PRESENTING SUPERB RESEARCH THAT ADVANCES THE FIELD OF EDUCATION
We (Still) Be Lovin' Black Children Edition 2
African Diaspora Literacy, A Divine Ancestral Charge
- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975509330
- Language English
- Pages 150 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
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- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975509347
- Language English
- Pages 150 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
We STILL be lovin’ Black children.
Not sometimes.
Not conditionally.
Not when it is convenient.
We loved them in the past.
We love them now.
We will love them in the future.
In this expanded second edition, We (Still) Be Lovin’ Black Children:
African
Diaspora Literacy, A Divine Ancestral Charge, leading scholars, educators, and community leaders deepen the call to center African Diaspora Literacy as a foundation for healing, identity, and collective thriving. Across classrooms, homes, and communities in the United States, Africa, and the Caribbean, contributors offer practical strategies, critical questions, cultural frameworks, and affirming activities that protect Black children’s spirits while nurturing their brilliance.
At a time when Black histories are distorted, erased, or politicized, this book insists on truth-telling rooted in love. Grounded in African Indigenous Knowledge, Adinkra principles, intergenerational wisdom, and Pro-Black educational practices, authors demonstrate how literacy about the African diaspora is essential.
This edition includes new chapters, updated chapters, expanded global perspectives, new resources for families and educators, and timely guidance for confronting anti-Blackness in schools, media, and public discourse.
To love Black children is to teach them who they are.
To teach them who they are is to protect their souls and spirits.
To protect their souls and spirits is to secure our collective future.
This is a love book.
This is a liberation book.
This is an urgent book.
Perfect for courses such as: Foundations of Education; Black Education; African Studies; African American Studies; Introduction to Early Childhood Education;
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction—We (Still) Be Lovin’ Black Children
Part I— Black Folks in the United States
1. Open Love Letter to Black Families and
Communities
Kamania Wynter-Hoyte and Gloria Swindler Boutte
2. Pro-Blackness: What It Looks Like and What It Is
Gloria Swindler Boutte, Jarvais J. Jackson, George L. Johnson, Janice Baines, and Nicole Y. Strange-Martin
3. We Be Lovin Black History: Eight Best Teaching Practices Around Black History Education
LaGarrett J. King, Dawnavyn James, Abigail Henry, Gregory Simmons, and Daphanie Bibbs
4. My Soul Looks Back in Wonder: What Are
We Doing to “Serve the Present Age”?
Joyce E. King
5. What the Children We Be Lovin’ Have To Say
Preston King, Jaliyah S. Ware, and Janiyah S. Ware
6. Say It Loud—I’m Black and I’m Proud: Beauty, Brilliance, and Belonging in Our Homes, Classrooms, and Communities
Jarvais J. Jackson, Saudah N. Collins, Janice Baines, and Valente’ Gibson
7. Great Rising: Activities to Inspire Black
Teens and Youth
Shaquetta Moultrie, Antoinette Gibson, and Julia Dawson
8. Preparing Black Children to Identify and
Confront Racism in Books, Media, and Other
Texts: Critical Questions
Meir Muller
9. Each One, Teach One: Reflections and Lessons on Mentoring Young Men of Color
Ricardo O. Neal and Kindel Turner Nash
10. We Be Family
Kayla Hostetler and Jamon Dubose
11. The Crown on Your Head: Teaching African Diaspora Literacy Through Hair
Shayla Calhoun and Joy Howard
12. Teaching Our Children About Blackness
in the World
Lasana D. Kazembe, Leslie K. Etienne, and Tambra O. Jackson
Part II—Black Folks All Over the World
13. African Diaspora Literacy in Jamaica
and the Wider Caribbean
Dr. Clement T. M. Lambert
14. Lessons From Africa
Asangha Ngufor Muki, Samuel Ntewusu, Moepeola Omoegun, and Berte Van Wyk
15. We Be Schoolin’. We Be Schooled: Learning Across Educator Partnerships with Youth Voices at the Center
Safi Darden, Melody Kuziwa Jombe, Wahida Sussex and Ayanna Page
16. Resources
LaGarrett J. King, Gloria Swindler Boutte, Joyce E. King, George L. Johnson, Jr., and Jarvais J. Jackson
Appendix A: Dimensions of African American Culture
Appendix B: Ten Principles for Black Education and Socialization
About the Authors
Index
NOTE: Table of Contents subject to change up until publication date.
Gloria Swindler Boutte
Dr. Gloria Swindler Boutte is a Carolina Distinguished Professor at the University of South Carolina. She is the author/editor of eight books: (1) Pro-Blackness in Early Childhood Education: Diversifying Curriculum and Pedagogy in K-3 Classrooms; (2) Revolutionary Love: Nurturing the Brilliance of Young Black Children; (3) Educating African American Students: And How Are the Children (2nd edition); (4) We Be Lovin’ Black Children: Becoming Learning to Be Literate About the African Diaspora (2022 Society of Professors of Education Outstanding Book Award); (5) African Diaspora Literacy: The Heart of Transformation in K-12 Schools and Teacher Education (2019 AESA Critics Choice Award); (6) Educating African American Students: And How Are the Children; (7) Resounding Voices: School Experiences of People From Diverse Ethnic Backgrounds; and (8) Multicultural Education: Raising Consciousness.
She has more than 100 publications and presents nationally and internationally. She has received prestigious awards such as the Fulbright Scholar; Fulbright Specialist; National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) Outstanding Educator in the English Language Arts—Elementary Section; an AERA Division K Legacy Award; AERA 2022-23 Fellow Award; and an American Educational Research Association (AERA) Social Justice in Education Award. She was the founder and Executive Director of the Center for the Education and Equity of African American Students (CEEAAS). She has served as a Visiting Scholar and presented her work internationally on every continent except for Antarctica. She has led/co-led Fulbright Hays Groups projects in Ghana, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Cameroon, and Barbados. She has been a Visiting Scholar in Australia (twice), South Africa, Jamaica, Guyana, and Colombia. She has traveled to nine countries in Africa (at least one country in each region) and lived in Nigeria for a year and taught at the University of Uyo as a Fulbright Scholar.
Joyce Elaine King
Dr. Joyce E. King holds the Benjamin E. Mays Endowed Chair for Urban Teaching, Learning and Leadership at Georgia State University (GSU) in the Department of Educational Policy Studies. She holds affiliated faculty status in the Department of African American Studies, the Women’s and Gender Studies Institute, the Partnership for Urban Health Research, and the Urban Studies Institute. Her publications in the Harvard Educational Review, the Journal of Negro Education, International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, and the Journal of African American History focus on a transformative role for culture in curriculum and urban teacher effectiveness, morally engaged, community-mediated inquiry and Black education research and policy. Her most recent book is Heritage Knowledge in the Curriculum: Retrieving an African Episteme (with E. Swartz). Dr. King is past president of the American Educational Research Association, President of the Board of Directors of the Institute for Food and Development Policy (FoodFirst.org), a member of the National African American Reparations Commission and a recipient of the Stanford University School of Education Alumni Excellence Award (2018). A recent essay, “To Create a More Perfect Union, We the People Need Reparations to Heal Our Wounded Souls,” is published on the American Civil Liberties Union website: https://www.aclu.org/issues/create-more-perfect-union-we-people-need-reparations-heal-our-wounded-souls
George Lee Johnson, Jr.
Dr. George L. Johnson is Professor and Academic Program Coordinator of Special Education at South Carolina State University. For more than two decades, Dr. Johnson’s scholarship, teaching, and service has focused on equity pedagogies, teaching for social justice, and critical race theory in education with an emphasis on culturally and linguistically diverse students. He has taught and presented nationally and internationally on special education, diversity, and disproportionality, community, and equity issues. Dr. Johnson has numerous publications and has received $300,000 in grants. He has presented his work in Nigeria, Australia, New Zealand, England, Botswana, South Africa, and Sierra Leone. He is the co-author (with Gloria Boutte) of Drs. Diaspora Curriculum-a curriculum that teaches P-12 students about African and African American history.
LaGarrett J. King
Dr. LaGarrett J. King is a Professor and Founding Director for the Center for K-12 Black History and Racial Literacy Education at the University at Buffalo. With over 60 publications, Dr. King is a sought after speaker and leader in Black history education. He is a former classroom teacher who researches the teaching and learning of Black history in schools and society, teacher education and professional development, and the history of Black education.
Jarvais J. Jackson
Dr. Jarvais J. Jackson is a former elementary teacher and current Assistant Professor of Elementary Literacy Education at Indiana University Indianapolis. His work is grounded in pro-Blackness, culturally sustaining pedagogy, and the educational wellness of Black students and teachers. Drawing on qualitative and community-based research, Dr. Jackson partners with schools and families to prepare educators who center Black children’s lived experiences and affirm their brilliance. His scholarship explores family engagement, African Diaspora Literacy, and school-university partnerships that move beyond transactional involvement toward shared power and co-creation.
As a scholar-practitioner, Dr. Jackson actively collaborates and publishes with classroom teachers as part of his research, ensuring their voices remain central in efforts to transform education. Before joining IUI, he served as a Program Director and Assistant Professor at Georgia Southern University, where he led innovative teacher preparation efforts and built strong partnerships with local schools. He also directed statewide equity-focused initiatives through the Center for the Education and Equity of African American Students (CEEAAS).
Dr. Jackson currently serves on the Board of Directors for the National Association for School-University Partnerships (NASUP). His work has been published by Teachers College Press, and in The Urban Review and The Reading Teacher, and presented at AERA, NCTE, and the Black Doctoral Network. Across his teaching, research, and service, he remains committed to sustaining liberatory educational spaces where Black children and their communities can thrive.