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Book Club Facilitation Guide: How to be an Antiracist

Book Club Facilitation Guide: How to be an Antiracist

Olaolu Adeleye

Kenny Panza; Rebecca Shortt; Helena Prins; Leva Lee; and Tracy Roberts

Contents

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Accessibility Statement

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“When we see others as the enemy, we risk becoming what we hate. When we oppress others, we end up oppressing ourselves. All of our humanity is dependent upon recognizing the humanity in others.” 

— Archbishop Desmond Tutu

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Introduction

This guide is designed to offer readers the opportunity to reflect on the significance of racism in their own lives.

Using the overarching learning outcomes of to know, to be, and to do, the intention of this guide is for you to acquire knowledge, inquire about our societal status, and aspire for change through individual actions that challenge the status quo.

The conversation about anti-racism must evolve from one of debate to one of understanding led by empathy and individual experiences. Anti-racist approaches are often associated or reduced to activism; this has conflated the acceptance of anti-racist discourse in academia. With a consideration for the lived experiences of others, our circles of sharing must shift from rebuttal to reflection — both on our own positions and those of others.

To truly prioritize anti-racism is to see the implications of the societal structures that create and uphold cleavages. It is to ask if our policies and pedagogies are effective in creating equity and equally represent the perspectives and priorities of all – especially voices that have been silenced.

Moreover, it is to prioritize our experiences first and foremost as human beings and engage with each other with sensitivity to the racism that persists and upholds inequity in our local and global systems.

I hope the prompts in this resource offer you a chance to pause. The objective of this guide is to make you think and engage you on a personal level.

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Acknowledgements

This facilitation guide is designed to accompany Ibram X. Kendi’s book How to Be an Antiracist. Kendi’s book inspired the learning arc of the guide.

I would like to extend thanks to those who participated in the inaugural BCcampus Book Club Hub in fall 2021. Your engagement and feedback informed the evolution and development of various iterations of this resource.

Thank you to the BCcampus equity, diversity, and inclusion group for their support, suggested resources, and voluntary participation in the guide’s activities. Thank you to the program heads and my fellow colleagues at Royal Roads University’s School of Communication and Culture who provided an impetus for me to explore and hone my pedagogical approach.

Several individuals contributed to the development of this guide. For a full list, please see Appendix 3: Acknowledgements.

Reconciliation is inextricably linked to a commitment to anti-racism and decolonization in Canada. I acknowledge the traditional territories throughout B.C. where the contributors to this guide reside. This includes the ancestral territories of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish), xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), W̱SÁNEĆ (Saanich), and Songhees Nation of the lək̓ʷəŋən (lekwungen) Peoples.

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Learning Outcomes

To Know: Content (Learn)

Discuss and describe key content themes.

Consider and apply key learnings to various contexts.

To Be: Citizenship (Reflect)

Recognize and identify personal steps to become an anti-racist.

Engage openly and authentically.

To Do: Communication (Apply)

Consider and apply key learnings to various contexts.

This includes self, society, and schools (specifically post-secondary education contexts).

Apply learned methodology, frameworks, and techniques.

Download this Learning Outcomes [PDF].

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Brave, Safe, and Ethical Spaces

Download Brave, Safe & Ethical Spaces [PDF].

  • Brave – No fear of challenge or having to defend oneself.
  • Safe – Venturing into conversations and relationships that are fraught with danger.
  • Ethical – Willingness to examine difference between people with care and love. This involves humility and genuine curiosity.

Media Attributions

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Act 1: Self and Schemas

Synthesis of Key Themes

Discussion Points

The following are some suggested themes and topics to be explored during this Act. Depending on your own frame of reference and the direction you hope to take, it may be helpful to do some preliminary research. Our suggestion is that you approach these themes in a variety of ways, including small group discussions, sharing circles, visual prompts, brainstorming activities, and annotations.

Although you may be looking to offer contextual and factual information, prioritize establishing a collective understanding of your theme, and use this as a building block for further discussion and exploration with the group.

Steps to Being Antiracist

Download the Steps to Being Antiracist Infographic [PDF].

  • I stop using the “I’m not racist” or “I can’t be racist” defense of denial.
  • I admit the definition of racist (someone who is supporting racist policies or expressing racist ideas).
  • I accept the course of racist ideas I express (my upbringing inside a nation making us racist).
  • I acknowledge the definition of antiracist (someone who is supporting antiracist policies or expressing antiracist ideas).
  • I struggle for antiracist power and policy in my spaces.
  • I struggle to remain at the antiracist intersections where racism is mixed with other bigotries.
  • I struggle to think with antiracist ideas. Not being fooled by misleading statistics or theories that blame people for racial inequity.

Reflective Questions

To Know

To Be

To Do

Check-In: Feeling, Orientation, Inspiration (FOI)

  • Discuss one feeling that has surfaced for you during this Act.
  • Reflect on one new orientation you’ve gained from this Act.
  • Collectively brainstorm steps or actions this Act has inspired you to take.

Activity

Suggested Activity – Privilege Walk

The objective of this exercise is to allow respondents to reflect on the areas of their life where they may experience privilege. Privilege is not to be seen as something you should be ashamed of but rather something that if leveraged correctly can move anti-racist conversations and actions forward and an opportunity to reflect on how to turn your awareness of your individual privilege into action.

Throughout this exercise, each individual will move according to their own experiences. At the conclusion of the activity, respondents will be scattered at various “points” and see where they stand in relation to those around them.

This is an introspective exercise. It’s important to understand how privilege affects your life, but it is not designed to make you share things you don’t wish to share — nor is it made to make anyone feel guilty or ashamed. Please make a note of any questions that specifically capture your attention.

Suggested Questions

  • If your parents needed you to translate newsletters that came to their home or be their interpreter at a school event or parent-teacher interview, please take one step back.
  • If you saw people who looked like you as teachers and administrators in your schools when you were a student, take one step forward.
  • If you felt that the traditions and beliefs that were promoted by your teachers and your school matched the traditions and beliefs that were taught to you at home, take one step forward.
  • If you personally witnessed something that you define as appropriation of your culture, take a step back.​
  • If you have ever been made uncomfortable by a joke related to your race, ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation but felt unsafe to confront the situation, take one step back.
  • If there were more than 50 books in your house growing up, take one step forward.
  • If both your parents graduated from university, take a step forward.
  • If you speak your great grandparents’ language, take a step forward.

Debrief

  • Choose one word that describes how you felt with where you landed.
  • Share your general feelings about the activity.
  • How did it feel to be ahead of or behind the group average?
  • Were you surprised by where you landed?
  • Did you find any sentences more impactful than others?
  • Did you find any sentences that you believe are or are not a reflection of privilege?
  • Do you feel your final position would be different in an alternative cultural context?
  • How does your position of privilege affect your vantage point and the story you tell?
  • What role does privilege play when you are considering and relating to Indigenous peoples?

Facilitator Tips

  • Reiterate to participants that the activity is not designed to make them share things they don’t wish to share — nor is it made to make anyone feel guilty or ashamed.
  • If you are conducting this activity in person, consider asking participants to bring a scarf or blindfold to wear during the prompts. This will allow for anonymity.
  • Before launching into this Act, discuss ways to self-regulate, step away, or practice self-care when triggered or upset.
  • Allow for enough reflection and processing time during and after a discussion prompt or activity.
  • When debriefing, highlight that we all experience privilege in different ways and across different cultural contexts. Use this as an opportunity to tie in how the intersectional elements of who we are can impact our overall privilege.

Suggested Resources

Articles

Lorde, A. (1981). The uses of anger. Women’s Studies Quarterly, 9(3). https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1654&context=wsq.

Metta, J. (2015).I, racist. Those people. https://medium.com/thsppl/i-racist-538512462265.

Coaston, J. (2019). The intersectionality wars. Vox. https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/2019/5/20/18542843/intersectionality-conservatism-law-race-gender-discrimination

Multimedia

Coates, T. (2015). Fear and the black experience. [Video]. PBS Religion & Ethics. https://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/2015/11/20/ta-nehisi-coates-fear-black-experience/27488/

Morrison, T. (1998). Beautifully answers an “illegitimate” question on race. [Video]. Charlie Rose. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Kgq3F8wbYA

McIntosh, P. (2012). How studying privilege systems can strengthen compassion. [Video]. TEDx Talks. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-BY9UEewHw.

Deggans, E. (Host). (2020). Not racist” is not enough: Putting in the work to be anti-racist. [Podcast]. NPR. https://www.npr.org/2020/08/24/905515398/not-racist-is-not-enough-putting-in-the-work-to-be-anti-racist

McGregor, H. (Host). (2020). Being a demon bitch about justice. [Podcast]. Secret Feminist Agenda. https://secretfeministagenda.com/2020/06/26/episode-4-23-being-a-demon-bitch-about-justice/.

Brown, B. (Host). (2021), Brené with Emmanuel Acho on uncomfortable conversations with a black man. [Podcast]. In Unlocking us with Brené Brown. https://brenebrown.com/podcast/brene-with-emmanuel-acho-on-uncomfortable-conversations-with-a-black-man/.

Definitions

rac·ist (/ˈrāsəst/)

 

(Kendi, 2019, p. 13)

Black​ (/blak/​)

 

(Kendi, 2019, p. 136)

gen·der​ (/ˈjendər/)

 

(Kendi, 2019, p. 181)

queer (/kwir/)

 

(Kendi, 2019, p. 193)

 

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Act 2: Society and Systems

Synthesis of Key Themes

Discussion Points

The following are some suggested themes and topics to be explored during this Act. Depending on your own frame of reference and the direction you hope to take, it may be helpful to do some preliminary research. Our suggestion is that you approach these themes in a variety of ways, including small-group discussions, sharing circles, visual prompts, brainstorming activities, and annotations.

*Although you may be looking to offer contextual and factual information, prioritize establishing a collective understanding of your theme, and use this as a building block for further discussion and exploration with the group.

Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist

Download the Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist [PDF].

Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist (Kendi, 2019, p.24).

  • Racist: Supporting a racist policy through their actions or inaction or expressing a racist idea.
  • Assimilationist: Expressing the idea that a racial group is culturally or behaviourally inferior and is supporting cultural/behavioural enrichment programs to develop the group.
  • Segregationist: Expressing the idea that a permanently inferior racial group can never be developed and supporting policy that segregates that group.
  • Antiracist: Expressing the idea that racial groups are equals and none needs developing and is supporting policy that reproduce racial inequity.

Contexts

Download Contexts_Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist [PDF].

Context i

  • Caste system separates Dalits (Untouchables) from others in society (India) 
  • Apartheid limits the rights and mobility of Blacks (South Africa) 
  • Ku Klux Klan members lynch freed slaves (United States)
  • Residential schools’ mandate of “Kill the Indian in him and save the man” amounts to cultural genocide (Canada)
  • Nazi state-sponsored persecution of Jews leads to the Holocaust (Germany)

Context ii

  • Anti-Asian hate crimes increase over COVID-19 (Global)
  • Blanquemiento practices look to mejorar la raza (Latin America)
  • “Stop and frisk” policy by NYC police officers targets Black and Latinx New Yorkers (United States)
  • Trump’s travel ban restricts travel for citizens of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen (United States)
  • Halifax Regional Municipality refuses provision of amenities to residents in Africville, eventually demolishing it and displacing its residents (Canada)

Reflective Questions

To Know

To Be

To Do

Check-In: Feeling, Orientation, Inspiration (FOI)

  • Discuss one feeling that has surfaced for you during this Act.
  • Reflect on one new orientation you’ve gained from this Act.
  • Collectively brainstorm steps or actions that this Act has inspired you to take.

Activity

Suggested Activity – Society Mapping Exercise

Using MindMeister or Lucidchart, select one of the following themes and place it in the centre of your page.

  1. With this theme, create a map of the relationships you see between the opportunities and threats that exist for racialized people to access and freely experience it in your area.
  2. Using pluses and minuses, highlight the feedback loops that exist as a result of policies, structures, and relationships.
  3. Place yourself on the map, and consider where you intersect and what opportunities you have to affect change in policy.
  4. Are the current barriers a reflection of racist (assimilationist or segregationist) or anti-racist policies?
    • Education
    • Sports
    • Fine arts
    • Food security
    • Housing
    • Healthcare
    • Environment (natural)
    • Government

i.e.

A sample mindmap with the theme of "Housing" in the middle.

Facilitator Tips

  • Remind participants that the objective is not to create an exhaustive depiction that is accurate but rather to locate themselves.
  • Have participants share their rationale for including positive or negative feedback loops in their diagram.
  • This activity can also be done successfully using a flipchart or white paper. Do not let using a new tech tool distract from the content or intent of the activity.
  • Consider some examples from the White Paper, 1969 (Canada), Jim Crow (United States), apartheid (South Africa), or the caste system (India).

Suggested Resources

Articles

Sithole, T. (2016). The concept of the Black subject in Fanon, Journal of Black Studies, 47(1), 24–40. https://doi.org/10.1177/0021934715609913.

Rashid, A.  (2021). “Racism & the Americanization of Canadian history: Why we shouldn’t look at ourselves through a U.S. lens, The Conversation. http://theconversation.com/racism-and-the-americanization-of-canadian-history-why-we-shouldnt-look-at-ourselves-through-a-u-s-lens-159974

Gray, A. (2019). The bias of ‘professionalism’ standards, Standford Social Innovation Review. https://ssir.org/articles/entry/the_bias_of_professionalism_standards.

Multimedia

Deggans, E. (Host). (2020). Not racist” is not enough: Putting in the work to be anti-racist. [Podcast]. NPR. https://www.npr.org/2020/08/24/905515398/not-racist-is-not-enough-putting-in-the-work-to-be-anti-racist

Canadaland. (2020). The police #2 — The secret history of the RCMP. [Podcast]. https://www.canadaland.com/podcast/the-police-2-the-secret-history-of-the-rcmp/

‎Warrior Life. (2020). Desmond Cole on anti-Black racism in Canada & US on Apple Podcasts. [Podcast]. https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/desmond-cole-on-anti-black-racism-in-canada-us/id1434096503?i=1000476463578

The Globe and Mail. (2016). Colour code: A podcast about race in Canada. [Podcast]. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/colour-code-podcast-race-in-canada/article31494658/

CTV News. (2020). W5: Balarama Holness fights against systemic racism in Canada. [TV show]. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjsTcw0abhs

Hudson, S. & Loretto, N., (Hosts). (2021). Canada’s democratic deficit. [Podcast*]. https://sandyandnora.com/

* Sandy and Nora is a Canadian political podcast that discusses current events and has great episodes over the last year and a half on Black Lives Matter, White supremacy, and police violence in a Canadian context. See episodes 119, 117, 103, 104, and 99.

Books

Chariandy, D. (2018). I’ve been meaning to tell you: A letter to my daughter. McClelland & Stewart.

Cole, D. (2020). The skin we’re in: A year of Black resistance and power (Toronto: Doubleday Canada, 2020).

Diverlus, R., Hudson, S., & Ware, S. M. (Eds.). (2020). Until we are free : Reflections on Black Lives Matter Canada. University of Regina Press.

Saad, L. F. (2020). Me and white supremacy: Combat racism, change the world, and become a good ancestor. Sourcebooks.

Definitions

space (/spās/)

 

(Kendi, 2019, p. 166)

class (/klas/)

 

((Kendi, 2019, p. 151)

bi· o· log· i· cal (/bī-ə-ˈlä-ji-kəl/)

 

(Kendi, 2019, p. 44)

 

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Act 3: Schools and Syllabus

Synthesis of Key Themes

Discussion Points

The following are some suggested themes and topics to be explored during this Act. Depending on your own frame of reference and the direction you hope to take, it may be helpful to do some preliminary research. Our suggestion is that you approach these themes in a variety of ways, including small group discussions, sharing circles, visual prompts, brainstorming activities, and annotations.

*Although you may be looking to offer contextual and factual information, prioritize establishing a collective understanding of your theme, and use this as a building block for further discussion and exploration with the group.

Reflective Questions

To Know

To Be

To Do

Check-In: Feeling, Orientation, Inspiration (FOI)

  • Discuss one feeling that has surfaced for you during this Act.
  • Reflect on one new orientation you’ve gained from this Act.
  • Collectively brainstorm steps or actions this Act has inspired you to take.

Activity

Suggested Activity – Audit of Your Curriculum

Curriculum

  • In what ways do you currently employ multiple ways of knowing in the learning environment?
  • In what ways are your assigned reading lists reflective of non-Western, non-White theorists and frameworks?
  • How have you challenged imperialist epistemology within your pedagogy?
  • Have you accounted for ways of knowing, being, and learning from actors in the Global South without fetishizing, de-historicizing, or misrecognizing their differences?

Engagement

  • How does your class arrangement or learning environment reflect your practice (rows, circles, pods)?
  • Is your approach an inclusive, transdisciplinary one that challenges academic privilege and values personal knowledges?
  • In what ways — whether through resources, technologies, or guest speakers — are you promoting and amplifying racialized voices?

Assessments

  • In what ways have you invited your learners into the process of determining the criteria being evaluated?
  • How have the options you’ve given your students for their submissions reflected an acknowledgement of different strengths and knowledges?
  • How have your assessments encouraged your learners to explore additional or primary sources rooted in their own cultural (race, ethnicity, work, familial) contexts?

Rubric

Using the single-point rubric below, reflect on how and if your current approach is anti-racist, and consider some areas you can enhance your learning approach to be more inclusive.

Concerns –
Areas that Need Work
Criteria –
Standards for This Performance
Advanced –
Evidence of Exceeding Standards
Curriculum – Is inclusive of multiple vantage points, celebrating the knowledges of various locales.
Engagement – Uses a welcoming approach that is representative of student experiences and reflects the varied heritage, histories, and perspectives of all, specifically amplifying disenfranchised voices.
Assessment – Is collaborative and reflects an appreciation for varied strengths, abilities, and knowledges, specifically primary sources from alternate cultural contexts.

Facilitator Tips

  • Encourage participants to jot down all and any ideas they have for change. This should be used as a brainstorming exercise.
  • Break participants into groups and have them share their audits with their colleagues.
  • Depending on your time allotment:
    • Have participants connect with a learning designer about their findings and brainstorm ways they can incorporate them into their future iterations.
    • Ask for anonymous formative feedback from your students.
    • Reach out to experts with lived experiences, and invite them into your process or classroom.

Suggested Resources

Articles

Bowleg, L. (2021). “The master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house”: Ten critical lessons for Black and other health equity researchers of colorHealth Education & Behavior, 48(3), 237–249. https://doi.org/10.1177/10901981211007402.

Dei, G. J. S. (2006). Introduction: Mapping the Terrain – towards a new politics of resistance. In G. J. S. Dei & A. Kempf (Eds.), Anti-colonialism & education – The politics of resistance. (pp. 1–24). Brill.

Gonzalez, J. (2018, December 2). 10 ways educators can take action in pursuit of equity. Cult of Pedagogy. https://www.cultofpedagogy.com/10-equity.

Matias, J. N., Lewis, N., Jr., & Hope, E. (2021, September 7). Universities say they want more diverse faculties. So why is academia still so white? FiveThirtyEight. https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/universities-say-they-want-more-diverse-faculties-so-why-is-academia-still-so-white.

Showing Up for Racial Justice. (n.d.). Resources. https://surj.org/category/resources.

Tuck, E., Carroll, K. K., & Smith, M.D. (2010). About us and not about as: Theorizing student resistance to learning about race and racism from underrepresented facultyJournal of the International Society of Teacher Education, 14(2). 70–74. https://static1.squarespace.com/static/557744ffe4b013bae3b7af63/t/5fa193f046d4646b2902890c/1604424688479/Tuck%2C+Carroll%2C+Smith_About+us+and+not+about+us.pdf.

University of Toronto Scarborough. (2021). Scarborough charter. https://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/principal/scarborough-charter

Zinn Education Project. (n.d.). Teaching materials. https://www.zinnedproject.org/materials.

Multimedia

Lindo, L. (2020). Why hugging out racism in education just won’t cut it [Video]. TEDx Talks. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tifJElYkuYI.

Class, T. (Host). (2012). How is smartness defined in schools? [Video]. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZuXzgLTFJWM.

Gray, J. (Host). (2021). Open knowledge spectrums podcast – Exploring epistemic justice in open education [Podcast].https://knowledgespectrums.opened.ca/podcast/epistemic-violence-in-world-history-curriculum-with-dr-tadashi-dozono.

Book

Henry, F., Dua, E., James, C. E., Kobayashi, A.,  Li, P., Ramos, H., & Smith, M. S. (2017). The equity myth: Racialization and Indigeneity at Canadian universities. UBC Press.

Definitions

eth·nic (/ˈeTHnik/)

 

(Kendi, 2019, p. 56)

be·hav·iour (/bəˈhāvyər/)

(Kendi, 2019, p. 92)

 

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Act 4: Solidarity and Success

Synthesis of Key Themes

Discussion Points

The following are some suggested themes and topics to be explored during this Act. Depending on your own frame of reference and the direction you hope to take, it may be helpful to do some preliminary research. Our suggestion is that you approach these themes in a variety of ways, including small group discussions, sharing circles, visual prompts, brainstorming activities, and annotations.

*Although you may be looking to offer contextual and factual information, prioritize establishing a collective understanding of your theme, and use this as a building block for further discussion and exploration with the group.

Eliminate Racial Inequity in Our Spaces

Download the Eliminate Racial Inequality in Our Spaces Flowchart [PDF].

  • Investigate and uncover the racist policies causing racial inequity.
  • Admit racial inequity is a problem of bad policy, not bad people.
  • Figure out who or what group has the power to institute antiracist policy.
  • Identify racial inequity in all its intersections and manifestations.
  • Invent or fund antiracist policy that can eliminate racial inequity.
  • Disseminate and educate about the uncovered racist policy and antiracist policy correctives.
  • Work with sympathetic antiracist policymakers to institute the antiracist policy.
  • Deploy antiracist power to compel or drive from power the unsympathetic racist policymakers in order to institute the antiracist policy.
  • Monitor closely to ensure the antiracist policy reduces and eliminates racial inequity.
  • When policies fail, do not blame the people. Start over and seek out new and more effective antiracist treatments until they work.
  • Monitor closely to prevent new racist policies from being instituted.

Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist

Download the Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist [PDF].

Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist (Kendi, 2019, p.24).

  • Racist: Supporting a racist policy through their actions or inaction or expressing a racist idea.
  • Assimilationist: Expressing the idea that a racial group is culturally or behaviourally inferior and is supporting cultural/behavioural enrichment programs to develop the group.
  • Segregationist: Expressing the idea that a permanently inferior racial group can never be developed and supporting policy that segregates that group.
  • Antiracist: Expressing the idea that racial groups are equals and none needs developing and is supporting policy that reproduce racial inequity.

Reflective Questions

To Know

To Be

To Do

Check-In: Feeling, Orientation, Inspiration (FOI)

  • Discuss one feeling that has surfaced for you during this Act.
  • Reflect on one new orientation you’ve gained from this Act.
  • Collectively brainstorm steps or actions this Act has inspired you to take.

Activity

Suggested Activity – Crafting an Anti-Racist Statement (Individual and Institutional)

Using the template below, build your own anti-racist statement.

Individual – “I”

Advice

  • A – AcknowledgeI understand that…
  • D – DisruptI commit to…
  • V – Volunteer I shall give of…
  • I – IterateI will continue to…
  • C – CommitI can take steps to…
  • E – Explain (how)I resolve that…

Institutional – “We”

Advocate

  • A – AcknowledgeWe understand that…
  • D – DiscussWe have learned that…
  • V – VolunteerWe will give…
  • O – Operationalize – We plan to…
  • C – CommitWe are committed to…
  • A – AspireWe aim to…
  • T – Take onWe resolve/hope that….
  • E – Explain/ExecuteWe shall do this by/through…

Facilitator Tips

  • “We suggest you use Mentimeter to collectively brainstorm some of the gaps within your sector.
  • Remind participants to focus on highlighting their personal understanding and learnings with an emphasis on who they are, using positive affirmation rather than negative critiques about themselves or their organization.
  • Create something that is both reflective of today and aspirational.
  • This is not a static exercise; as your group’s knowledge expands, so too does the content. Be open to iteration.

Suggested Resources

Articles

Vargas, J. A. (2011, June 22).  My life as an undocumented immigrant, The New York Times Magazine. https://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/26/magazine/my-life-as-an-undocumented-immigrant.html.

Scott Gilmore, S. (2015, January 22) Canada’s race problem? It’s even worse than America’s, Maclean’s. https://www.macleans.ca/news/canada/out-of-sight-out-of-mind-2/.

DasGupta, N., Shandal, V., Shadd, D., Segal, A., & in conjunction with CivicAction. (2020, December 14). The pervasive reality of anti-Black racism in Canada, BCG. https://www.bcg.com/en-ca/publications/2020/reality-of-anti-black-racism-in-canada.

Multimedia

Beautiful Trouble, Toolbox (n.d.), https://www.beautifultrouble.org/toolbox.

City of Saskatoon. (2011). Video 1: Tim Wise on the Legacy of Institutionalized Racial and Ethnic Discrimination. [Video.] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0McOGoxf7Bo.

Government of Canada. (2019). Building a Foundation for Change: Canada’s Anti-Racism Strategy. http://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2019/pch/CH37-4-29-2019-eng.pdf

Definitions

bi· o· log· i· cal (/bī-ə-ˈlä-ji-kəl/)

 

(Kendi, 2019, p. 44)

bod·y (/ˈbädē/)

(Kendi, 2019, p. 69)

 

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Appendix 1: Infographics

You can find and download all the infographics and handouts in this book here.

Brave, Safe & Ethical Spaces [PDF]

Contexts_Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist [PDF].

Eliminate Racial Inequality in Our Spaces Flowchart [PDF]

Learning Outcomes [PDF]

Racist, Assimilationist, Segregationist, Antiracist [PDF]

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Appendix 2: Works Cited

Bowleg, L. (2021). “The master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house”: Ten critical lessons for Black and other health equity researchers of colorHealth Education & Behavior, 48(3), 237–249. https://doi.org/10.1177/10901981211007402.

Crenshaw, K. (1989). Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex: black feminist critique of antidiscrimination doctrine, feminist theory and antiracist politics, University of Chicago Legal Forum, 139-168.

Diangelo, R. (2011). White fragility: Why it’s so hard for white people to talk about racism. ZIP Reads.

Du Bois, W. E. B., & Alexander, S. L. (2018). The souls of black folk: Essays and sketches. University of Massachusetts Press.

Du Bois, W. E. B., (1903). The souls of black folk: Essays and sketches. McClurg.

England [@England]. (2021, July 13, 2021). Our three lions. [Tweet]. Twitter. https://twitter.com/england/status/1414907459567767553.

Ermine, W. (2007). The ethical space of engagement, Indigenous Law Journal, 6(1), 193-203.

Freire, P. (2000). Pedagogy of the oppressed (30th anniversary ed.). Continuum.

Ind | trainee clin psych [@clinpsych_ind]. (2021, August 31st). Anti racist services and practices are broad and requires ongoing commitment. [Photograph]. Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/p/CTPLXcwMRkK/?utm_medium=copy_link

Kumasi, K. (2017). Teaching about race in cyberspace: Lessons from the “Virtual Privilege Walk” exercise. In Cooke, N. & Sweeney, M. (Eds). Teaching for Justice: Implementing Social Justice in the LIS Classroom. (195-216). Library Juice Press.

Mazumder, R. (2020, November 30). Public spaces are essential – But not yet equal, City Monitor. https://citymonitor.ai/community/equity/public-spaces-are-essential-but-not-yet-equal.

Pierce, C. (1970). Offensive mechanism. In F. B. Barbour, (Ed.), The Black seventies (pp. 265–282). Porter Sargent.

Pierce, C. M. (1974). Psychiatric problems of the Black minority. In S. Arieti, (Ed.), American handbook of psychiatry (pp. 512–523). Basic Books.

Scholz, R. W., Lang, D. J., Wiek, A., Walter, A. I., & Stauffacher, M. (2006). Transdisciplinary case studies as a means of sustainability learning: Historical framework and theoryInternational Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 7(3), 226–251. https://doi.org/10.1108/14676370610677829.

Wæver, O. (1995). Securitization and desecuritization. In Ronnie D. Lipschutz, (Ed.), On security (pp. 48–86) (Columbia University Press, 1995).

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Appendix 3: Acknowledgements

Contributors

Leva Lee, manager, Learning + Teaching, BCcampus

Kenny Panza, research assistant, Royal Roads University

Helena Prins, advisor, Learning + Teaching, BCcampus

Tracy Roberts, director, Learning + Teaching, BCcampus

Rebecca Shortt, coordinator, Learning + Teaching, BCcampus

Advisors

Dr. June Francis, Simon Fraser University

Dr. Athena Madan, Royal Roads University

Dr. Moussa Magassa, University of Victoria

Dr. Robin Mazumder

Reviewers

Amanda Coolidge, director, Open Education, BCcampus

Dr. Sophia Palahicky, associate director, Centre of Teaching and Education Technology, Royal Roads University

Dr. Chaseten Remillard, program head, School of Communication and Culture, Royal Roads University

Technical Support and Guidance

Sally Glover, copyeditor

Josie Gray, manager, Production + Publishing, BCcampus

Jessica Webber, owner, Star Graphic Design

Kaitlyn Zheng, coordinator, Open Textbook Publishing, BCcampus

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Versioning History

This page provides a record of edits and changes made to this book since its initial publication. Whenever edits or updates are made in the text, we provide a record and description of those changes here. If the change is minor, the version number increases by 0.01.

If the edits involve substantial updates, the version number increases to the next full number.

The files posted by this book always reflect the most recent version. If you find an error in this book, please fill out the Report an Error form.

Version Date Change Details
1.00 February 15, 2022 Book published.