UC Riverside, School of Education is creating a NEW Counseling program and we are looking for a Director to begin to dream and build with us!! PLEASE share this and encourage folx to apply. If you have any questions, please feel free to message me!
aprecruit.ucr.edu/JPF02023
Posts by Alice Y. Lee
She is so brilliant!!!
Thank you for joining on! I appreciate your contributions!!
I want to add that even before we reached out to have @draliceylee.bsky.social host that I was doing a lot of reading and came across her article "Why “Correcting” African American Language Speakers is Counterproductive," which I recommend! 💖
The slide reads: "To learn more about Black Language, check out www.blacklanguagesyllabus.com edited by Dr. April Baker-Bell and Dr. Carmen Kynard" and features a screenshot of the website.
To learn more about Black Language, check out www.blacklanguagesyl... edited by Dr. April Baker-Bell and Dr. Carmen Kynard. #literacies
The slide reads: Thank you for joining us tonight! For further reading, read this article by Dr. Lee (https://tinyurl.com/DrLeeArticle) titled “The Science of Language and Anti-Blackness: Accounting for Black Language in Reading Instruction, Interventions, and Assessment" and has a screenshot of the first page of the article.
Thank you for joining us tonight! For further reading, read this article by Dr. Lee (tinyurl.com/DrLeeArt...) titled “The Science of Language and Anti-Blackness: Accounting for Black Language in Reading Instruction, Interventions, and Assessment" #literacies
Yes! They are pioneers and featured on www.blacklanguagesyllabus.com
The slide reads: "You can also read this blog post featuring Dr. Lee’s expertise about why correcting Black Language doesn’t help students. https://tinyurl.com/DrLeeBlogPost" and features a screenshot of the article.
You can also read this blog post featuring Dr. Lee’s expertise about why correcting Black Language doesn’t help students. tinyurl.com/DrLeeBlo... #literacies
A6 (part 2): In addition to these scholars and those featured on the site, I also follow the work of Drs. Gloria Boutte, Brittany Frieson, Sonja Lanehart, and Anne Charity Hudley. #literacies
A6 (part 1): www.blacklanguagesyllabus.com was created by Dr. April Baker-Bell and Dr. Carmen Kynard and is an amazing resource that features so many important Black Language scholars, including the voice of Dr. Teaira McMurtry! #literacies
YES!!
Students need to be allowed to use all their learning tools for learning, including Black Language.
Yes!!! Excellent point!!
A5 (part 3): However, given the reparations still owed to Black communities, a good principle is to give more than you receive. #literacies
A5 (part 2): The 1st step is always educating yourself. But sometimes you don’t know what you don’t know. This is where being in community with Black communities is important–not just to learn (a form of taking), but also to serve and give within your capacity. #literacies
A5 (part 1): I have an article coming out next year entitled, “Taking Off My Shoes”: Entering Black Educational Advocacy as a Chinese American Scholar Seeking Justice and Solidarity, in which I get into much more detail about my journey into this work. #literacies
A4 (part 3): We need non-Black teachers of color and White teachers to also be on the frontlines advocating for Black Language and fighting against white supremacist practices
in schools and society. Black Language speakers deserve the right to use their mother tongue to learn! #literacies.
A4 (part 2): While I believe all teachers need education and professional development, my own research explores the important linguistic assets Black teachers bring to classrooms. We need bilingual Black Language-speaking teachers who can leverage the language for learning. #literacies
A4 (part 1): There are too many to name here! But to start, we need wide education that Black Language is a real language in all teacher preparation and in schools. We also need all communities to advocate for societal acceptance of Black Language. #literacies
A3 (part 4): Our space was imbued with love from Dr. Carmen Kynard and Dr. Teaira McMurtry as guest speakers and who have been critical in helping me build the Consortium! #literacies
A3 (part 3): From it, I created the Black Language Research Consortium with my students, and the space in each classroom was powerful! So much so that I’ve co-authored about it with my students and we’re moving the work into our communities. #literacies
A3 (part 2): As a teacher educator, I’ve taught and written about how I’ve centered Black Language in literacy methods courses. After coming to UCR, I had the honor of creating the 1st Black Language course in partnership with the Black Studies department. #literacies
A3 (part 1): I began imagining and playing with what honoring Black Language might look like in the classroom as a 5th grade teacher. I wasn’t satisfied with what I had come up with before I left the classroom, so I’ve continued this journey for the last decade. #literacies
Black students are multilingual, so "standard" English already have a variety of tools to learn. If we really want them to succeed in the world, we would let them use all the tools they have to build their learning.
Beautiful!!
YES! So simple, but not easy given our context.
Yes, there is nothing linguistically legitimate about "standard" English
A2 (part 3): Many Black students are already bilingual in White Mainstream English and Black Language. To foster bilingualism, encourage a translanguaging classroom. #literacies
A2 (part 2): Seeing Black students as struggling to learn “standard English” is a homegrown problem in this country. Also, go to: www.pbs.org/speak/seatos... to see why “standard English” is not linguistically legit. #literacies
A2 (part 1): This is a common reaction because white supremacist norms frame Black people with language deficits. We never imagine the opposite–that they can be bilingual, multilingual. Multilingualism is normal for Black people, globally. #literacies