I was just blessed to be there.
I was very humbled.
I, you know, I felt like crying.
I felt like jumping for joy.
I remember driving down the highway and grabbing the steering wheel and screaming out loud a few times.
Cardinal Stritch graduates are given the option to reserve classrooms where a large number of guests can watch the commencement broadcast.
But she kept her party fairly small.
Right. My husband, Frederick Van Dyke, my son, Isaac Sawyer, my sister, my mother, and a few nieces and nephews
and a couple cousins. I didn't want the public to come. Why was that? I'm an introvert. I'm late
back. I'm nervous at times. And so I wanted to just make sure that I did what I needed to do
for the day. And at the same time, I want to make sure that I'm not minimizing the experiences of the students
who participated in my study.
And this is a serious research study,
despite some of the jokes and memes
that come up about Dr. Marijuana Pepsi.
She was born in Chicago in 1972.
My mom has always been an entrepreneur.
She has always made clothes on clothing shops,
gardening. She's been featured in a few newspaper articles for her gardening skills.
My father was a university bus driver, so he drove the bus for the campuses in Chicago.
Was it your mom who named you or your dad or a combination?
I believe it was my mother.
My father's a Jehovah's Witness, and he says that it was all her.
And I tend to believe him.
Okay, so why'd she choose the name?
She shared with me that she believes that my name would take me around the world.
And that was always the answer I got when I asked her.
Hey, she wasn't wrong.
No, she was not wrong.
Marijuana Pepsi was the middle of three sisters.
The others were named Kimberly and Robin.
And I asked her, so why couldn't Kim and Robin go around the world?
You know, what was it that when you looked down at me the first time and you helped me that made you go up? This is the one marijuana Pepsi. And so of course, there are no
answers to that. And she'll go to her grave without answering it further than she already has. I don't
even ask anymore. I mean, did you at some point ask your mother, were you smoking a lot of marijuana?
Were you drinking a lot of Pepsi? Did you ever ask her that?
No, I have not ever asked my mom that. And I'll just say I've known my mom all of my life. And some questions I don't have to ask her at all and leave it there.
Meaning you're sure she did or sure she didn't smoke marijuana? Meaning that I know my mom, I know her personality, and she is a lover of life, and I just believe nothing's off the table.
What about you and marijuana and or Pepsi? Are you an avid or even occasional partaker of either?
No, I have never drank and I've never smoked.
I've never once smoked cigarettes.
I've never taken a toad.
I've literally done nothing.
When she was very young, Marijuana Pepsi lived with her dad in Chicago.
I attended an almost predominantly African-American school.
Everyone knew my name.
Teachers called me by my name. No issues. I did
not understand that my name was unusual until I entered into the fourth grade here in Beloit,
Wisconsin. Beloit, like much of Wisconsin, is overwhelmingly white. And it was very clear that
marijuana Pepsi was not usual. It was not quite accepted. And it opened the doors for a lot of
teasing and bullying and issues. And not just from the students themselves. I didn't have teachers
who bullied me, but I guess the name was just so interesting. They just couldn't help themselves
with the questions and the opinions and the statements and dragging me to different classrooms to introduce me to other people to show who this little girl was who had this name.
I didn't see that as they were trying to bully me or put me down.
Some of the questions were difficult, however, because they questioned my family, the type of family that I had, and what type of mother would name a child this.
Some of her teachers started calling her Mary.
And I don't think they did it from a place of, again, being hurtful towards me.
I think they were trying to help me.
They saw the way that I was getting on with the students and
the hurtful things they were doing, and they wanted to make my life a little bit easier.
And that worked right until I placed in the school spelling bee, and they wrote Mary Jackson
on my certificate. And I went home, and my mother saw it and hit the roof and came back to the school and cursed everybody out and
do not ever call her Mary. Her name is Marijuana. Do not ever write her name differently. And she
told me, you had better never answer to anything else other than marijuana or I'm going to get you.
And from that day on, you know, I was a lot more scared of her than I was of them.
When she was younger, back in Chicago, school had been a joy for Marijuana.
I was a very smart student. I learned to read very early. I was picked to do everything.
I had great relationships with the teachers and the students.
Overnight, here I am at a school here, and not only are the teachers looking at me funny the
students are looking at me crazy they're surrounding me in the playground asking
me questions why are your pants so high you know Michael Jackson and high waters
and everything under the Sun I felt like I didn't belong there I didn't want to
be there because clearly they didn't want me there. Something must be wrong with me. I, you know, I never said on an interview or I've never even
shared it ever. But sitting here, I remember thinking about committing suicide. I was nine.
And I remember that like yesterday. And I was just hoping that everything would just go away.
And then I sat there and said, yeah, right, fool, you do that. They were going to talk about you even more.
She says now there were a lot of reasons she was having such a hard time.
Environmental factors, family issues, the relationship between the students at school, relationship with teachers.
It was very difficult to wonder what was going to happen the next day.
And it was just, it was a lot.
I won't go into too much detail.
You know, the last thing I want to do is make it sound like I didn't have people who loved me and who didn't take care of me.
I did. But sometimes that's just not enough.
And in my case, it wasn't.
My home environment was just a little bit different between my I have a very close knit family, very loving family. I've got my
mom and we've been raised in with our grandmothers and aunties. And so there's different types of
things that happen in families. And so you have that going on. And I go forward a few more years, I leave home when I'm 15. And before I left home, I was a failing
student. I had all F's, maybe a D in gym. And I had never, ever given any thought to what my life
was going to be like after anything. I was literally living day to day. And I happened to be walking down the street to the
store with my cousin, Mikael Cooks. And she was four years younger than me. And she was bragging
about how she was going to be the first person in our family to go to college. And I remember
stopping in my tracks because I said, so what is she saying about me and the next day I
went into the counselor's office at the high school and I ended up going into a
credit recovery program and from then on I believe I may have gotten a over
three-point and then from there another three-point something a little higher I
ended up getting the most improvedroved Student Award at graduation, and I was awarded an academic scholarship, and I elected to go to University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. at just the straw that broke the camel's back that led you to becoming a straight F student as a smart kid? Or do you think that the treatment you got over your name was a big
contributing factor to that? That was one of the straws that broke the camel's back. Again,
it's that sense of belonging. And in my case, the lack thereof. Were you, I guess, angry at your mom
either for giving you the name that caused the trouble,
or for insisting that you continue using the name even when other people were,
you know, offering you a sort of easy way out by calling you Mary?
I've never been angry about my name. I have never felt that there was anything wrong with my
name. Again, I didn't even know that someone even
believed that until I moved here. I'm looking at them like, what's wrong with you? Why are you
messing with me? All I wanted to do was read my books, fly under the radar, go to school, and go
home. I don't mean to put emotions into your mind, but it's hard for me to imagine you wouldn't be
resentful at your mom for insisting that you use the name that was causing you grief, though.
I wasn't resentful of it. Again, it's like being named Steven. If someone called you Steve,
and your mom says, no, I want you to be Steven, that's your name. I'm resentful of the people
bringing me the grief about it. Because again, that's my name. When I ask you what your name is, you tell me it's over.
Why do I have to go through the fifth degree?
Coming up after the break, how marijuana Pepsi turned lemons into lemonade in the form of a doctoral dissertation.
And someone's going to say, oh, she had a distinctly black thing, but look, she's successful. But in the
short term of her navigating her educational institutions to get there, look at what she
had to go through. That's coming up right after this.
Marijuana Pepsi Van Dyke turned things around in high school and went on to college.
Her first major was business.
And that's what I wanted to do. That's always what I wanted to do.
But she also loved education, and she wound up becoming a schoolteacher.
Even so, she kept her hand in business.
That is correct. So I owned and operated a small real estate company
and did real estate investing.
And I've actually been in real estate as long as I've been teaching.
Now, real estate for sale signs often include the name of the broker.
I'm curious if you included your name and how that worked out.
So, you know, they would steal it. You know, I had phone calls from sellers.
Hey, marijuana, someone stopped and snatched the sign. They're driving up down the street.
I'm trying to get the license plate.
They took the magnets off my car so many times.
It was just ridiculous.
So Marijuana Pepsi Van Dyke had clearly thought longer and harder than most people about the effects of a first name. But even this did not prepare her for what happened
at her new school in Atlanta and her fellow teachers' angry response to seeing the class list.
My test scores are going to be SHIT. I'm sick of this SHIT. And I'm like, where are the test
scores? They're like, marijuana. Look at the names. Look at the names.
This kind of response she would come to
learn was not so uncommon among white teachers. To me, it's jarring to think that this kind of
response would be prominent among educators, because I guess we like to think that if there's a class of people in the world
who, you know, don't prejudge and who believe in potential, it would be educators. And I'm
curious whether this response affected your view of the field that you'd chosen.
It definitely did. Not because it made me think I didn't want to be an educator. It just reminded me that teachers, we're not on a pedestal. We are human. We have the same preconceived judgments. When we see something that we deem unusual, we sometimes have the same thoughts. What I was shocked and disheartened to see is that when we had those
thoughts, it seemed that we stuck with those instead of saying, okay, I'm thinking this.
Let me just see. I don't know this person. Let me just go on from there. And that is the part
that sticks with me. The research that Steve Levitt did on black names, remember, found that those names didn't seem to influence long-term economic outcomes, as indicated by things like neighborhood characteristics or health care status or years of education.
But what that research didn't explore was the day-to-day reality of living with a distinctively black name. It was a big
quantitative study. The research Van Dyke began to work on as a graduate student was a much smaller
phenomenological study. A phenomenological study, meaning that I'm looking at the students'
lived experiences, their views, and told with their voice. The whole point of such a study is to zoom in on each individual data point
with extensive group or one-on-one interviews.
Van Dyke was looking to speak with college students about their experiences in college,
but also in high school and even earlier.
So she held an open call at her alma mater, the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater,
and chose 10 students who
fit her study criteria. My criteria was they had to be, of course, Black. They had to be what I
deemed to be academically successful, as defined as they have met all the criteria for graduation
from high school, acceptance into college, and they must be in good academic standing.
They must have had name-related experiences throughout their academic history and must be willing to talk about it, and they believe that they have a distinctly black name.
When I see those criteria, I'm going to assume, and maybe I'm wrong, so tell me,
that most of those experiences were negative, not positive. Am I wrong?
There were positive experiences that I did highlight in the dissertation. In general,
many of them were negative. However, I did not enter into the research study expecting that.
As a researcher, you have to be very impartial.
You have to make sure that your own personal feelings.
And I especially had to be very careful of that.
The last thing I ever want to do is be told that because my name is marijuana, that I had a bias.
And so I was just very careful to stay away from that.
I wanted to learn from the students' experience and not put
my own experiences on them. The students in Van Dyke's study were named Mikael, M-Y-K-R-E-L-L. Taliyah, T-A-L-I-Y-A-H.
Stavante, S-T-E, capital V as in Victor, O-N-T, apostrophe, E.
Radea, R-A-D-A-Y-A-H.
Deante, D as in David, E-Y-O-U-N-T-E, apostrophe, Shalise, S-H-U-N-T-E apostrophe. Shalise.
S-H-A-L.
Van Dyke was hoping to answer a few fundamental questions.
Deason David.
R-E-W-S-H-I-K-A.
Number one, what are the educational experiences of students with distinctly Black names?
Basically, what are they going through on a day-to-day basis?
And number two, what are the impacts of navigating educational environments as a student with a distinctly black name? So you've gone through this, what happens to you? And then lastly,
what recommendations do they have for students with distinctly black names for educators and
for other students who have to go through life with that same name.
So what'd she learn?
So when we look at research question number one, the education experiences of the students,
the major one was disrespect.
Disrespect, low behavior expectations, low academic expectations, and stereotypes.
This disrespect was in two distinct ways.
Disrespect was shown towards the students with their names, but
secondly towards the students personally as individuals.
They questioned what type of person the student was,
what type of life they would have.
They questioned what type of parent would name their child this. They took it a step further. They chose completely different names for the
students, even without the student's consent or their family's consent.
Can you give a for instance of that?
Sure. Kentrum sounds easy to me. It sounds simple. But he talked about teachers always having the roughest time saying his name. And they would always ask him, can we call you Ken? And he had a quote that I just loved. You can say trepidation, but you can't say Kinshrel.
Can you talk also about the low expectations? And again, I want to be clear, the criteria for the students in your study were that they
were academically successful, correct?
Correct.
And that was purposeful.
Sometimes when we are doing research on minority students, there is this historical tendency
to just look at all these mitigating factors of why, oh, it's because of their low
income, their this, their that. And I wanted to make sure that no one could come back and say,
well, the reason it was this is because the student was just, you know, not academically
successful. And so when you're looking at the low expectations, the students felt like they
were expected to be disruptive or to have discipline issues.
Van Dyke then dug into how these experiences affected the students' academic experience.
It put a strain on the student-teacher relationship.
Students have self-perception issues.
If the student-teacher relationship is strong, that student can overcome, can learn, and can succeed.
When that strain is put in from the very first time, the students automatically clam up,
and they talked about how they can't give of themselves, and then the teacher sees that,
and then they think this student is low academically and treats them as such,
and there's this vicious cycle with the teacher not understanding what's happening and they're attributing it to this. And then the student just, you know, pulling back.
Their self-efficacy is ruined. And that's where the self-perception comes in. In many cases,
it altered their future career choices. Several of these students, they were going on to be science majors and other STEM majors,
and they changed, and they wanted to work with students and not be in a lab.
They wanted to be teachers because they felt that they could help other students who are going through this
to love their names and not have to put up with this.
One person, they said they wanted to do race-related studies
because of his experiences with this.
You could imagine that the effects Van Dyck is describing
are not unique to students with distinctively Black names.
You could imagine students who belong to other minority groups
being made to feel less capable than they are.
And this jibes with other research that seeks to explain
the relatively low rate of female STEM students.
In Van Dyke's study, she did find that some students
had had positive school experiences because of their names,
a teacher using their name as a conversation starter, for instance,
to talk about cultural backgrounds.
But, she says, this rarely happened with white
teachers. When we talk about the positive experiences, those came from African American
and minority teachers and faculty. So here's a question. When you have a distinctively
African American name or any other name that's distinctive, it's obviously something that someone else can latch
onto. And maybe it's even a little bit of a diversion from a more core issue of racism or
prejudice or whatnot. Since your study didn't include African American kids who don't have
distinctively African American names, how can you tell that in the case of the
kids you studied that it was their names that were the cause of this treatment as opposed to
simply being black? That was one of the research questions. How do you know that this happened
because of your name? And that's where the stories came in. The conversations that started the issues with
them in those classrooms were because of their name. When a participant talked about having to
call in their parents, it was because of the name. So not only did the instructor refuse to call the
student by the name, they also told the student, oh, you're not going to
be here that long. It doesn't matter. Just sit down. And the student talked about being so
frustrated because while her parents were staying in there to talk with the teacher and the
principal, the assistant principal gave the student a pass to go back to class and spell the name
wrong. And the student said, you spelled the name wrong. And the student said,
you spelt my name wrong. And the assistant principal said, it doesn't matter. Just go
back to class. And the participant, she threw her hands up and said, it does matter. That's
the whole reason we're here, because of the name. I guess just continuing to play devil's advocate,
like, it could be that those teachers and administrators would have exhibited racist behavior toward a black kid without the distinctive name.
It's just that there wouldn't be such overt evidence of it, right?
That is true.
And that's not a part of this study.
The names are. And so when the student comes in for that first time, and they talked
about what happened when they introduced themselves to the teacher, and when the conversation was,
did anyone else get those questions? The answer was no. Did you have other
black students in your class. Yes. So your findings were really dramatic and interesting. I'm curious how they squared
with your expectations coming in. I heard that a lot of them did experience what I experienced,
which was surprising to me because these students were so much younger than I was currently. And I
thought that with the change over the years and
the types of names now and all of the professional development around implicit bias and race and
equity and diversity, that things would be so much better for these students. But it's not.
Okay. So let's talk about now, here's what we can do about it. In the paper,
you talk about recommendations from the students for other students and faculty and so on.
Well, some of the recommendations that the students came up with, basically to be
culturally competent, to be respectful, to understand that just because a student has a name that
an educator may not be familiar with, it does not mean that there's something wrong with
that student or with their parents.
It was acceptance, acceptance of the students, acceptance of their backgrounds.
When everything is boiled down, ask the student how to say their names. They
talked a lot about the teacher egos, how when teachers were corrected, how they
caught an attitude about being told how to say the name. So when you talk about
implications for leadership, again it goes back to educators being
self-reflecting, looking at their own personal biases that they have.
Think about when you hear a name or you see something about a student, you don't know them,
but think about what it triggers in you and ask yourself why it's triggering that.
And when it does trigger you, remind yourself, okay, I don't know this person. I don't know why
this is being triggered. However, I'm going to make sure that I get to know them the way that they are. And I say, you know, even though you're talking about, quote, just the names of one subset of people, I believe there's probably a lot to be learned here about how we all have different biases and that we often don't even see these biases.
Do you have any advice more generally for people based on your research?
It's the same advice. You cannot judge someone by
their name, by their race. It is individual. Studies show that when people are actually
asked about their tendencies, whether racist or just about other groups, that they firmly believe that they are being fair
and impartial. They have to bring that to the forefront and have those conversations
and put that in training and make people aware that it happens.
So Fryer and Levitt do make the argument that distinctively African-American names did not affect long-term
economic outcomes. So I am really curious to know whether you think a distinctively
African-American name, or again, a distinctive name in some other category perhaps, is ultimately
a penalty for lifelong economic and perhaps other outcomes?
When you're looking at these students that were in my study, let's take Talia, for example.
She is a biology major. She has two minors, a Spanish minor and a psychology minor.
When she graduates, she is going to go on and perhaps get a PhD in biology.
Well, she is going to be deemed successful.
And someone's going to say, oh, she had a distinctly Black name, but look, she's successful.
But in the short term of her navigating her educational institutions to get there,
look at what she had to go through. And many of the choices and changes that she has made, and many of the experiences that she's had, they were impactful on her. So you're saying this success may come despite
the distinctive name and the penalties of it, yes? And not even despite, sometimes in a small part
because of, you know, but most people will go, well,
you know, there's no way that marijuana, Pepsi had a long-term impact because of her name. Look at
her. She's Dr. Van Dyke now. But my goodness, I shared with you that I thought of killing myself
at age nine. And there was much I didn't share. How do you think your life would be different now had your name been just Mary?
I would have stayed in business.
I've always been very entrepreneurial, business minded.
I've always had students' interests at heart.
So at some point, I still would have been some sort of an educator, even if I just went into schools and did some work as a business leader.
But I think that's where I would have changed because it did alter my career choices as well.
Van Dyke has been working most recently at Beloit College in Wisconsin.
She's been director of their Student Excellence and Leadership Program, which supports low-income, first-generation college students.
The big reason she went into education, she says, and stuck with it,
is because she wanted to change how students who look like her
or look like anyone else or no one else,
how those students will be received by the rest of the world.
Yeah, and I've said many times,
I cannot wait to become a teacher
because this is ridiculous.
We have got to give students at least one teacher
where they can come in and be themselves
and have parents that can come in and have a conversation.
She remembers one particular incident with a student
back when she was teaching elementary school.
And I had a conference with his mom, and she cried throughout the whole conference, and I could not understand it.
And I'm giving her tissue after tissue, and I finally say, well, why are you crying? He's doing great.
That's just it. He has never had a good conference. These teachers have
been kicking him out of school since he was in pre-K. I came in here expecting to hear everything
I've always heard. And this student was on honor roll. He was doing a fabulous job. Coming up next time on Freakonomics Radio,
if you were a judge on Shark Tank,
what would you make of this pitch?
I'd like to open a new kind of grocery store.
We're not going to have any branded items.
It's all going to be private label.
We're going to have no television advertising
and no social media whatsoever.
No Facebook, no Twitter.
We're never going to have anything on sale.
We're not going to accept coupons.
Would you invest in my company?
And what if I told you that this grocery store not only already exists,
but that it's crushing the competition?
They not only are at the top of the industry, but they're at the top by a wide, wide margin.
A look at the economics behind one of the most unconventional and beloved companies in America.
It's next time on Freakonomics Radio.
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