Skip to main content

Racism and Choices

Blogpost: Find a young adult novel/book or a comic/graphic novel that addresses issues of race/racism, and explain how you might use it in the classroom as part of an antiracist teaching practice.

I'm always the person that when asked for a good book for YA I will immediately pick The Hate U Give obviously because of its amazing narrative, and #Blacklivesmatter movement ideas. But I wanted to broaden my horizons for this assignment, and find some other material that could be used to help fight racism in schools. The first book that I came across was a similar one. The book Dear Martin is also a great book to teach parallel to The Hate U Give.


Both of these texts are about young Black students who are extremely smart and talented and are racially profiled in one way or another. The best thing about these is that one is in the perspective of a girl who witnesses a friend shot by police, and the other is a boy who is arrested and assumed dangerous by police. Both offer some great insight into the different ways that racism affects them in their worlds.

To use these texts in the classroom I have a few ideas for a unit I could do on these for two to three weeks. Here are my ideas:


  • Give students the choice. Which would they prefer to read? Maybe have them do a quick write about why they choose the one they choose. Allow the students to read them parallel to each other.
  • Read a Martin Luther King speech together. Listen to the song "THUG LIFE" by Tupac and discuss the two different messages that each one of them is saying is important and compare and contrast their viewpoints.
  • Have students explore the ideas of the #Blacklivesmatter movement. Talk about the history involved with the Black Panthers and the idea of police brutality today.
  • Get students to watch some of the current footage from some of the police brutality that we see today and compare that with old photos of slavery and the abuse that the African American has faced. Have them write about personal feelings towards it.
  • Have students write a paper at end of the unit. Leave it really open ended and encourage creativity. Write a song, a letter to someone in power, a journal, a narrative of their own experiences with racism, etc. This can be the summative assessment at the end of the unit.
These are obviously just some random ideas for a few week long unit that would take some serious time and work to really get into. However, it's really worth the work to let our students have so much freedom and choice here. These two books are SO important to our current society that they should both be read, but there isn't enough time for that. So this way students can have a choice to relate to one over the other.

That's all I have for today anyway! Have a great weekend everyone, and stay safe.

Comments

  1. I love your lesson ideas. Letting students choose what books they read can be the best idea so they feel they have more freedom in their learning. I'll have to look into these two books. I've heard a little about The Hate U Give but not Dear Martin.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

New Beginnings and Golden Nuggets

     As far as the first two pieces of text go, from the NCTE and from Radical Eyes, there is a connection being made between what we as teachers need to be doing for our students, rather than teaching them to get good grades on tests for our benefit. Both pieces spent a lot of time talking about how important and useful it can be to have some sort of handheld device or digital media at your fingertips. And yet, I think that so many people still try and stifle the use of these great resources for sake of keeping tradition. In my high school experiences our teachers used projectors, and never went out of their way to use other technologies what-so-ever. Was that because they were not properly taught how to go about using them? Or was it simply laziness and old habit that kept them from reforming their lessons to include some sort of digital aspects?       Now, my sister just graduated from High School last year. Her class had...

Problems and Solutions

      Let me start this post out by saying that I absolutely love listening to TEDTALKS, because when they are finished I find myself utterly inspired to go out and make a difference in some lives.       That being said, I found this weeks reading and video to be extremely important. These are absolutely things that I want to incorporate into my everyday routine with my students when I am a teacher. And no, I'm not just saying that at all.       Growing up in HS I can count maybe one or two books that had any culturally diverse characters. African American literature? Never experienced it. Not until the college level anyways, which is pretty sad when I think about it. All the beautiful writing that I was denied, just because of the need to teach the "dead white guys" who were prevalent to the times.       I absolutely love the idea of comparing literature, especially poetry, to hip-hop and rap. Growing...

Let's 86 the Five Paragraph Essays!

Ok... so this was a pretty lengthy chapter, but I must say, I loved just about every bit of  it. It's stocked full of different ways to get our students to write in the classroom. So, let's take some time to break it down. *And the beat drops* One of my favorite ideas in this chapter is the idea that Christensen "teach[es] students specific methods of "retrieving" and "collecting" information from readings, media, and discussions, and I engage them in discussing the topic."(121) All to often in our HS experiences I am sure that we went through an entire unit, read the novel, and were THEN given the paper assignment, which we then proceed to having to go back and basically redo all sorts of work to find the evidence. This is so discouraging as a student! Why are these essays such a big secret for the whole unit, and then given at the end? It makes no sense. This is what Christensen is trying to argue in the first part of the chapter. Why are we no...