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First Name Basis Podcast

7.6: Age Appropriate Anti-Racism

First Name Basis Podcast

Jasmine Bradshaw

How To, Parenting, Education, Kids & Family

5629 Ratings

🗓️ 27 September 2022

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

My dear friends, we have been on this anti-racism journey together for 3 years, and it’s AMAZING to think about the growth we’ve gone through together. 

Over the course of more than 100 episodes, we’ve gone from talking about the basic building blocks to more in-depth conversations. And just like we as adults have worked to build up our own understanding of anti-racism, we need to do that for our kiddos too — and we need to do it in a way that is developmentally appropriate.

These conversations need to be happening while our kiddos are young, but that doesn’t mean we need to have them drinking out of the fire hose — we need to see where they are and present the concepts in a way that is appropriate for their current understanding, using their language.

So how do you do that? We’re here to help! In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • Why we need to be having these conversations and providing the building blocks to our young kiddos.
  • The 4 goals of anti-bias education and how they apply differently to different age groups.
  • More about our two at-home anti-racist education programs — Ally Elementary and Ally Elementary Jr. — and how each can help you creat an anti-racist family culture.

 

Ally Elementary and Ally Elementary Jr.

Registration is now open for both Ally Elementary and Ally Elementary Jr.!

Parents have been asking for a practical, interactive way to implement the anti-racist strategies that I lay out in the First Name Basis Podcast, so I created Ally Elementary and Ally Elementary Jr. 

Ally Elementary is geared toward third-eighth graders, while Ally Elementary Jr. is for the smaller allies in our lives who are in preschool-second grade.

During these programs, parents will work together with their children to create a culture of anti-racism in their home. We will use hands-on activities to teach our children about everything from the untold story of how race was created to how they can disrupt racism in their everyday lives to how they can learn more about their individual identity and culture. I am so excited to watch the families in our community make a meaningful transformation and improve their communities through anti-racist action.

Registration closes September 30, so don’t miss your chance. Head over to firstnamebasis.org/sneakpeek for a look inside the programs and to receive a coupon code straight to your inbox!

Click here to join the waitlist for Ally Elementary (for third-eighth graders) 

Click here to join the waitlist for Ally Elementary Jr. (for preschool-second graders)



Articles, Studies & Podcasts Referenced in the Episode

First Name Basis Podcast, Season 5, Episode 9: “Don't Wait Until Something Bad Happens To Talk To Your Kids About Race with Dr. Lucretia Berry

Conversations With Kids About Race” by Margaret A.

Anti-Bias Education for Young Children and Ourselves” by Louise Derman-Sparks & Julie Olsen Edwards

 

Song Credit: “Sleeper” by Steve Adams” and “Dive Down” by VYEN

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're listening to the First Name Basis podcast, Season 7, Episode 6, age appropriate anti-racism.

0:13.6

Teaching our children to be inclusive and anti-racist starts with us within the sacred walls of our home. First-name basis is designed to

0:23.5

empower you with the confidence you need to be a leader in your family and a changemaker in your

0:28.7

community. Together, we will wrestle with hard questions and use the answers to create the world we

0:35.2

want, a world that reflects our values of inclusion, compassion,

0:39.6

and courage. I'm your host, Jasmine Bradshaw, and I am so excited to be on this journey with you.

0:49.4

Hello, First Name Basis, fam. I am so glad you are here. Y'all, do you realize that we have been doing

0:58.1

this journey together for such a long time? We have had so many amazing conversations about skin tone,

1:06.9

race, racism, anti-racism. I'm just so grateful for all of the progress we've made and all of the

1:13.2

ground we've covered. And for this episode, I want to zoom out and talk a little bit more about

1:19.8

our kiddos. I want you to take a second and think back to the first time you press play on

1:25.3

first name basis. And if this is your first time, welcome.

1:28.5

We are so glad you are now in our first name basis family. But if you are a person who press

1:33.4

play, that means that you are probably a parent, a caregiver, or a teacher who cares about

1:38.8

and loves kiddos and cares about and loves your community. And you want to take those two things that you really

1:44.9

care about and love and connect them together in a meaningful way. So today, we're going to be

1:50.7

talking about our kiddos and how we can help them become well-rounded, contributing members

1:55.6

of their community who are committed to anti-racism. And we are going to do it in a way that is developmentally

2:02.4

appropriate. So I hope you are ready because this is going to blow your mind when I tell you

2:08.5

about the different goals of anti-biased and anti-racist education and how we create activities

2:14.5

that go along with supporting those goals for our children. But first, I have to

2:20.6

tell you that enrollment for Ally Elementary and Ally Elementary Jr. are officially open. We only

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