麻豆影视

麻豆影视

Inspiring: A Black Literary Society Helps High Schoolers Fall in Love With Books

Get stories like these delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter

For two hours on Friday afternoons, a group of high school students split between Stockton and Sacramento, California, hop on Zoom to discuss the book they鈥檙e reading. Though they鈥檝e never gathered in person, these students have created a space where they feel comfortable being vulnerable and engaging in enthusiastic discussion.

What is this virtual literary society that encourages Black students to read and talk about literature that reflects the entirety of the Black experience? Aptly enough, it鈥檚 called Black is Lit, and it brings Black youths together, amplifies their voices, and enables them to fall in love with books.

One recent Friday, the students discussed the n-word and history of the KKK, because it came up in their book selection 鈥淭his Is My America鈥 by Kim Johnson. Tiffany Herndon, the culturally responsive projects plan manager at Aspire Public Schools who also founded the Black is Lit program in 2021, watched her students engage in academic discourse that was rooted in the book, while also applying it to their personal experiences and offering emotional support from the racialized trauma.

It was a moment of seeing all of the elements of her program come together.

鈥淭hey were free to be their authentic selves without fear of judgment,鈥 Herndon says of the students. 鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about these hard hitting issues that impact the Black community and thinking of ways in which they want to go out and support and encourage change.鈥

More Than a Summer Reading Program

Literacy has an impact on the trajectory of your life outcomes.

The Black is Lit program was inspired by the idea of having a summer reading program for Black students. Reading and language arts scores were down, and Herndon wanted to help 鈥 and make help accessible for students beyond her school. So Black is Lit was born, inspired by the concepts of 鈥淐ultivating Genius: An Equity Framework for Culturally and Historically Responsive Literacy鈥 author Dr. Gholdy E. Muhammad who says literacy is liberation and education is a form of empowerment.

鈥淲e really wanted to reintroduce that concept and that spirit back into the learning environment for our scholars, and disrupt like the disproportionate outcomes that we see for Black students across the nation and low Black student achievement,鈥 Herndon says.

The discussions included textual and character analysis, and making real world connections to the text. From relating to and interacting with the book, Diorue Hodges, 16, said she has been able to translate those skills to other classes, as well as better articulate her thoughts on racial matters.

鈥淚 now know how to engage in those conversations without just shouting or getting angry really fast,鈥 Hodges says. 鈥淚 can have that discourse with my peers and educators now.鈥

The Pilot Program

In its pilot year, Black is Lit consists of 22 students attending Aspire Alexander Twilight Academy in Sacramento and Aspire Langston Hughes Academy in Stockton. In the fall, the program will be available at all of Aspire鈥檚 6-12 schools.

The program will focus on one book each year, and this year鈥檚 pick, 鈥淭his Is My America,鈥 which focuses on mass incarceration and the prison industrial complex. Each book chosen will have a social justice lens and cover a topic that adversely impacts the Black community.

Hodges said she鈥檚 gained a lot of insight, especially on the physical reactions to racism and discrimination. As someone who hasn鈥檛 experienced overt face-to-face racism, Hodges says she couldn鈥檛 understand why her mom, a dark-skinned woman, sometimes gets panicky or breaks down after racist interactions.

鈥淚n Black is Lit, we discussed that everyone has different reactions and approaches to racism,鈥 Hodges says. 鈥淚t did allow me to be more empathetic toward my mom and her feelings. And I was able to help her validate her feelings.鈥

鈥業 Can Be Comfortable With Being a Nerdy Black Kid鈥

All three students who spoke with Word In Black said that wanting to be part of an academics-based Black student group was their motivation to join Black is Lit.

鈥淭his was one of the first clubs that I felt connected to or that I could relate to,鈥 Hodges says. She was skeptical to join because of the time commitment and having to be vulnerable with her peers. 鈥淲e created an open and welcoming space. Other than [the Black Student Union], there wasn鈥檛 really many options for a safe space as a Black student that can just be myself unapologetically.鈥

William Ellington, 14, has always been a good reader, but he wanted a space where he could 鈥渂e comfortable with being a nerdy Black kid.鈥 Once the program is over, he鈥檒l carry on the concept of literacy being liberation.

鈥淚 hope to maybe inspire other Black kids who feel like they might not be as smart or they might not be as able to articulate as other people when they鈥檙e just as able to, if not more than every other kid,鈥 Ellington says. 鈥淎nd I really hope that this program helps inspire other kids to realize that.鈥

Though she just graduated, Nieja Harris isn鈥檛 leaving Black is Lit. While working toward her criminal justice major in college, Harris will intern with the literacy program because she 鈥渋sn鈥檛 ready to leave.鈥 Other than BSU, this gave her a space where her voice is heard.

鈥淭his is important to me because even though I know that I鈥檓 a senior and I graduated from high school, I wanted to do something more outside of school, and I want to do more advocacy for us as Black people,鈥 she says.

Black is Lit Nationwide

Overall, Herndon wants her students to embrace the spirit that literacy is liberation and reconnect to how the Black community embraced education as empowerment. She also wants to reframe their learning experience.

鈥淚 want them to feel like they鈥檙e agents of change in their community and that they鈥檙e equipped to go out and be leaders,鈥 Herndon says. 鈥淢y number one goal is to experience a learning environment that is culturally responsive, and understanding what it feels like when your identity is at the center and is uplifted and validated in your learning space.鈥

Going forward, Herndon wants to scale the program to the state level and then take it national.

Most importantly, Hodges says, the key is having an open space.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 feel like our voices were being silenced.鈥 Hodges says. 鈥淲e were able to just express ourselves, and that鈥檚 not something that a lot of students get on campus.鈥

This article originally appeared at and is published in partnership with the .听

Get stories like these delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view The 74's republishing terms.





On The 74 Today