Parenting Meets Race #17: This Week’s Must Read Stories

Parenting Meets Race Round-Up

I’ve been remiss this summer on parenting meets race stories, but hopefully I can make it up to you this month. Without a set routine during the summer, I’m doing less. No frantic, overflowing to-do list. It’s been a good change, but won’t last as the kids return from their grandparents soon. I’ll enjoy the quiet while it lasts!

This week’s parenting meets race stories are:

  • Dreaming of Oz (Entropy Mag)
  • Brendan Kiely’s and Jason Reynolds’s Coretta Scott King Author Honor Speeches for “All American Boys” (School Library Journal)
  • Third Graders Assess and Improve Diversity of Classroom Library (Teaching For Change)
  • What institutionalized racism looks like inside our system of education (dooce)
  • When your parents speak broken English (Angry Asian Man)
  • Teaching about race, racism and police violence: Resources for educators and parents (Washington Post)
  • A Letter From Young Asian-Americans To Their Families About Black Lives Matter (NPR Code Switch)
  • The fear of raising biracial babies could lead to new era of segregation (New York Post)
  • In the narrative of race, why only black ink on white paper? (Star Tribune)

What parenting meets race stories have you read this week? Share in the comments!