Former teacher, coach, and pro basketball team co-owner Andre Levingston

Andre Levingston

Former teacher, coach, and pro basketball team co-owner Andre Levingston

There are many classroom teachers who have also earned a name for themselves in an arena outside of the classroom. This is true for Andre Levingston, who at one time was a co-owner of a professional basketball team in Halifax, Canada.

Andre was born in 1965 and raised in a disadvantaged neighborhood of Detroit, Michigan. Once he graduated from high school, he attended California State University, Chico, where he played basketball at the NCAA Division III level. At Chico Andre earned his Bachelor’s degree in Child Psychology.

After his graduation, he became a fourth grade teacher at the Paul Robeson Academy in Detroit. Robeson Academy is a school where the enrollment is comprised primarily of young African American boys. At Robeson Andre also coached basketball. “It was an amazing school, one of the best things I’ve ever been a part of,” Andre once said. “We were losing too many Black boys to the streets, to violence, to jail. There were a lot of single parents, women ran homes, and when (kids) came to school it was all women. We wanted them to see positive men,” he continued.

When Andre decided to relocate to Ontario, Canada, he opened two businesses: a restaurant and a custom car shop. While living in Ontario, Andre was asked to help bring a basketball team to Mississauga. He wasn’t able to put that deal together, but later he heard that Halifax was eager to have a professional basketball team, so Andre went there to establish The Rainmen. His team played until 2015, when it was disbanded.

While he was associated with the Rainmen, Andre encouraged his players to become involved in some aspect of community service. Community service is obviously a passion for Andre. “I stumbled into teaching, but it was the best thing I’ve ever done because I had the opportunity to affect the lives of children,” the former educator once said. “And now basketball is an extension of that classroom. Instead of affecting 30 kids, I get to affect an entire community,” he concluded.