Pandemic and racism in eductation lead more Black families to homeschooling : NPR

Yalonda Chandler homeschools her children, Madison and Matthew. She co-founded Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham, in Alabama, and has seen the organization grow since the pandemic began.

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Yalonda Chandler homeschools her children, Madison and Matthew. She co-founded Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham, in Alabama, and has seen the organization grow since the pandemic began.

Kyra Miles/WBHM

It’s a common perception that white, evangelical families are the most likely to homeschool their children. But a growing number of Black families have started teaching their kids at home — especially during the pandemic. The Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey found that in April 2020, 3{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of Black households homeschooled their children, and by October 2020 it was up to 16{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}.

Those numbers may not be completely accurate, the Bureau noted, because a lot of children were learning at home in 2020. So part way through the survey period, the homeschooling question was expdanded to clarify that homeschoolers did not include children enrolled in public or private school. Even so, the numbers signal a significant increase.

Joyce Burges, founder of National Black Home Educators, said that since 2020, thousands of families have joined her organization.

“I think you’re going to see more and more parents, Black parents, homeschooling their children like never before,” Burges said.

“COVID was the catalyst”

Didakeje Griffin in Birmingham, Ala., is one of them. When she and her husband realized their kids wouldn’t be going back to public school in March 2020, they knew they had to make a change.

“It was like a light bulb moment,” Griffin said. “Ultimately, what I realized is that the pandemic just gave us an opportunity to do what we needed to do anyway, which is homeschooling.”

The mother of two said she’d always coached her kids at home to keep them on track. But three things made her decide to officially start homeschooling. First, she wanted her children to be safe from bullies. She also wanted them to understand their cultural history. The third factor was freedom.

“I want to have time to cultivate my children’s African-American, their Nigerian history and culture in them first, before anybody tries to tell them who they are,” Griffin said. COVID was the catalyst, “but it has not been the reason that we kept going.”

The Griffins celebrate Juneteenth more than July Fourth. They have discussions about the Black Lives Matter movement and talk about critical race theory with their children, ages 11 and 8. Griffin sees homeschooling as a way to protect her children.

“I don’t want my kids to be subjected to racism in certain ways so early,” she said.

Homeschooling as activism

In Black households, homeschooling can be its own unique form of activism and resistance.

“The history that’s taught is that we’ve tried through Brown v. Board of Ed to get access to schools, and schools are integrated,” said Cheryl Fields-Smith, a professor at the University of Georgia who studies Black homeschooling and its cultural significance.

“And that’s true,” she added. “But we’ve also always been self-taught.”

Fields-Smith said homeschooling is a way to combat educational racism, which comes in many forms.

“We all know that there are structures and policies and practices within our traditional schools that can be damaging to students of color, Black students in particular,” she said.

School discipline is one of them. Data from a 2014 study by the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights showed that Black students were suspended at three times the rate of white students, and were more likely to be reprimanded. A 2015 study from the Association for Psychological Science found that Black students are more likely to be labeled “troublemakers” by teachers.

These statistics can make parents and caretakers of Black children distrust the education system. In the last couple years a number of states have moved to add more Black history into their lesson plans. Still, earlier this year, Alabama and a handful of other states banned critical race theory in K-12 classrooms, even though it’s an academic theory of structural racism that is largely taught at the university level.

“This idea of white supremacy and the inferiority of Black people lingers today,” Fields-Smith said. “We are overcoming racism through homeschooling. I don’t think white people can say that.”

A growing community

Some families are also creating community through homeschooling.

In Alabama, Alfrea Moore said homeschooling her children for the last three years has given them the freedom to ask questions and learn without a strict curriculum. It’s also allowed them to connect with their culture.

“The thing about homeschooling in the South as a Black family that I’m finding is that there are a lot more of us than we actually know of,” Moore said.

“When we moved to get my kids to interact with other kids, there are networks of homeschoolers and Black homeschoolers in not just this part of Alabama where we live, but all over.”

Carleigh and Alexander Duckworth get some play time as part of their homeschooling day. Their mother, Jennifer Duckworth, is a co-founder of Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham.

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Carleigh and Alexander Duckworth get some play time as part of their homeschooling day. Their mother, Jennifer Duckworth, is a co-founder of Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham.

Kyra Miles/WBHM

Jennifer Duckworth and Yalonda Chandler co-founded the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham three years ago so more homeschooling families of color could find and support each other.

Duckworth said she started homeschooling because she was concerned that if her son were in public school, he would start to withdraw.

“My son, being a young Black boy with positive self-esteem about himself, can sometimes be threatening, for lack of a better word, to some teachers,” Duckworth said. “They’ll create an identity for the Black and brown children that they don’t even realize they’re doing.”

Duckworth said the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham has created a community where children don’t feel different because of their race.

Her 10-year-old son, Alexander, agrees. “It just feels great to be around kids like me so you don’t always have to be alone, like the odd person out,” he said.

Duckworth has been homeschooling her three children for several years. They participate in a lot of the Black homeschooling group’s activities, like the debate club and field trips.

Last month the group held its first homeschooling summit. The founders said in just three years, the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham has grown from two families to 70.

“Black families, they understand now that they don’t have to be trapped in a system that overpolices them, that marginalizes them, that makes their children feel criminalized for just being who they are,” said Chandler.

For a long time, the U.S. had barriers that made it hard for Black people to get an education, so learning and knowledge were always shared within the community.

“The African-American and African culture, we are the culture that has been homeschooling our children since the beginning,” Duckworth said. “And so I feel like it’s just in our DNA.”

Homeschooling surges among black families

Raegan Mayfield’s 11-year-old son was doing well in his Christian private school, but Mayfield and her husband felt there were gaps in how his history classes addressed racial subjects. They supplemented his education at home, but then COVID-19 concerns and racial issues became front and center in spring 2020. “My husband and I became really protective of our son,” Mayfield said.

The couple, who live in Georgia and work from home, began looking into homeschooling options. “We wanted to keep the Biblically sound education but then also diversify his education a bit,” Mayfield said.

Finding Heritage Homeschoolers, a group for African American homeschoolers in the Atlanta area, gave Mayfield the encouragement she needed. She and her husband began homeschooling their son in fall 2021.

The COVID-19 pandemic drove an increase in homeschooling across all demographics, but the boost was particularly large among African American families. According to Census Bureau data, the percentage of black families educating children at home grew
fivefold in six months, from 3.3 percent in April 2020 to 16.1 percent in October 2020.

Steven Duvall, director of research at the Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), said that in previous years African American families homeschooled at about half the rate of white families. But more recent surveys show the black homeschooling rate is only a couple of percentage points behind that of white families. “It just shows you how diversified the homeschool movement has become,” Duvall said.

That shift began even before 2020. According to a 2015 report
by Brian Ray at the National Home Education Research Institute, the number of black homeschooling families “nearly doubled from 1999 to 2012.”

Amber O’Neal Johnston, who helped start the Heritage Homeschoolers group the Mayfields joined, said she has seen more black families involved since she started homeschooling about seven years ago, but the growth has exploded in the past two years. Heritage Homeschoolers opens registration to new families twice a year, in January and August, and in 2019 and early 2020, the group received fewer than 20 applications in each of those months. Since August 2020, though, 34 to 41 new families have applied each month registration is open.

Before starting Heritage Homeschoolers, Johnston and her husband were involved with another homeschool group. They enjoyed it, despite being the only black family there. But their daughter began to say negative things about her own skin and hair and stopped playing with her black dolls. “It’s not like anyone had been mean to her,” Johnston said. “It wasn’t like she had been somewhere where people were saying negative things about black people.”

The Johnstons never left their first homeschooling group, but they decided to look for other black homeschooling families. Soon Heritage Homeschoolers was born, and it kept growing. It now serves 94 families with 280 children.

In March 2020, Khadijah Ali-Coleman defended her doctoral dissertation on perceptions of community college preparedness among dual-enrolled African American homeschooling students. Ali-Coleman homeschooled her daughter for a while and co-founded Black Family Homeschool Educators and Scholars, a research group that provides virtual training for parents. In her research, Ali-Coleman identified several reasons black parents chose to homeschool, including concerns that schools aren’t properly teaching about black history and convictions that parents could better protect their child’s self-esteem at home.

Emily Powell, a representative for National Black Home Educators, said in an email that the organization has “seen incredible growth” this year. According to Powell, many new families are homeschooling due to COVID-19 restrictions, virtual learning situations, or concerns about schools teaching critical race theory.

Jasper and Deah Abbott prayed about their son’s education after his prekindergarten year ended with virtual learning in spring 2020. Deah said that four generations of her family have taught in public schools, but the Abbotts’ concerns about COVID-19 and virtual instruction convinced them to give homeschooling a try. They pulled their son out of public school in fall 2020, the weekend before he would have started kindergarten.

Deah is white and Jasper is black. In some homeschool circles, their son may be the only brown-skinned person. “He feels that—that otherness,” she said.

The family also joined Heritage Homeschoolers. Abbott thinks her son may benefit even more from the group than most children.

Johnston believes the uptick in homeschooling will continue, especially now that there are more support groups and options for single or working parents.

“Parents have had an opportunity to see their children just flourish at home,” she said. “When everyone was forced to bring the kids home, black families, in large numbers, saw how beautiful it was.”

21 Best Black Friday and Cyber Monday Toy Deals (2021): STEM Toys and Tech for Kids

The shopping event of the year is upon us. With shipping delays wreaking havoc over the holiday season, it’s best to buy now. The best STEM toys encourage the kids in your life to develop their interests, skills, and creativity. But why would we want to limit ourselves to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics? Let’s say “STEAM toys” and include the arts too. We’ve curated the best Black Friday STEM toy deals. We plan to update this story regularly as more bargains emerge.

Updated November 27: We’ve added a few more deals, like Kinetic Sand and Snap Circuits.

WIRED’s Black Friday and Cyber Monday Coverage

We test products year-round and handpicked these deals. Products marked (Sold Out) are sold out or no longer discounted as of publishing. We’ll update this guide throughout Black Friday weekend.

If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more.

Toy Deals

Lego Classic Bricks and Plates

Photograph: Walmart

This might be out of stock depending on your location. When your kids are old enough (Lego suggests 4 years and up), there are few toys that offer such unbridled creativity. This Classic set includes 1,500 pieces in all with four base plates and a range of colored bricks that can be built into anything your little ones can imagine. 

This selection of cute animal figurines comes with special non-toxic washable markers, so your kids can develop their art skills by drawing designs on them. When they get bored with the current look, they can simply wash the colors off in the sink and start again. My daughter loves these and spends hours scribbling new designs and playing with them. 

Colored sand that can be molded into different shapes is fun for kids aged three years and up, and both of my kids enjoyed playing with it. This set includes a range of plastic tools to help them sculpt the sand into interesting patterns and structures. The only thing that might give you pause? The sand tends to get everywhere.

Kohls, Best Buy (Expired), 

Both my kids played with this sturdy table that has room inside to store the large bricks. This is a great toy for toddlers who aren’t ready for anything too small or fiddly yet, and it will encourage their inner architect.  The legs lock into place for play and can be folded away when they’re done. 

Hobby Deals

National Geographic Hobby Rock Tumbler Kit

Photograph: National Geographic

Interesting rocks can be found just about anywhere, and budding geologists will get a kick out of this National Geographic tumbler, which turns rough rocks into dazzling gemstones. It comes with some rough rocks, grit, a strainer, and jewelry settings. It is a bit noisy, so you may want to keep it outside. Target is also offering 30 percent off a wide range of other National Geographic science activities and kits.

Packed with different circuits that can be snapped together, this is a great way for kids to learn about the basics of electronics and get a taste for putting things together. There are more than 60 parts including resistors, a microphone, a slide switch, and wires that can be used to create a lie detector, AM radio, and more.

Game Deals 

Osmo Little Genius Starter Kit for iPad

Photograph: Osmo

Target, Amazon, Best Buy, PlayOsmo

Blending the digital and physical worlds, Osmo’s innovative kits appear in our Best STEM Toys guide. Kids mount their iPad or Fire tablet on the special stand and engage in educational puzzles and games by interacting with pieces on a tabletop. Your tablet’s camera picks up on the action and provides onscreen and audio feedback. Games develop skills like adding and multiplication, spelling and vocabulary, puzzle-solving and physics, learning to draw, basic coding, and more. There are fun and imaginative kits for different ages, from preschoolers up to 12-year-olds. 

Target, Best Buy ($56)

For newcomers to Osmo, a starter kit is the best way forward as it includes a base for your iPad or Fire tablet. The Little Genius Starter Kit is for preschoolers.

Target, Amazon

One of our favorite family board games, Ticket to Ride challenges you to plot rail routes across North America. It’s recommended for kids aged 8 years and up, as there’s a lot of strategy involved and some math, but it doesn’t take too long to play and is a lot of fun. Ticket to Ride Europe is also on sale for $18. 

Creating matching groups of tiles to get the maximum possible score from your game board sounds simple, but Azul has enough strategic depth to challenge your kids’ math, planning, and puzzle-solving skills. This is another one of our picks for the best family board games.

Target, Amazon

We have all had enough of the actual pandemic, but the board game is a family favorite. The beauty of this one is that it’s cooperative, as you adopt different roles and work together to beat the deadly viruses scouring the globe.

Tablet and Kindle Deals

Kindle Kids Edition (2019, 10th Generation)

Photograph: Amazon 

For reading, devouring educational apps, playing games, or watching documentaries, a tablet can be an excellent buy for kids. While you can read on tablets, e-readers are more comfortable for the eyes and allow parents to ensure their kids are reading rather than gaming. Check out our guide to the Best Kids Tablets for more options. 

Amazon, Target

A portable tablet with a protective bumper, a year of Amazon Kids+ subscription, and a two-year worry-free replacement guarantee adds up to a great deal for families with young kids (8/10, WIRED Recommends). There are lots of educational apps and games, videos and books, and solid parental controls. 

Amazon, Best Buy, Target (Sold Out)

If your kids are getting a little old for the “baby tablet” with the rubber bumper, this is an upgrade they won’t mind being seen holding. It offers all the same benefits as the smaller HD 8, including educational content from the likes of National Geographic, Rabbids Coding, and LEGO. And there’s still a protective case, though it’s a bit sleeker and has a handy kickstand. 

This small, lightweight ebook reader (7/10, WIRED Recommends) is the perfect size for kids and comes with a folding cover, a year of Amazon Kids+, and a promise that Amazon will replace it if it breaks within two years. It’s easy to load up ebooks, or just check them out from the local library.

Amazon, Best Buy

An upgrade on the basic Kids Kindle above, the Paperwhite boasts all the same benefits but also has a backlit screen for reading in low light or at night and the ability to withstand a short dunk in water.

Subscription Deals

Looking for more discounts on subscription services? We’ve rounded more up here.

Yousician Premium for iPad

Photograph: Yousician

Learning to play an instrument is a worthwhile pursuit for any child, and this clever app uses the built-in microphone on a smartphone, tablet, or laptop to provide feedback as they play. Check out our guide to the Best Sites and Apps to Learn Music for more information. 

Little Passports (Enter Code GIVEJOY at Checkout)

With a range of themed packages for different age groups, these play-based science and geography kits are packed with toys and activities that are delivered monthly. Each contains art and science activities to get stuck into, from deep sea and dinosaurs for wee ones to a road trip around the USA for older kids.

Speaker Deals

Amazon Echo Dot Kids (4th Gen)

Photograph: Amazon

The Kids version of the Amazon Echo Dot gets a cute animal makeover as a tiger or panda. It’s a full-fledged smart speaker that enables children to ask Alexa questions, play music, listen to audiobooks, and even try educational skills. Like the rest of Amazon’s Kids range, it comes with a year of Amazon Kids+ subscription ($3 per month after), solid parental controls, and a two-year worry-free guarantee.

This might be out of stock depending on your location. With songs and stories featuring some of your kids’ favorite Disney and Pixar characters, this durable kid-friendly speaker is a great alternative to screens. Children place a plastic figurine, like Woody from Toy Story, on top of the speaker to trigger related content. Additional packs with other character tie-ins are available for everything from Disney princesses to Sesame Street characters. You can also record your own stories and songs or have grandparents record so they can read to your little ones from afar. The basic Toniebox Starter Set is also on offer for $70 ($30 off) at Amazon.

Other Deals

Photograph: SBenitez/Getty Images

This tempting Target promotion allows you to pick three items from a wide selection of books, video games, and board games, but only pay for two. There are a few educational options in there and lots of things to encourage creativity and puzzle-solving.  

Got a Yoto Player (7/10, WIRED Recommends)? It’s a cute-looking speaker that kids can insert cards into to play stories and podcasts. The speaker itself isn’t on sale, but Yoto is offering 10 percent off cards and accessories, which can be handy if your kid needs a batch of new content. 


More WIRED Black Friday and Cyber Monday Coverage

Retailer Sale Pages and Coupons

Want to browse the Black Friday and Cyber Monday 2021 sales yourself? Here are a few places offering deals. Be sure to check out our many buying guides and gift guides for additional ideas.

Home-schooling becomes a solid movement among Black families | Local

Ashley Jacobs moved to Columbia with her family in July 2020, right in the middle of the pandemic. At the time, her oldest child was going into kindergarten, and they had to make a decision about her education.

Originally, she was set to enroll in a traditional school, but the coronavirus interrupted that plan.

“Once we looked, we really weren’t comfortable with what seemed to sometimes be kind of a casual response to implementing and enforcing COVID-19,” Jacobs said.

Her daughter has never enrolled in public school, and now the Jacobses are homeschooling both of their girls with no intention to change.

“We were looking for a space that our girls could be celebrated for who they are, feel welcomed, feel included, feel comfortable, affirmed, accepted, you know, all those things,” Jacobs said.






Levi Scott, right, sighs as he works out long division

Levi Scott sighs as he works out long division in his head Nov. 1 at his home in Columbia. “Home-schooling takes learning your child’s learning style,” said his mother, Jolanda Scott, left. “So, for him, he prefers when I don’t instruct. He’s very, very independent.”



Since the start of the pandemic, the number of children of color who have switched to homeschooling has increased by 400{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} in Missouri, according to the Show Me Institute in St. Louis. A Census Bureau Pulse Survey found an uptick in home-schooling, from 5.4{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} in the spring of 2020 to 11.1{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} that fall.

In Missouri, Black families switching to homeschooling rose from 3.3{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} in the spring of 2020 to 16.1{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} last fall. Health and safety during the pandemic were significant factors, but the racial tension that erupted in the summer of 2020 contributed as well.

Because Jacobs was home-schooled in high school, it “was not this foreign idea,” she said. “It was on my radar as far as my own children.”

The Jacobs family

As a family of faith, the Jacobses used prayer to help decide that home-schooling was the best option they could offer their children at the time.

“Every year we pray about it again and explore our options again because we don’t feel like there’s one way and only one way every year,” Jacobs said.






Curriculum books and notebooks stand on a shelf in the Scott residence

A learning calendar and list of organism classifications hang on the wall in the dining room of the Scott house. “Over the last three years, we’ve gone through different curriculums and have settled on our current one because of his learning style,” Jolanda Scott said of her son Levi.



She said she likes the flexible pace of home-schooling and the personal attention she can give to her daughters, Alana, 7, and Aliya, 4.

“I love how I can literally see with my own eyes their progress and what areas they’re weak in,” she said. “We can speed up or slow down. I’m intentional about pulling learning moments throughout the day to support what they’re learning.”

A typical day starts early, with Ashley waking up Alana, 7, and Aliya, 4, between 7 and 7:30 a.m. and making time for prayer.

“They have literally a little schedule on the wall that has pictures for my daughter who can’t read yet that go through the routine of making their bed, brushing their teeth, getting dressed,” Jacobs said.

Class starts at 9:30 a.m. in a separate room that has been rearranged to look like a classroom. Aliya goes through her daily numbers, letters and shapes for daily reinforcement, while Alana takes piano virtually.

They learn the basics in math, language arts, break for PE and end the school day between 3 and 5 p.m.

“That’s the beauty of it,” Jacobs said. “If we want to kind of shift things around, we can.”






Levi Scott stands in the doorway of his kitchen

Levi Scott stands in the doorway of his kitchen as he waits for dinner Nov. 3 in Columbia. Currently in sixth grade and home-schooled, Levi is learning math and science at his grade level, while taking 12th grade English.



Social media gives her a tool to have her children mingle with other home-schoolers in spaces such as libraries, playgrounds and science centers. They are, in essence, field trips.

In becoming their teacher, Jacobs said she was challenged by the different ways her girls learn.

“One child is more of a kinesthetic learner, and the other one’s not, so figuring out what’s going to work best for my child was the first challenge,” she said.

Jacobs and her husband will continue to reevaluate the situation every year, but she encourages parents to consider the option.

“There’s a lot of support out there if somebody wants to do it,” she said.

The Scott family

Jolanda Scott is a mother of five, with three still in school. Two of her sons, Gideon and Levi, are twice-exceptional, meaning they are gifted students who also have a disability. Her daughter Naomi was not yet in elementary school during the pandemic.






The Scott family stands in the kitchen

The Scott family stands in the kitchen while Jolanda Scott makes chili and cornbread Nov. 3 in Columbia. Because the family is often busy with schooling, extracurriculars and other obligations, many of the household duties are shared.



All three were home-schooled during the height of COVID-19. Afterward, Gideon went back to school, Naomi started public school and Levi remained at home.

“(Gideon) thrives in the academic environment, but he wasn’t being challenged to pay attention to what he was doing,” said Scott, a former third-grade teacher at Blue Ridge Elementary School.

“I brought him home so he could learn how to do his work with precision and not just show that he understood the concept, and not just, kind of like, this was fun.”

Gideon has now entered the eighth grade and is able to pay attention and advocate for himself to make corrections, she said. He has also been placed in several advanced placement classes.

“It’s giving him the rigor that he needs, and he’s allowed to do more extracurriculars than we are when we’re home-schooled,” his mother said.

“He’s able to get the interaction that he’s been looking for; that’s really been the benefit of putting him back in public school as he was just missing people.”






A learning calendar and list of organism classifications

A learning calendar and list of organism classifications hang on the wall in the dining room of the Scott house Nov. 4 in Columbia.



Levi is in the sixth grade, learning math and science at his grade level and also managing 12th grade English. Scott decided staying home would be more productive for him.

“There are days that he is like super chill … and there’s days that he can cuss out a sailor. I’m, like, home’s a really great idea for you,” Scott said.

Both COVID-19 and racial tensions played a role in the family deciding to pull both Gideon and Levi from traditional school. Gideon wanted to return earlier, but Scott had reservations at the time.

“At that point I’m like, ‘There’s no way in hell that I’m putting my sweet-natured Black boy in a predominantly white school on the south side of town without being sure enough to know who he is,” she said.

Teaching at home during the pandemic was an opportunity to introduce the full scope of history to her children, she said, including the impact of women and other cultures.

“A big win was to really be able to give them value in who they are as Black men and not be afraid, but know how to be respected, to know when they’re being sold a line and how to speak up for what truth is,” she said.






Naomi Scott, left, and Gideon Scott, right, attend public school

Two of Levi’s siblings, Naomi Scott, left, and Gideon Scott, right, attend public school. Jolanda and her husband place emphasis on the children’s ability to choose their educational wants. 



Surrounding the boys with material that is inclusive was important to Scott. When they first came home because of the pandemic, she had them read a lot of books about different cultures.

They learned about Black men, Black women, Afghan women and Hispanic women, as well as Asian cultures.

“A lot of women, she said, because they’re going to see the value of men everywhere.”

At the same time, the George Floyd protests were spreading across the country.

“(Levi) had made some comment that if he got pulled over, there’s a chance that he’s going to get killed anyway,” Scott said.

She quickly went to Facebook in search of friends married to police officers who could talk to her son.






Levi Scott watches a gaming YouTube video

Levi Scott watches a gaming YouTube video on his phone after dinner Nov. 3. Levi typically spends his downtime either watching YouTube videos, anime or chatting with online friends on Discord.



“Our friend comes over, white man, and sits down at the table with my then 10-year-old.” she said. “They have like an hour and a half conversation where my kid is able to ask somebody of another culture, why are Black men getting killed in the streets?”

During this talk, Levi discovered that the officer served in Iraq. Levi had just read “The Breadwinner,” about an Afghan girl who secretly earns money to buy food for her family. He was able to ask the former soldier about the Taliban.

“Those are big-deal moments that we have,” Scott said. “Ask your questions, and let’s go find a person that’s lived it.”

As a certified teacher, she has found that the only difference between traditional schooling and home-schooling is the learning style.

“It’s so much based on the kids’ personalities. And so because I know all three of them are going to be able to thrive in the environments they’re in educationally, they’ll get what they need,” Scott said.

Scott works at Christian Fellowship, a multiethnic and multicultural church. Her family also attends worship there, which she believes is important for her children.

“You’re going to learn that other people’s experiences are valid and your experiences are not the only ones that matter in the room,” she said.






A family portrait magnet

A family portrait magnet next to a DIY magnet that reads “Jesus is God’s best gift!” When Jolanda Scott began home-schooling her children, she used it as an opportunity to introduce material that was inclusive and multicultural.



More Black families in Birmingham find freedom in homeschooling

When you google “homeschoolers” most of the images that pop up display white, evangelical people. But there’s new evidence that the confront of homeschooling is switching. Information from the 2020 Census Bureau’s Residence Pulse Study displays the selection of Black people homeschooling has gone up five-fold in the final year, and it is no diverse in Alabama.

When Jennifer Duckworth and her spouse begun their spouse and children 10 several years back, homeschooling was something they have been often curious about, but it wasn’t till her oldest son was ready to go to kindergarten that they determined to start off.

“My son, getting a younger Black boy with beneficial self-esteem about himself, can occasionally be threatening, for absence of a better word, to some instructors,” Duckworth said. “They’ll generate an id for the Black and brown children that they do not even comprehend they’re executing.”

Duckworth was worried that if her son have been in public college her usually social and talkative youngster would commence to withdraw. The 10-yr-outdated reported he feels safer homeschooling with his two younger sisters, Carleigh and Phoenix.

“It just feels excellent to be all around little ones like me so you never normally have to be on your own, like the odd man or woman out,” Alexander said.

They didn’t see a lot of other youngsters that appeared like them when the Duckworths started homeschooling six a long time in the past. Which is why their mother co-founded the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham so other Black and brown homeschooling people could discover a supportive group.

“The African-American and African culture, we are the culture that has been homeschooling our young children since the beginning,” Duckworth stated. “And so I feel like it is just in our DNA.”

The Duckworth's have been homeschooling for six years. Trips to the playground are part of their weekly schedule.

Kyra Miles,WBHM
The Duckworth’s have been homeschooling for 6 a long time. Visits to the playground are section of their weekly program.

It Usually takes A Village

For hundreds of yrs, it was unlawful in the United States for Black men and women to even master how to browse, so any training or awareness was shared inside of the local community.

“The background which is taught is that we have experimented with by Brown as opposed to Board of [Education] to get entry to schools and schools are integrated,” claimed Cheryl Fields-Smith, a professor at the College of Georgia learning Black homeschooling and its cultural importance. “And that’s true. But we’ve also normally been self-taught.”

Whilst virtual studying due to COVID-19 may possibly have pushed families into homeschooling, Fields-Smith and numerous people informed WBHM that homeschooling is a way to combat educational racism, which arrives in quite a few sorts.

“We all know that there are constructions and guidelines and tactics inside our conventional faculties that can be harming to students of color, Black students in distinct,” Fields-Smith claimed.

College self-discipline is just just one-way Black students are targeted in faculties. Details from a 2014 review by the U.S. Section of Education Workplace for Civil Rights shows that Black students are suspended at a few situations the amount of white students and are more very likely to be reprimanded. An additional examine from the Affiliation for Psychological Science identified that Black learners are more likely to be labeled “troublemakers” by academics. All of these data can make mother and father and caretakers of Black small children distrust the education program.

In reality, Fields-Smith reports how Black mothers use homeschooling as a form of resistance from instructional racism.

“We are combating the leftovers from slavery,” Fields-Smith said. “This plan of white supremacy and the inferiority of Black persons lingers now … We are overcoming racism by way of homeschooling. I never feel white persons can say that.”

Though there’s been a increase in Black homeschooling, there is also been a backlash in opposition to essential race idea and training Black heritage in general public faculties. Previously this year, Alabama and a handful of states banned crucial race idea in school rooms. Black record is not mandated in the bulk of curriculums in The usa, and it is ordinarily reserved for Black Historical past Month. In response, some Black families have made a decision to get their kids’ training into their personal hands.

“Black family members, they understand now that they don’t have to be trapped in a system that more than-polices them, that marginalizes them, that will make their children come to feel criminalized for just getting who they are,” stated Yalonda Chandler, the other co-founder of the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham. “It’s freedom for us.”

Yalonda Chandler started homeschooling her children, Matthew and Madison, when she felt like their teachers weren't challenging them enough.

Kyra Miles,WBHM
Yalonda Chandler begun homeschooling her kids, Matthew and Madison, when she felt like their lecturers weren’t difficult them more than enough.

A Growing Group

Sequoia Watters-Parrish had generally planned to homeschool, but the pandemic pushed her into it earlier than expected. She said she did not picture the amount of money of support she’d receive.

“I truly believe African-American people believed that they would be alone if they homeschool,” Watters-Parrish reported. “They had no outreach but [there are] so several methods out there.”

By the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham, Watters-Parrish claimed she was ready to find a local community of youngsters who didn’t make her son feel distinct due to the fact of his race. They often get industry excursions to museums or zoos alongside one another.

Yet another dad or mum, Alfrea Moore, stated homeschooling her young children for the final three a long time has supplied them the flexibility to question concerns and understand with out a rigid curriculum. It’s also permitted them to connect with their society.

“The factor about homeschooling in the South as a Black loved ones that I’m acquiring is that there are a ton a lot more of us than we essentially know of,” Moore said. “When we moved to get my little ones to interact with other little ones, there are networks of homeschoolers and Black homeschoolers in not just this element of Alabama exactly where we dwell, but all above.”

Continued Fascination

Due to the fact 2020, hundreds of family members have joined the National Black Residence Educators, in accordance to Joyce Burges. She started the group with her partner 21 several years ago to middle Black heritage in homeschooling.

“I consider you are going to see a lot more and much more moms and dads, Black mom and dad, homeschooling their youngsters like never in advance of,” Burges mentioned.

In just three a long time, the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham has developed from two households to 70.

A single of their new associates is Didakeje Griffin. When she and her husband recognized their kids wouldn’t be going back again to faculty in March 2020, they understood they experienced to make a modify.

“It was like a gentle bulb moment,” Griffin said. “Ultimately, what I recognized is that the pandemic just gave us an chance to do what we needed to do anyway, which is homeschooling.”

The mom of two said that she’d generally been coaching her young ones at dwelling to hold them on track. But a few points designed her decide to commence officially homeschooling. Very first, she wanted her youngsters to be protected from bullies. She also needed them to recognize their cultural record. And the third: liberty.

“I want to have time to cultivate my children’s African-American, their Nigerian heritage and culture in them first in advance of any one attempts to convey to them who they are,” Griffin said. “So genuinely, COVID, it was the catalyst, but it has not been the reason that we kept going.”

The Griffin family celebrates Juneteenth additional than July Fourth. They have conversations about the Black Life Matter motion and communicate about critical race concept with their 11 and 8-calendar year-old youngsters. She sees homeschooling as a way to guard her kids.

“I don’t want my kids to be subjected to racism in specified ways so early,” Griffin mentioned.

Griffin said she is worried that traditional community educational institutions might press again versus Black homeschoolers. But for now, she reported homeschooling has been the most effective choice she’s built for her children’s education.

Kyra Miles is a Report for America corps member reporting on education for WBHM.

Editor’s Be aware:  This story has been up to date to clarify Alexander Duckworth was never enrolled in public faculty.

Yuen: What’s behind the bump in Black home-schooling

Last year, Survival Mandieka helped two of her daughters, Samantha and Salina, with remote learning. Unlike me, she did not pull out her hair or bang her head against the kitchen table. On the contrary, she treasured the experience.

The challenge of being her children’s teacher “strengthened” her, she said. And Mandieka began to imagine the possibility of educating all three of her young children, even after traditional schools reopened for good.

“It gave me a perspective on what home-schooling could be,” said Mandieka, who lives in Shakopee. “The pandemic showed us we could actually do it.”

This fall, Mandieka stopped sending her daughters to a private Christian school and decided to home-school her kids, giving her more autonomy over their learning. The COVID-19 era has fueled an explosion in home-schooling across the nation. In Minnesota, nearly 31,000 students were registered with the state as being home-schooled in the 2020-2021 school year, about a 50{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} increase from the previous year.

A national survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau suggests that the recent surge in home-schooling is especially strong among Black families. It’s unclear if that trend is playing out in Minnesota because state education officials do not track home-school students by race.

But the national rise in Black home-schooling is not a mystery to the members of Black Homeschool Scholars With Swagg, an informal community of Twin Cities parents and their home-schooled kids who meet weekly for socializing and support. I stumbled upon them at Theodore Wirth Regional Park one morning as the kids and teens were embarking on a kale-eating contest. (One boy was nearly gagging on what certainly is an acquired taste.)

When the group first met a couple of years ago at a library, the moms were seated in a circle, detailing their children’s experiences in traditional school settings. “There was something traumatic that happened to a lot of us,” said co-founder Rey Sirakavit. “We were just exhausted.”

They spoke of racism at school, bullying by other students, policies that favored white families and bias among teachers. Black students are suspended at far greater rates than white students, and Minnesota has historically struggled with discipline disparities across race.

Sirakavit, a former public school administrator and teacher who had moved to Elk River from Denver, had two daughters with painful experiences in public schools. When it came time to enroll her youngest child, a boy named Zealous whom educators had deemed “gifted,” she still believed the traditional school system was best.

“I was one of the biggest advocates for public schools,” she said. “I advocated for public schools more than public schools advocated for my kids.”

When Zealous was in third grade, he attended a grade school in Minneapolis where Sirakavit was the principal. Zealous says teachers came down on him hard for what he considered to be minor offenses, such as trying to take a break from class to see his mom during the school day. That resulted in a detention. Another teacher called him and his friend “stupid boys,” he recalled.

Now 12, Zealous appreciates his atypical school experience, one that offers him plenty of breaks. His mother seizes on his interests, and he’s read traditional classics like “The Count of Monte Cristo” and young adult books by African American authors Christopher Paul Curtisand Jason Reynolds.

Another assignment might involve watching a Hindi movie and charting cultural differences between American and Indian culture. For social studies, he’s researched lesser-known abolitionists and civil rights activists.

“My mom knows me best — what I’m good at and how to teach me,” he said, adding that the time spent with her has brought them closer. “Even though she’s my mother, I feel like I’m getting to know her a lot better.”

Granted, home-schooling is not for every child — or every parent. Many of the mothers in the group are business owners, or their spouses work full-time, affording them financial stability. They also had to overcome any insecurity — and stigma — about taking their children’s learning into their own hands.

On a sun-drenched fall morning, the Black Homeschool Scholars With Swagg roamed a corn maze and bounced on an inflatable bubble. Before they posed for a picture, they sang a few bars from a chant:

I am Black, I am powerful, I’m a child of God. I was created for a purpose.

Co-founder Tryenyse Jones, an entrepreneur and artist, said home school allows families to cultivate their child’s passions. Her son Priest, 15, is now working on his third hip-hop album.

“With regular traditional school, he wouldn’t be able to stay up late, practice, and be in the studio, recording. This is part of his life destiny,” she said. “I’m not damning the whole public education system, but we have found that this has been the most beneficial for us.”

Some parents remember feeling like they didn’t belong in predominantly white school settings. Sameka Edmon had enrolled her daughter in a prestigious public school district in a tony suburb outside Chicago. While volunteering with other moms over the lunch hour, one parent assumed Edmon was “the help,” she recalled.

It reinforced some of the troubling accounts her daughter, then in kindergarten, had been sharing with her.

“If they don’t acknowledge me as a parent when I walk through those doors, how are they going to treat her?” Edmon said.

Researchers at the University of Minnesota are studying results of a statewide survey conducted during the past school year for K-12 public school students, families and educators. One surprising finding was that a disproportionate number of Black and Brown families reported that their students were learning more during the pandemic compared with pre-COVID times, when classrooms were open.

A working hypothesis is that students of color were spending less time serving out suspensions and detentions, said U of M graduate student Coy Carter, who is studying the issue. “Parents actually have more time to teach their students when they’re not dealing with discipline issues that don’t arise in the home,” he said.

It’s been a trying year and a half, during which these families have endured not only a pandemic but the police killing of George Floyd.

Zealous remembers feeling a pit in his stomach after hearing about Floyd’s murder and finding solace through his home-school friends at their regular meetups in Minneapolis.

“Being with them, there’s this unspoken thing,” he said. “We don’t have to say it, but we know what we’re all going through.”