Add African American Dads to your Literacy Programs and Watch Magic Happen
In schools where African American boys may show little to no interest in reading, imitation can positively affect their reading success.
In schools where African American boys may show little to no interest in reading, imitation can positively affect their reading success.
This month “The Reading Quilt” shines a spotlight on the late Marva Collins, who worked passionately to help educate African American children who were dismissed as learning disabled, harmful, or unloveable.
The similarities between Beatrix Potter’s tales and the Brer Rabbit stories demand further consideration.
Winnie and Nelson: Portrait of a Marriage is at once a double biography of South Africa’s two famous liberation leaders and a historical love story about their personal lives
There has never been a time more crucial to amplify the voices of Black LGBTQIA+ activists, authors, and creators.
A new children’s book, Black and Bold Queens: Women in Ghana’s History explores the lives of 16 notable female pioneers and leaders in the West African country.
In her book Letter to My Daughter (Random House, 2008), Angelou details her life as a young mother to a daughter she never had.
The idea that there were no Black people in Britain in Dickensian times is prevalent, but wrong.
The love of this world – and the nostalgia it evokes – seems to supersede the problematic views of the creator.