76: Getting Young Black Boys to Say “I’m a Reader”: An Interview with Barbershop Books Founder, Alvin Irby

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Dear White Women

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Here on the podcast, we’ve been focusing on the intentionality of this sustainable lifestyle shift.  It can’t be just reading an anti-racism book once to your child and - suddenly - your child is an anti-racist forever.  It has to be more than that, and it has to last longer than a month. That’s where Barbershop Books comes in. For those of you who may be wondering why this organization exists, it came out of an idea that its founder, Alvin Irby, had while he was getting his hair cut at his local barbershop in New York, and noticed one of his young students there. What Alvin has done is nothing short of amazing in terms of changing the trajectory of Black boys and their relationship with reading - all stemming from the barbershop, which is a Black cultural center in American neighborhoods.   We hope you enjoy this interview as much as we did - and we hope you get involved with this amazing organization. Have questions, comments, or concerns?  Email us at hello@dearwhitewomen.com What to listen for:  The importance of helping young children identify as readers - in particular, helping young Black boys identify as readers. Why children’s books need to have diverse children doing diverse things that interest children themselves (i.e. why they shouldn’t all be about slavery or civil rights icons). How interest from White families spiked after George Floyd’s murder - and then leveled out over the last few months - and what White parents can do differently. How to support Barbershop Books: https://barbershopbooks.org/about-us/ Twitter @barbershopbooks Alvin Irby @alvinirby  Like what you hear? Support us through Patreon!   Don’t miss another episode and subscribe to the podcast! Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter – and don’t miss our new anti-racism action calendar by joining our email list.