The guiding questions that lead to the creation of A Journey through Care: Healing Justice and Arts were 1. How do Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and API girls and TGNC youth experience care? And un-care? 2. How do t […]
The guiding question I’m using for my UnFinal project is, “How is the tradition of classroom care passed on?” I will share a piece of my 2nd exam that addresses this question through a Black educational histor […]
Here is my website. For now, the lesson plans are what I focused on. I plan to develop the resources, readings and my blog as times goes on. Thank you all for a wonderful semester. 🙂
In what immediate ways can care transform the classroom for both students and teachers?What does care look like in a school system driven by capitalism? Can those even coexist?How can care […]
So you know how at the beginning of the semester Rosa posed the question ‘How do you measure radical care?’ and I was feeling spicy and responded ‘Should we???’? Remember that? Okay well I am about to be the […]
The Education for Liberation Playlist is a lyrical and visual exploration of what education for liberation can look like, feel like, and sound like. Both a personal reflection and an […]
I want to start off with this quote, “To truly transform education, we must first deepen our understanding of the great battle that we are in. This begins with actually asking people of color what they want and […]
I really appreciated your post Lucy. It reminded of a panel hosted by the NYC Alliance for School Integration and Desegregation a few years ago where they were discuss the needs for, benefits of, and barriers to […]
In a nation divided by race and reality, efforts to advance anti-racist, culturally responsive, and equitable approaches to education face great opposition from an emboldened coalition of white militants, […]
Lydia, I completely agree. It’s like, who is taking care of the poor kids that are being thrust into these hostile spaces? What do students of color lose when they attend schools that are not made for them? How […]
I have to start my response to the work of Sonya Douglass Horsford with a short rant that speaks to my experience with the quote, “even on issues of race and equity, white allies are the experts, taking up s […]