Article: Exploring Diasporic Perspectives with Children's Literature: A Guide for Diversifying Classroom Libraries with Black, Caribbean, and Indigenous Children's Literature, Dianne Wellington and Jasmyn Jones
I found this article very generative. While I'm not a librarian, having a diverse library and integrating diverse books into my curriculum is one of my special interests. I am jazzed about the book recommendations and happy to see that there are some I do not know!
I talk with my team a lot about books as doors and mirrors, but the reference to books as sliding glass doors from Bishop 1990 felt new to me. I often feel like my students struggle with the books I get them as windows because they lack the cultural context. I think books like Any Day With You or The First Rule of Punk are awesome, but students will engage with them as a read aloud, but not engage independently (those texts have been given back to me as "not my thing"). Maybe the books weren't the students' thing or maybe it was too unfamiliar.
I wonder how I can use the racial literacy development model described by Sealy-Ruiz. If I understand this article it's for teacher educators to use with pre-service teachers. But, how can I help my students critically reflect on their identities or biases? How can I help them analyze power? Such big questions.
Can I some how build this power analysis into teaching the students about countries of the world? Are they old enough/do they have enough context to think about who has power and who doesn't? As well as what that might mean?
Use the one observation (how can I explain that?!), one connection, one question one surprise
Develop discussion questions that model rethinking personal bias.
Freedom Soup, If Dominican Were a Color, Island Born