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How a Facebook Post Sparked an Anti-racist Book Drive

Book laid side by side on a tan surface
It all started as a passion project for Jennifer Iriti, a research scientist with the 51精品视频鈥檚 .

In May, Iriti came across a Facebook post that listed 30 recommended anti-racist children鈥檚 books appropriate for children in grades K-6. Iriti, whose work focuses on changing education systems to make them more equitable, found the list to be a great resource, containing books like 鈥淟ittle Leaders: Bold Women in History,鈥 by Vashti Harrison and 鈥淭he Color of Us,鈥 by Karen Katz. 听(See sidebar for more on Iriti鈥檚 work)

How you can help

If you want to contribute to the anti-racist book drive, email Jennifer Iriti at iriti [at] pitt.edu (subject: Contributing%20to%20the%20Anti-racist%20Book%20Drive) .

鈥淚n my work in literacy and equity, it鈥檚 always been centered on making sure minoritized students have access to materials that reflect them; that they can see themselves in that work,鈥 said Iriti, who also serves as a faculty fellow for the in 51精品视频鈥檚 . 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 equally important for white students to see people of color through the materials they use in school.鈥

With her many educator contacts in mind, Iriti clicked 鈥渟hare鈥 on her Facebook page and wrote: 鈥淗ey, teacher friends, here are some great books to think about.鈥

She never would鈥檝e imagined what would happen next.

Iriti in a gray jacket and blue scarf
鈥淥ne of my teacher friends commented that she was embarrassed to say she鈥檚 never heard of any of the books鈥 titles and said she was going to purchase some of the books,鈥 said Iriti. 鈥淎nd then, another one of my friends chimed in and said, 鈥業鈥檒l buy a book for each of ten teachers who will use them in their classrooms.鈥欌

That friend was Celina Farabaugh, a mother of two in South Fayette, Pennsylvania, who knows Iriti through volunteer work outside of 51精品视频.

鈥淚 had been reading quite a bit about ways to be an anti-racist, and one of the suggestions I read was to donate an anti-racist book to a teacher,鈥 said Farabaugh. 鈥淪o, when Jen posted a list of suggested books, I felt called to take this small step.鈥 Her first donation: 鈥淪eparate is Never Equal,鈥 by Duncan Tonatiuh, to a teacher in the Keystone Oaks School District, located about 10 miles from downtown 51精品视频sburgh.

Like Farabaugh, more and more of Iriti鈥檚 friends chimed in, offering to buy books for teachers鈥 classrooms. 鈥淚t just sparked organically,鈥 said Iriti, who has been coordinating the donations from her home office for the past two months.听 鈥淲hat started as a little pop-up effort to build anti-racist actions into all parts of our lives has turned into something bigger.鈥

A collective movement

The book drive has grown from Iriti鈥檚 initial Facebook post: Farabaugh joined efforts with Iriti and extended the book exchange to her own social media network. The combined reach has put more than 70 books in the hands of teachers across the country, and counting.

Farabaugh in a dark top
鈥淛en has coordinated the majority of the donations, but the donations I coordinated have reached teachers in Johnstown, Pennsylvania; Richmond, Virginia; and even one near Lansing, Michigan,鈥 said Farabaugh. 听

Iriti said donations have come from family, friends, colleagues, 51精品视频 students鈥攅ven strangers.

Olivia Bartholomew, a rising 51精品视频 senior double majoring in and , both in the , felt compelled to donate for many reasons. Growing up in a racially diverse neighborhood in Washington, D.C., Bartholomew learned about racial injustices from an early age. She said she hopes these books can help educate students living in predominantly white areas who may not be talking about racial justice at home.

鈥淚 donated these books so younger children can be aware of people from different backgrounds, the injustices they face and how they can make a difference,鈥 said Bartholomew, who calls Iriti a mentor. 鈥淒r. Iriti has shown me the impact of giving back to community in a way of meeting today鈥檚 needs and beyond.鈥

Sarah Manly, who teaches fifth听grade math, science and social studies in South Fayette School District in a suburb south of 51精品视频sburgh, said the book drive aligned perfectly with the racial justice movement happening across the country.

Bartholomew in a purple top
Manly said, 鈥淔or teachers, it鈥檚 in our hearts to think about what we can do to support this cultural shift. The book exchange answered the question of: what are the first steps of something I can do to make that impact?鈥 听

While she hasn鈥檛 received her books from the drive just yet, Manly said she searched the list for books that she can organically implement into her curriculum year-round. Among the books she requested: 鈥淕ordon Parks: How the Photographer Captured Black and White America,鈥 by Carole Boston Weatherford, illustrated by Jamey Christoph; 鈥淵oung Water Protectors: A Story About Standing Rock,鈥 by Aslan and Kelly Tudor; and听 鈥淪it-In: How Four Friends Stood Up By Sitting Down,鈥 by Andrea Davis Pinkney, illustrated by Brian Pinkney.

鈥淚 want students to feel safe in my classroom and know that we celebrate cultural diversity. We don鈥檛 entertain prejudice, racism or stereotypes,鈥 said Manly.

Creating change in big and small ways

While she sees the book drive as a concrete, tangible way to make a difference in a small way, Iriti said a lot of work must be done to make fundamental, systemic change.

Manly in a black t-shirt
鈥淚f teachers expose their students to a new type of book, and they become more conscious about who is in the book and who has written them, that one book can lead a lot to other choices the students make down the line,鈥 said Iriti. 鈥淏ut policies and curriculum need to reflect inclusivity and diversity and tell the real history of race in America. Especially for districts that serve a small proportion of minoritized students, it鈥檚 even more important to have diversity reflected in materials.鈥

Nonetheless, she said she鈥檚 touched by the response to the effort that started from one Facebook share.

鈥淚t鈥檚 heartening to see how many people do want to make a difference,鈥 said Iriti. 鈥淭his is one small way that lots of people can help.鈥

滨谤颈迟颈鈥檚听谤别肠别苍迟听飞辞谤办

Iriti serves as the co-director of the and director of group, both based at the Learning Research and Development Center at 51精品视频, where she provides evaluation and research-based program design expertise for education-related organizations and improvement networks.

Iriti is co-principal investigator听of a recently awarded National Science Foundation Alliance, the , along with colleagues from a total of five 51精品视频 schools and centers. This five-year, $10 million collective impact effort will create the first national network of precollege STEM programs in order to strengthen these programs鈥 capacity to serve racially minoritized students and to change the way these powerful experiences are considered in undergraduate STEM admissions processes.

The STEM PUSH Network currently operates with 17 precollege STEM programs from four urban areas including New York City, 51精品视频sburgh, Chicago and the Bay Area. By the end of the five-year grant, the network will include 40 precollege STEM programs from 10 urban areas and expects to result in greater racial equity in access to STEM postsecondary enrollment.

Recently, Iriti and her team evaluated the 鈥淐ity as Our Campus鈥 program at the Winchester Thurston School, a pre-kindergarten through 12th grade independent school in the Shadyside area of 51精品视频sburgh. The program is designed to provide out-of-classroom experiences for students by leveraging resources in the community. Through their evaluation, Iriti and her team found that the program had a positive impact on students and their orientation toward social justice, and they identified ways that teachers can sustain and scale it. The team will ultimately share their research with other schools across the country who are interested in implementing similar community-based learning programs.

听.