
After reading What about Me? by Ed Young, the children created their own collaged images…



After reading What about Me? by Ed Young, the children created their own collaged images…











My students made their own versions of the African American Flag after an art lesson on David Hammons.
I had the flags sitting in my apartment and finally placed them throughout my building.

As tradition has it, every first Monday of each month, my school would gather for assembly. We will lift our voices and sing the anthem.
This Monday we were muted. We listed to a muffled Dr. Roland Carter version.
We listened to our Principal tell us the virtue of the month, Resilience. Resilience.
And, just like that, Assembly was over.
When the question was asked, anyone have anything to say, the students unmuted their microphones and said hi. Cries of children saying hi as if they wouldn’t have an opportunity to be heard. Calling teacher names and saying they missed them.
This was the first assembly I cried. The first assembly I didn’t have to speak to any children nor lead them in a rendition of the Black National Anthem.
Another voice came. Assembly is over, please hang up.
No one moved. Everyone stayed. No one spoke. just stayed in the call. Until the call was dropped.

Brother Leroy is holding one of the calendars he purchased from me… behind his back.





Created by the fourth grade


How my students see my Sister.
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