Bringing this bestselling guide completely up-to-date, the authors address the current state of racism and anti-racism in the United States (including the election of the first African-American president); review recent child development research; discuss state standards and NCLB pressures on early childhood teaching; and more. The text includes teaching strategies, activities for families and staff, reflection questions, and updated organizational and website resources.
I read this book for my Early Childhood Issues and Methods course. This book really opened my eyes as to the stereotypes and biases that we may portray, and not even mean too. This book was also great for learning how to implement these anti-biases and how to handle the themes with every age group.
It was such a trip to read this book in 2024 and juxtapose the content on the Obama-era social climate vs now. I think this book has some really solid ideas, and I loved that they were able to back those ideas up with accounts of actually using them in early childhood centers. I was familiar with most of the concepts in the book already, but what was really eye-opening for me was the content on consumerism and capitalism. I had never made the connection before between those aspects of our culture in America and the ways in which we navigate and perceive race. I thought that an exploration of gender (and sexuality, but more so gender) was really missing from this book unfortunately, and there were times where that was very glaring in the language and content. However, since this was written 13 years ago, I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt and assume that explorations of gender would be prominently featured in a 2024 edition.
Derman-Sparks is an importance voice in antibas/multicultural education for young children and this is probably my favorite resource of hers. There is plenty of practical advice for educators (and parents) - and it is an excellent read even for those of us who work in environments where all the kids are not “all white”.
I appreciate the organization and flow of the book, the case studies included, as well as activities and ideas for working with parents and children in the classroom.
Highly recommend to anyone doing AB/AR work. Particularly the early childhood educators set. This was filled with amazing information and real strategies to use in the classroom, as well as some more intermediate level questions for those on their AB/AR journeys. One of the best teacher books I’ve ever read.
This book is for educators, trainers, and facilitators who need creative input and structure for implementing anti-bias multicultural learning in setting where most of the participants are white. Though it's geared for working with children, white adults would also benefit from these kinds of learning exercises.
I'm not a teacher, so I was reading this more for insight than for practical use. It was easy to read and it seemed like there were practical suggestions for educators. I gleaned some useful thoughts from it.
My colleague and I have expanded our book partnership to a group of four! So far the family aspect or rather the family-school-child connection seems so crucial in this work. It makes me really want to be attentive to this issue at our school.
This book is full of sound theory in the form of practical examples and suggested starting points for activities. What I love is the authors' attentiveness to listening to and knowing children and families.
It may sound arrogant of me, but I really do think everyone should read this book - especially if you identify as white. The history and strategies are infinitely valuable.