Full Description
Join the authors of this book in starting a movement of hope and possibility for an antiracist child care and early childhood education system. This volume disrupts mental models regarding where the work of early care and education began—with enslaved African women—and how the stigma of that beginning relegates present-day child care workers to a low-status, low-wage field of practice. Expert authors contribute their wisdom, experience, research, and practical knowledge on issues related to equity and social justice. They examine the oppressive historical, political, economic, educational, and cultural systems that continue to oppress early care educators and, by extension, racialized children and children in poverty. The interrogation and litigation of past and current issues and grievances of injustice and inequities in the field are addressed, while threading the needle of social justice and critical consciousness throughout the chapters. Child Care Justice calls on educators, activists, and their allies to rethink, reimagine, and reconstruct a more equitable and just system for all who receive and provide care to our nation's youngest of children. When historically marginalized child care workers are held in high esteem, then, and only then, will America live up to its promise of liberty and justice for all.Book Features:
Centers the historic and current oppression of Black people in the United States as foundational to the disregard for childcare workers today.
Uses Paulo Freire's critical consciousness framework to guide readers to see, analyze, and act.
Calls for a multiracial coalition of activists for racial justice, gender justice, and economic justice.
Contents
Contents
Foreword Barbara T. Bowman vii
Acknowledgments x
Introduction: Is This the Moment for a Movement? 1
Maurice Sykes1. Wet Nurses, Nannies, and Mammies 9
Maurice Sykes2. Liberatory Education: We Are the Ones We've Been Waiting For 20
Alexis Jemal and Sarah Ross Bussey3. Child Care Justice, A Human Right 48
Michael Gramling4. From a Pedagogy of Poverty to a R.I.C.H.E.R. Framework 70
Iheoma U. Iruka5. Broken Promises, Power, and Privilege 87
Rebecca Berlin and Kyra Ostendorf6. Preparing Teachers to Deal with Race, Culture, and Hegemony 102
Ed Greene, Hakim M. Rashid, James C. Young7. The Tomorrow Builders: A Case Study of Systems Change 124
Joey Saunders8. Child Care Justice, Lessons from #BlackLivesMatter 149
Denisha Jones9. Toward Building a Child Care Workers Matter Movement 163
Maurice SykesAbout the Editors and Contributors 181
Name Index 186
Subject Index 191