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I have said many times that a book is like an SLPs Swiss Army Knife, so many tools in one awesome package. If you want to see how I plan literacy base therapy you can read about it in this post. Books are so versatile, but when your library isn’t diverse in characters, authors, illustrators, and cultures you are limiting yourself and your students.

It is important that student’s see a representation of themselves in the materials we use, books included. The amount of children’s literature that features BIPOC ( black, indigenous, and people of color ) has grown in the years, but is still limited as a when compared to stories featuring white children. The image below was shared by @sandboxacademy on Instagram. When you see things broken down by the numbers it is very striking.

Even if your caseload isn’t very diverse in nature, not allowing student’s to be exposed to other cultures can limit the wonderful and practical language that comes with that heritage. I am excited to share some titles that can add diversity and would be a welcome addition to any library.

ONE THING FIRST….

Before we dive into some amazing books, I wanted to share some perspective that was thoughtfully shared. Elementary Edventure shared this on instagram a bit ago and resonated with me so much, that I need you to hear it too.

“Your book is not diverse, the collection of books you have is diverse.⁣

A book featuring characters who are Black, does not have diverse characters. A book featuring characters who are Indigenous, Black, Asian, Latinx, and/or white has diverse characters.⁣

If you use the term “diverse books” to describe books having characters ????? ???? white, you are centering whiteness. You are indirectly saying that white is the default or standard.⁣

Diverse is not code for books representing all other races, ethnicities, identities, physical abilities, or beliefs except your own. It means including your own. Language matters.?”


ELEMENTARY BOOK RECOMMENDATIONS

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JABARI JUMPS

A sweet story about overcoming your fears and perseverance.

THUNDER BOY JR.

This story stars a little boy who wants a name of his own. It has wonderful opportunities to discuss attributers and figurative language as well.

MANGO, ABUELA, and ME

This story highlights multigenerational households and how language ‘barriers’ aren’t really barriers at all, but opportunities to learn. This is great book to use with younger students working on labeling too.

HONEYSMOKE

This story is about a biracial girl looking for her ‘color’. She ends up creating her own, unique color word for herself using attributes she sees in her parents.

Sofia Valdez, Future Prez

A great story about a girl determined to make a change in her community and who won’t let the fact that she is ‘just a kid’ stand in her way.

Ada Twist, Scientist

Ada is a curious girl who asks ‘Why’ and keeps going when she can’t quite find the answers she needs.

The Hike

This is a great fit for preschool/Kindergarten students. This book shows all the things that kids see while on a nature hike. Great vocabulary words and many items are labeled in the illustrations.

WHOOSH!: Lonnie Johnson’s Super-Soaking Stream of Inventions

Did you ever play with a Super Soaker? Well, did you know it was an accidental invention NASA engineer Lonnie Johnson! This is a great story for older kids ( grades 3-5 ) that has the potential for some pretty cool hand on speech activities.

The Proudest Blue: A Story of Hijab and Family

This a beautiful story about cultural tradition and the bond of sisterhood.

FIREBIRD

FIREBIRD by Misty Copeland. Misty Copeland is the first Black principal ballerina in the American Ballet Theater. She has authored this children’s book to share her story.

NON-FICTION BOOKS/BOOKS FOR OLDERS STUDENTS

The ‘Who Was..’ series has many titles that focus on trailblazers and innovators, many who of which are people of color. Some titles to check out are:

  • The Tuskegee Airmen
  • Booker T. Washington
  • Venus and Serena Williams
  • Maya Angelou
  • Muhammad Ali

Counting on Katherine. The story of Katherine Johnson, an African American, female, mathematician for NASA who was critical to the Apollo 13 moon landing.

Salt in his Shoes: Michael Jordan in Pursuit of a Dream. He almost gave up on his hoop dreams, all because he feared he’d never grow tall enough to play the game that would one day make him famous. That’s when his mother and father stepped in and shared the invaluable lesson of what really goes into the making of a champion — patience, determination, and hard work.


If you are looking for more book suggestions you can check out this post with books that celebrate diversity.

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Meet Maureen

Hey there! I’m Maureen Wilson, a school-base SLP who is data driven and caffeine powered. My passion is supporting other pediatric SLPs by teaching them how to harness the power of literacy and data to help their students achieve their goals…without sacrificing time they don’t have.

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