Paula Young Shelton's Reading List
Paula Young Shelton is a children's author and first grade teacher at Georgetown Day School in Washington D.C.
Open in WellRead Daily app →The Best Antiracist Books for Kids (2020)
Scraped from fivebooks.com (2020-07-03).
Source: fivebooks.com
Brian Pinkney (Illustrator) & Carole Boston Weatherford · Buy on Amazon
"I love what Weatherford writes for children. I use a lot of her books in class like Moses and Voices of Freedom and Freedom on the Menu . Pick up any book that she’s written, and you’ve got a winner. But this book, In Your Hands , is special. It’s a touching story about a mother and a child who happened to be African American. The mother has all the same dreams that any mother has for her child, but she also is attuned and worried about how the world will perceive her child. This is something I could identify with as a mother. And this book is as much for the adult reading it as it is for the child. “I want children to understand, from a very young age, that we all have to work together for a better tomorrow” In many children’s books, the illustrations are brash and bright in color. These illustrations are light and warm tones. To me, it really embodies the warmth between a mother and child. Rhythm and music is so much a part of African American culture. I suspect that some of these books just naturally came out with a poetic rhythm, which is part of what makes them wonderful to read. Children particularly enjoy hearing rhythm and rhyme in the books."
Jacqueline Woodson & Rafael López (Illustrator) · Buy on Amazon
"This beautifully and brightly illustrated book is about a little girl entering into a new world. It could be a classroom or it could be anything. It features this beautiful African American girl with big, beautiful hair, talking about her expectations about entering someplace new and her thoughts about how she might be received. She eventually figures out how to make herself seen and heard. Sign up here for our newsletter featuring the best children’s and young adult books, as recommended by authors, teachers, librarians and, of course, kids. I read The Day You Begin at the beginning of my first grade year and leave the book prominently displayed through the year, because it captures what a lot of children go through as they experience new things. We all experience so many similar things and yet we each bring a different perspective, different expectations and different fears. It is part of our mission to be really inclusive and to teach history from all perspectives. So in first grade is we have a civil rights curriculum. We learn about Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks. We teach about the Civil Rights Movement. We also focus on child activists, like Ruby Bridges, the first African American child to integrate her school. We showcase stories of children standing up for themselves. It can be very inspirational to a young child."
Grace Byers & Keturah Bobo (Illustrator) · Buy on Amazon
"I Am Enough is a new book for me. It talks about recognizing that you are enough and that we are all enough, that we all deserve to be loved and respected and appreciated for who we are. It’s a lovely story with beautiful illustrations of its central character, an African American girl with big natural hair. It promotes self love to African Americans, but I also hope it promotes an appreciation for the beauty of African Americans by others. Absolutely. You’ll notice my selections feature African American girls. When I looked for books that feature boys, they were either for older boys or were written by white authors. There’s definitely an absence of positive images for African American boys in early childhood books. So we have to be careful what messages we’re sending to our girls and our boys."
John Steptoe · Buy on Amazon
"This is one of my favorite stories. I used to read it every year, as part of a unit on Cinderella stories. It is based on an African folktale. John Steptoe is a very gifted artist, he illustrates the African village so evocatively. Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters gives another perspective on beauty, outer beauty and inner beauty. In this particular Cinderella story the Prince chooses one of Mufaro’s daughters not only because of her physical beauty but because he’s seen how kind and giving she is to others. So there’s a focus on the inner beauty as well. And I just love this story because it’s a great folktale. Absolutely. I think we should be careful to teach kids not only about the pain and suffering of Black people, which there has been a lot of. Kids should also be exposed to the positive side of African ancestry. Familiarity with the great kingdoms that existed, and the great technology developed and the great science that was done in African civilizations helps people recognize the great talents in this race of people that goes back millennia."
Purple Wong (Illustrator) & Zetta Elliott · Buy on Amazon
"This is a touching story of a child who recognizes that she’s not being represented in museums, so she creates her own museum that represents her family and her community. A lot of people can identify with this story. Children of color need to recognize that they have the power to make change. All children need to recognize that, when they observe injustice happening, they can do something to change it. It’s important for African Americans to take on their own struggles and have white allies to support them. I want children to understand, from a very young age, that we all have to work together for a better tomorrow."