Offers positive parenting techniques for guiding young African American children through adolescence, exploring obstacles to creating positive identities, healthy resistance strategies, and the roles of school and church.
This stage of development is hard in itself. The writer helps us understand the importance of growing our children spiritually, emotionally and socially
Ward (education and humanities, Simmons Coll.) explores and codifies how contemporary African American parents prepare their children for healthy, successful adulthood in “a world where race clearly does make a difference.” Approaches that combat negative influences and racial stereotyping are termed “healthy resistance–”a positive, thoughtful model that “fuses knowledge gained from historical analyses and personal reflecskin were intion, a resistance born “from love and purpose, racial pride and connection.” Ward identifies family as the primary incubator and support mechanism for black youth and offers her methodology of “Read It, Name It, Oppose It, Replace It” to tackle racism. Informed by interviews with many African American parents and teens, this book is passionate, purposeful, thoughtful, and clear. Ward often frustrates, however, when she applies universal statements to blacks, e.g., “A black girl can be psychologically strong only when she knows and believes beauty is from the inside, not the outside.” Large public libraries as well as academic or educational collections with an emphasis on African American studies should purchase this book. Find reviews of books for men at Books for Dudes, Books for Dudes, the online reader's advisory column for men from Library Journal. Copyright Library Journal.