As a student at Garfield High School, Anthony Washington would walk by a special education classroom and sometimes see friends whoâd been sent there for being disruptive.
ââHold up!ââ Washington remembers thinking, his deep voice rising an octave. ââWhy is so-and-so in there?ââ
Special education, implemented properly, can be transformative. It provides critical support and helps students engage and succeed in school and beyond. But what Washington was seeing was different â and in his experience, it would become an alarming pattern, especially for young men of color.
Though his friends may have acted out in class, the root causes of their behavior â trauma, violence, poverty â werenât being addressed. Instead, the special education classroom was used to keep them from distracting others in general education classes. And in missing those classes, his friends were falling further behind. It was unfair both to Washingtonâs friends and to the students who did benefit from special education.
From the basketball court to the classroom
But back then, Washington was focused on basketball, not school. His junior and senior years, he played on a Garfield team brimming with talent â including future Huskies Brandon Roy, Will Conroy and Tre Simmons â and a basketball scholarship brought Washington to the ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșin 2002. But after two years fraught with injury and frustration, he transferred to Portland State University and then left for a decade-long professional basketball career abroad.
With stints in Germany, Qatar and the Dominican Republic, Washington says, âI kept thinking I was about to make it to the NBA.â But eventually, repeated injuries forced him to face a different reality.
He took stock of his options: âI decided to hold myself accountable. My mom had gone back to school. My grandparents were educators. Why did I feel like basketball was the only route I could take? I was like, âMan. I want to teach.ââ
Washington hung up his sneakers in 2015 and reenrolled in the ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșto become a teacher. This time, he was focused. âIt was all about not letting an opportunity fade,â he says of his second chance at a degree. âI pursued it wholeheartedly.â
Washingtonâs confidence grew. He made the deanâs list. And in 2016, he earned his bachelorâs in American ethnic studies and landed a job as a substitute special education instructional assistant at a Seattle-area middle school.
âMost of the adults in this building couldnât deal with some of the stuff my students are dealing with.â
Changing the narrative
On his first day, Washington took in the classroom. âIt was me and eight Black boys in a room. I didnât have any instructions. I wasnât told what to do with them. I started to realize: âIâm 6’10”, Iâm 270 pounds,ââ he recalls. ââI think Iâm just supposed to control these kids.ââ
But he didnât want to control them. He wanted to teach them. The job became permanent, and Washington recognized a familiar, frustrating theme: the misuse of the special education classroom, and its connection to the criminal justice system for a disproportionate number of young Black men.
He remembered the fate of several of his high school friends: Sent to special education for behavioral issues without help for the underlying causes, they were considered problem students and more likely to face disciplinary actions like suspension.
As they watched their teachersâ confidence in them wane, they lost confidence in themselves. School wasnât serving them, and they eventually stopped attending; some got involved with gangs or drugs, and some were now in prison. Once theyâd been labeled disruptive or difficult, it was as if his friends â and their teachers â were locked into that narrative.
Washington worried that some of his middle school students were headed toward a similar future: âWhen I would get called to gen-ed classrooms my students were in, it was because teachers wanted me to carry them out. It wasnât like, âHey, I need you to have a conversation with this guy.â It was, âI need him out of my room.ââ
Washingtonâs goal came into focus: He wanted to be a mentor and advocate, giving students the empathy and accountability that seemed lacking. He decided to become a full-fledged special-ed teacher. And that meant returning to the ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșonce more.
âIâm big on accountability, because thatâs what my students need. But Iâve got to be compassionate.â

The Husky 100
Washingtonâs hard work at the ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșpaid off. In 2019, he was a member of  â a select group of ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșstudents making the most of their time at the University.
A clean slate
In 2017, Washington enrolled in the masterâs program in special education at the ÌìĂÀÓ°ÔșCollege of Education. His second year, he was selected for a graduate-student teaching position at the . There, children with and without disabilities learn alongside one another.
âAt the EEU, all the kids are so curious,â says Washington with a broad smile. âTheyâre interested in everything â theyâre a clean slate. This is probably what my middle schoolers used to act like. It reminded me that their curiosity is still there. It helped me stand tall on that.â
Life lessons
Washington is now in his second year as a special education teacher at Garfield High School. His connection to the Garfield community gives him a strong stake in his studentsâ growth, and his ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșand EEU training helps him create an inclusive environment where his special education students thrive â and helps him advocate for each student to be in the right learning environment for them.
âIf youâre not able to take certain classes because youâre kicked out all the time, youâre not just hurt on a daily basis,â Washington says. âYouâre hurt in the long run.â
He adds, âIâm big on accountability, because thatâs what my students need. But Iâve got to be compassionate.â
Some of his students come to school as a safe haven: âWhere they can rest. Where they can eat. Where they can hear from a positive Black dude. Most of the adults in this building couldnât deal with some of the stuff my students are dealing with.â
Sometimes Washington shares lessons from his own life, speaking frankly of his regrets about leaving the ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșduring his undergrad years. In describing how he ultimately took responsibility for his future, he hopes to be a role model.
Washington is grateful for the opportunities heâs had. âThe ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșand the EEU â and the scholarship funding â set me up to reach these kids. To give kids who got written off a chance to get their life together. Maybe even go to college.â
Originally published April 2021