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A Message of Joy from Justis

In a time of fear and uncertainty, Justis Lopez has found a way to become an ambassador for happiness.

Mr. Lopez and his partner in creativity, Ryan Parker, have built on the elements of hip hop to write a song to brighten children’s spirits while conveying a powerful message.

“Our song – ‘Happyvism’ – is centered on Black and Brown boy joy and the power and significance of self-love as a form of activism and radical resistance,” Mr. Lopez said.

                            Justis Lopez

Watch the music video performed by Lopez and Parker here.

Mr. Lopez received an Alma Exley Memorial Scholarship in 2015 when he was a student in the Neag School of Education at UConn.

Also a Happyvism Book

Lopez and Parker also have produced a children’s book on Happyvism. As Mr. Lopez said, “This book communicates the significance, necessity and power of embracing joy in the face of a world riddled with trauma and oppression specifically as it relates to Black and Brown bodies.

“Additionally, this book embraces the beauty and need for Black and Brown boy joy and emphasizes the fact that maintaining happiness about who you are and what you think, say and do in a world that consistently goes against the grain of your identity is a form of activism in itself. Hence: Happyvism.

“We expect to release the book in December,” he said. “The target audience is K-6 educators. We wanted to create a project for the little ones. It’s all new to us, but we are really excited to be working with Ivy (Horan) on this project.”

Music Video Goes to School

Ivy Horan, honored with an Alma Exley scholarship in 2018, used the music video in her second-grade class at Mayberry School in East Hartford.

“I had been thinking about ways to incorporate more music into my classroom,” she said. “The class was doing an activity about emotions when I remembered Justis’s Happyvism music video. I played it for the students once, and they were hooked. They loved the song. We played it three more times that day.

“After school, I reached out to Justis on Instagram to let him know that we loved his song and were excited for his book.

                            Ivy Horan

“I also wanted to thank him for just being such a positive force,” she added. “Justis said he’d like to send us some of their Happyvism books when they’re ready. I know my students are going to be super excited since they loved his song (and think he’s really cool for making a music video). I am excited to see how Justis’s project progresses, and I am looking for more ways to keep my students involved.”

When the books arrive, Ms. Horan can add them to her classroom library of multicultural books, which are helping her second-graders to affirm their diverse identities.

Congratulations to Ivy Horan and Justis Lopez on their creative collaboration.

  • Woody Exley

Second Graders Get Multicultural Library

When Ivy Horan was an elementary school student in Duxbury, Mass., she never saw books about people who looked like her.

Ivy Horan

Last summer, as she began to prepare for her first teaching position, she decided to provide a different experience for her second graders at Mayberry School in East Hartford.

She posted an appeal on Facebook and other social media for donations of books on multicultural topics featuring diverse people.

I got the idea for this multicultural book project from reflecting upon my own K-12 schooling experience,” she said. “I realized that I never was exposed to diverse or multicultural books. This has been my motivation throughout my entire project: to ensure that my students are given more representative books than I was as a child.”

UConn Graduate

Ms. Horan received an Alma Exley Memorial Scholarship in 2019 as a student at UConn. She received her master’s degree in May 2020 and began her teaching career in September.

Ivy Horan with some selections from her multicultural library

“I have collected more than 60 books that have characters from different backgrounds, races, cultures, religions, and with varying familial compositions,” she said. “I am working on finding as many different representative and diverse books as I can for my classroom library.”

Inspiring Diverse Students

This is relevant because all of Ms. Horan’s second graders are students of color. Her class includes students who are Black, Latino and mixed-race. A number are English-language learners, who speak Spanish as well as African languages.

Click here to visit the Amazon site to contribute one or more books to Ms. Horan’s classroom library.

The books in Ms. Horan’s multicultural library are listed at the end of this story.

“I am extremely thankful for the donations,” she said. “I received books from family members, friends, professors, and various people whom I worked with throughout my time at UConn.

“What was most surprising was that I also received books from a handful of old friends from middle school and high school whom I haven’t talked to in years. It was amazing to see how everyone, whether I have remained close to them or not, came out to support my project and me. I am forever grateful. Every book that I received is now in my classroom library.”

She began by posting a wish-list of books from Amazon. Down the road, she hopes to expand her outreach to find more programs or websites that could help her find more diverse books for her classroom.

Right now, because of Covid-19 guidelines, Ms. Horan is the only one who can touch the books. Because of this, she is using the books as “mentor texts” and reading aloud to her students.

Supporting the Curriculum

“I also use these diverse books in teaching some of my curriculum,” she added. “For example, last week we were doing a lesson on ‘taking notes’ with informational or nonfiction texts. We had been reading a book about sharks, but instead of continuing with that book, I used the book ‘Turning Pages: My Life Story’ by Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Not only is this story about the first Latina Supreme Court Justice, it also aligned perfectly with our celebration and recognition of Hispanic Heritage Month.

“So not only can I use the books as read-aloud, I can also use them within the curriculum. In the future, I hope to turn my classroom into a lending library where students can keep the books at their seats for a designated amount of time and do independent reading. But for the time being with Covid-19, this is my safest approach.

“My students love the books,” she said. “It has been really wonderful to see students making connections from their own lives to the books.

“For example, I have a handful of students who speak Spanish. When we read the book, ‘Mango, Abuela, and Me’ by Meg Medina, those students were really excited to hear some of the Spanish words they know. This engaged the entire class in a conversation about language and what other Spanish words they know, who in their family speaks Spanish, and how they learned Spanish.

Encouraging Conversations

“These multicultural texts have been a foundation to help my students and me have more conversations about diversity and connect the ideas from the books to our own lives.”

Ms. Horan takes seriously her responsibility to serve as a positive role model for her students. “I have a class that is all students of color, and I know I am making an impact by just being their teacher since I am a teacher of color,” she said.

“I create a safe, welcoming, and loving community for all students and foster a community of care within my room every day. And that, books aside, is what our students of color so often need with everything going on in our world today.”

Hearty congratulations to Ivy for taking the initiative in her first year on the job to create a welcoming classroom environment for her diverse students.

  • Woody Exley

Ms. Horan’s Culturally Diverse and Representative Class Library

*Updated 10/22/20

Book TitleAuthor
Freedom on the Menu: The Greensboro Sit-InsCarole Boston Weatherford
The Color of UsKaren Katz
Little FishSanne te Loo
Kali and the Rat SnakeZai Whitaker
Yagua DaysCruz Martel
Sosu’s CallMeshack Asare
New Clothes for New Year’s DayHyun-Joo Bae
Where Are You From?Yamile Saied Méndez
Jabari JumpsGaia Cornwall
Ada Twist, ScientistAndrea Beaty 
Uncle Jed’s BarbershopMargaree King Mitchell
AbuelaArthur Dorros
Mae Among the StarsRoda Ahmed
Too Many TamalesGary Soto 
The Jolly MonJimmy Buffet & Savannah Jane Buffet
Priscilla and the HollyhocksAnne Broyles
Anansi the Spider: A Tale from the AshantiGerald McDermott
Hush!Mingfong Ho
Whoever You AreMem Fox
Tiger in My SoupKashmira Sheth
Bringing the Rain to Kapiti PLainVerma Aardema
Round is a Tortilla: A Book of ShapesRoseanne Greenfield Thong
City ShapesDiana Murray
Bein’ with You This Way W. Nikola-Lisa
LoveMatt de la Peña 
City GreenDyAnne DiSalvo-Ryan
Something Happened in Our Town: A Child’s Story About Racial InjusticeMarianne Celano, Marietta Collins, Ann Hazzard 
Almost to FreedomVaunda Micheaux Nelson
Suki’s KimonoChieri Uegaki
Freedom SoupTami Charles
Mama MitiDonna Jo Napoli
Carmela Full of WishesMatt de la Peña 
Cool CutsMechal Renee Roe
Chocolate Me!Taye Diggs
Happy HairMichal Renee Roe
Hair LoveMatthew A. Cherry
Don’t Touch My Hair!Sharee Miller 
I Like Myself!Karen Beaumont
Just LIke MeVanessa Brantley-Newton
My Hair is a GardenCozbi A. Cabrera
Amy Wu and the Perfect BaoKat Zhang
Dear JunoSoyung Pak
Sumo JoeMia Wenjen
Fry Bread: A Native American Family StoryKevin Noble Maillard
WindowsJulia Denos
DreamersYuyi Morales
Grace for PresidentKelly DiPucchio
The Word CollectorPeter H. Reynolds
A Day’s WorkEve Bunting 
Sitti’s SecretsNaomi Shihab Nye
Ma’ii and the Cousin Horned ToadShonto Begay
Lailah’s LunchboxReem Faruqi
KeeprsJeri Hanel Watts & Felicia Marshall
Thirteen Moons on Turtle’s BackJoseph Bruchac & Jonathan London
Aunt Flossie’s Hats (and Crab Cakes Later)Elizabeth Fitzgerald Howard
Fatuma’s New ClothLeslie Bulion
Golden Domes and Silver Lanterns: A Muslim Book of ColorsHena Khan
IslandbornJunot Díaz
The Name JarYangsook Choi
Mango, Abuela, and MeMeg Medina 
You Matter Christian Robinson
I Promise Lebron James
I Am EnoughGrace Byers 
Under My HijabHena Khan
Thunder Boy Jr. Sherman Alexie
Raven: A Trickster Tale from the Pacific NorthwestGerald McDermott 
Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears: A West African Tale Verna Aardema
Ohana Means FamilyIlima Loomis
This Is the Rope Jacqueline Woodson 
Be the Difference: 40+ Ideas for Kids to Create Positive Change Using Empathy, Kindness, Equality, and Environmental AwarenessJayneen Sanders
V is for Voting Kate Farrell
Speak Up Miranda Paul
What If We Were All the Same! C.M. Harris 
Ella Fitzgerald: The Tale of a Vocal VirtuosaAndrew Davis Pinkney
A Computer Called KatherineSuzanne Slade
Counting on KatherineHelaine Becker
Little Leaders: Bold Women in Black HistoryVashti Harrison 
Ruby Bridges Goes to School: My True StoryRuby Bridges 
Turning PagesSonia Sotomayor
The Power of Her Pen: The Story of Groundbreaking Journalist Ethel L. PaymeLesa Cline-Ransome
Fight for the Right to Learn: Malala Yousafzai’s StoryRebecca Langston-George
Malala’s Magic PencilMalala Yousafzai
Martin’s Big WordsDoreen Rappaport
Child of the Civil Rights MovementPaula Young Shelton & Raul Colón
Equality’s Call: The Story of Voting Rights in AmericaDeborah Diesen

America’s Schools Are More Diverse Than Ever, But the Teachers are Still Mostly White

Editor’s Note: The Washington Post has published an excellent story about how students of color benefit from having teachers of color. The story features individual students and the teachers who have made a difference in their lives. It also highlights research into the impact of teachers of color.

For example, researchers have found significant positive results when black and Latino students have teachers who match their race or ethnicity: Better attendance, fewer suspensions, more positive attitudes, and higher test scores, graduation rates and college attendance. Teachers of color also have higher expectations for students of color, which may fuel the other gains. 

Studies have concluded that having a same-race teacher makes black and Latino students more likely to graduate from high school and enroll in college. Excerpts from the story follow.

By Laura Meckler and Kate Rabinowitz, Washington Post, Dec 27, 2019

SANTA ROSA, Calif. — Ricardo Alcalá’s parents, born in Mexico, carried less than a second-grade education when they came to California to work the fields. His older siblings dropped out of high school. One was sentenced to prison for life and killed behind bars. Ricardo was 13 then, living in poverty. 

But when he was 14, something changed. A Latina teacher told him he was too smart for pre-algebra and should move up. 

“For some reason, that simple act and belief changed my entire perception of schooling, and life really,” he said. “She was the first person who saw something good in me.” 

Now, Alcalá is a high school Spanish teacher, looking for the good in his students, most from Latino and poor families like his. He nudges boys drawn to gangs toward the wrestling team instead, and serves Mexican hot chocolate on a Monday afternoon, hoping that small treat will dissuade students from skipping class. 

Just Two Latino Teachers

Not many teachers at Elsie Allen High School can connect with students in the same way. While 80 percent of students are Latino, just two of 56 teachers are — 3.5 percent. 

Nationally, a Washington Post analysis of school district data from 46 states and the District of Columbia finds that only one-tenth of 1 percent of Latino students attend a school system where the portion of Latino teachers equals or exceeds the percentage of Latino students. 

It’s only marginally better for black students: 7 percent were enrolled in a district where the share of black teachers matches or exceeds that for students. Among Asian students, it was 4.5 percent. 

Over time, the ranks of teachers of color have grown. In 1988, 87 percent of public school teachers were white. By 2016, 80 percent were, according to federal data. 

Racial Gap Between Students And Teachers Has Grown

Nonetheless, the racial gap between teachers and students has widened as more young people of color have enrolled each year. In 1994, two-thirds of public school students were white; by 2016, fewer than half were. 

Researchers have found significant positive results when black and Hispanic students have teachers who match their race or ethnicity: better attendance, fewer suspensions, more positive attitudes, and higher test scores, graduation rates and college attendance. Teachers of color also have higher expectations for students of color, which may fuel the other gains. 

“Representation absolutely matters and it matters for … almost every educational outcome you can think of,” said Seth Gershenson, a public policy professor at American University. 

Lack of Cultural Connection

Celio Batres, 17, a senior here in Santa Rosa, whose family emigrated from El Salvador, recalled an assignment to explore different cultures and feeling like he couldn’t connect with his white teacher. “She grew up in a middle-class family, basically living the American Dream, and that’s completely different from my family and the way we were brought up,” he said. 

He said it was different with the one Latino teacher he had. Tomas Salinas talked about his own home growing up, the aroma of food wafting from the kitchen where his mom was cooking. “My house, it’s the same way,” Batres said. 

Father Figure

Salinas, whose parents are Mexican, remembers being on the other side. A Latina teacher hung Mexican and American flags in his fourth-grade classroom, not far from where he teaches today. “That just spoke to me as a kid,” he said. Now, as an English teacher, he incorporates Latino authors into his course. 

Motivating Students

At Elsie Allen High, Alcalá teaches Spanish, coaches the wrestling team and, when he thinks it might motivate a student, tells the story of his brother’s death, and how it motivated him to get serious about school. He tells them poverty is no excuse for failure. He tells them selling drugs is what landed his brother in prison. He’ll sometimes visit his students’ parents at home. 

“I have no fear to go to someone’s house and talk to them in their native language,” he said. 

Higher Graduation Rates

Studies find that having a same-race teacher makes black and Hispanic students more likely to graduate from high school and enroll in college and can even affect a choice of major. One study looked at black students who had at least one black and one white teacher in high school and found the black teachers more likely to expect black students would finish college. Another found that black students were more likely to be referred to gifted and talented programs when they had black teachers. 

“I’m doing student teaching two blocks away from my home,” said Kimberly Leal-Juarez, 28, who is working toward her teaching certification at the Los Angeles university. 

She said she never had a Latino teacher until high school and rarely felt supported. She recalls one of her teachers calling her college application essay “melodramatic,” a shot that stung her enough to abandon the idea of applying to college for several years. She said she had written about domestic violence in her home. “I didn’t know how to fix my personal statement. It was real for me.” 

Relatable Teacher

Talking with students at San Gabriel High School in the Alhambra district, one name kept popping up: English teacher Virginia Parra. Asked if there was a teacher they could relate to, one Latino student after another mentioned her. 

Growing up, Parra said, her father was always working and rarely set foot in school. Her mom was embarrassed that her English wasn’t good enough and shied away from teachers. Parra says she got lucky that a teacher noticed her and pushed her toward advanced classes and college. Now, she is doing the same, moving Latino kids into and through her AP English Language course. 

“Some of the students are struggling, or they never saw themselves capable of being in an AP class. And in the beginning we talk about why they’re here and their purpose and telling them that they’re all valued and they should be here,” she said. 

She seems a little embarrassed talking about her impact. But her wall is full of notes from students, and another mound of cards is put away, along with a stack of yearbooks whose pages are filled with student messages. 

Helped By Getting a Push

Ashley Macias, 15, who came to California from Mexico when she was 3, was already feeling insecure when she learned the cross-country team was dominated by Asian students. She wanted to be part of it, but feared she didn’t fit in. Macias talked to Parra, and learned she had run cross-country in high school. “And that kind of pushed me to want to go back because I felt if she did it, you know, it’s okay if I go, too.” 

Parra also encouraged her to compete in a poetry competition. She performed her poem called “Assumptions,” eviscerating those who assume she’s a criminal, a “ghetto girl” or stupid in school. “I have never worked on a field,” her poem says. “But even if I had to why would that be so bad.” 

“I find myself not being scared to do much anymore,” Macias said. “And I think that’s because of her.”