21-Day Syllabus
Syllabus: 21-day Racial Equity
Habit Building Challenge ©
(thanks to the American Bar Association for the curation of these selections)
Please note that when multiple choices are offered, we encourage all, but one is totally fine!
Day 1 – Tuesday, Sept. 22
- Nikole Hannah-Jones, America Wasn’t a Democracy, Until Black Americans Made It One, The New York Times (Aug. 14, 2019)
Day 2 – Wednesday, Sept. 23
- How to Not (Accidentally) Raise a Racist, Longest Shortest Time Podcast
Day 3 – Thursday, Sept. 24
- Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Case for Reparations, The Atlantic (May 21, 2014)
Day 4 – Friday, Sept. 25
- Danielle Cadet, Your Black Colleagues May Look Like They Are Okay – Chances Are They Are Not (May 2020)
- Katy Waldman, A Sociologist Examines The “White Fragility” That Prevents White Americans From Confronting Racism, New Yorker (July 23, 2018)
Day 5 – Saturday, Sept. 26
- Megan Ming Francis, Let's get to the root of racial injustice, TEDTalks (March 21, 2016)
Day 6 – Sunday, Sept. 27
- Project Implicit, Implicit Association Test (IAT), (This exercise requires navigating the sign up for the tests, which includes answering a series of questions for the researchers, but it is recommended that everyone do at least these tests: Race, Skin Tone, and Weapons-Race. Also, everyone is encouraged to add these tests if you are able: Asian American, Native American, and Arab-Muslim.)
Day 7 – Monday, Sept. 28
- Kristen Rogers, Dear anti-racist allies: Here's how to respond to microaggressions, CNN
- Ali Vingiano, 63 Black Harvard Students Share Their Experiences In A Powerful Photo Project, BuzzFeed (March 3, 2014)
Day 8 – Tuesday, September 29 (Discussion Day)
- James McWilliams, Bryan Stevenson On What Well Meaning White People Need To Know About Race: An interview with Harvard University-trained public defense lawyer Bryan Stevenson on racial trauma, segregation, and listening to marginalized voices, Pacific Standard (updated Feb 18, 2019)
- 🚩 ZOOM discussion at 5 pm. Check email for invite!
Day 9 – Wednesday, September 30
- "Media portrayals of black men contribute to police violence, Rutgers study says,” EurekAlert! Science News (Nov. 29, 2018)
- Leigh Donaldson, “When the media misrepresents black men, the effects are felt in the real world,” The Guardian (Aug. 12, 2015):
Day 10 – Thursday, October 1
- John Biewen, Seeing White (14-part series podcast, 2017), S2 E14: Transformation (44 minutes, 10 seconds)
- or, if pressed for time:
- John Biewen, Seeing White (14-part series podcast, 2017), S2 E2: How Race Was Made
- or, if pressed for time:
Day 11 – Friday, October 2
- Karma Allen, More than 50% of homeless families are black, government report finds, ABCNews (Jan. 22, 2020)
- Scott Winship, Richard V. Reeves, and Katherine Guyot, The Inheritance of Black Poverty: It’s All About the Men, Brookings (March 22, 2018),
Day 12 – Saturday, October 3
- Hannah Giorgis, Black Art is dangerous because it marries the personal and the political, The Guardian (Feb. 22, 2015)
- Reggie Ugwu, Lena Waitheʼs Art of Protest: The “Queen & Slim” writer on mixing art and politics, the key to collaboration and those infamous comments about Will Smith and Denzel Washington, The New York Times (Dec. 2, 2019)
- Bryan Stevenson ’85, "We can't recover from this history until we deal with it." legacy of slavery and the vision for creating the National Memorial for Peace and Justice and The Legacy Museum, Harvard Law School YouTube (Jan 30, 2019)
Day 13 – Sunday, October 4
- Rebecca Epstein, Jamilia J. Blake, and Thalia González, Girlhood Interrupted: The Erasure of Black Girls’ Childhood, Georgetown Law Center on Poverty and Inequality
- Adrienne Green, How Black Girls Aren’t Presumed to Be Innocent: A new study finds that adults view them as less child-like and less in need of protection than their white peers, The Atlantic (June 29, 2017)
Day 14 – Monday, October 5
- Perspectives in Poetry:
- Richard Wright - Between the World and Me
- Langston Hughes - Harlem
- June Jordan - Poem for Ms. Fannie Lou Hamer
- Audre Lorde - Who Said it Was Simple
- Claudia Rankine – You are in the dark, in the car . . .
- Alice Walker - The World Rising
- Perspectives on Change:
- The Beatles – Revolution #1
- Nina Simone – Revolutions 1 and 2
- Nina Simone - Mississippi Goddam
Day 15 – Tuesday, October 6 (Discussion Day)
- Peggy McIntosh, Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack of White Privilege
- 🚩 ZOOM discussion at 5 pm. Check email for invite!
Day 16 - Wednesday, October 7
- George Johnson, White gay privilege exists all year, but it is particularly hurtful during Pride, NBC News (June 30, 2019)
- Laverne Cox Talks about Intersectionality at Harvard (Video clips) (March 11, 2014)
- D-L Stewart, Black Trans* Lives Matter (TEDxTalks) (April 22, 2019)
Day 17 – Thursday, October 8
- N. K. Jemisin, How Long ‘Til Black Future Month? The Toxins of Speculative Fiction, and the Antidote that is Janelle Monae, Blog (Sept. 30, 2013)
Day 18 – Friday, October 9
- Sam Dylan Finch, 9 Phrases Allies Can Say When Called Out Instead of Getting Defensive, Everyday Feminism (May 29, 2017)
Day 19 – Saturday, October 10
- Jolie A. Doggett, 4 Questions About Hair that Black Girls Are Tired of Answering, HuffPost (Feb. 14, 2020)
- Jessica Moulite, Exclusive: Rep. Ayanna Pressley Reveals Beautiful Bald Head and Discusses Alopecia for the First Time, The Root (Jan. 16, 2020)
- Hair Love, Oscar®-Winning Short Film (Full), Sony Pictures Animation, YouTube (Dec. 5, 2019)
Day 20 – Sunday, October 11
- National Conference for Community and Justice, Colorism
- Natasha S. Alford, Why Some Black Puerto Ricans Choose ‘White’ on the Census: The island has a long history of encouraging residents to identify as white, but there are growing efforts to raise awareness about racism, The New York Times (Feb. 9, 2020)
Day 21 – Monday, October 12
- Karyn Lacy, How to Convince a White Realtor You’re Middle Class, The New York Times (Jan 21, 2020)
- Who is "Karen" and Why Does She Keep Calling the Police on Black Men?, On the Media (Podcast) (May 29, 2020)
Day 22 - Tuesday, October 13 (Discussion Day)
- 🚩 ZOOM discussion at 5 pm. Check email for invite!
During the following week, complete reading of the book “How To be an Anti-Racist” by Ibram X. Kendi.
Day 28 - Tuesday, October 20, 5 p.m. – Book Discussion & Program Completion
- 🚩 ZOOM discussion about “HOW TO BE AN ANTIRACIST” at 5 pm. Check email for invite!
Extra Resources
- Eddie Moore Jr., 21-Day Plans
- “The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture today launched Talking About Race, a new online portal designed to help individuals, families, and communities talk about racism, racial identity and the way these forces shape every aspect of society, from the economy and politics to the broader American culture.”
- Robin DiAngelo, Ph.D., Critical Racial and Social Justice Education: List of Resources
- Verna Myers, How to Overcome Our Biases? Walk Boldly Toward Them, TED Talk (video)
- John Biewen, Seeing White (14-part series podcast, 2017)
- Janice Gassam, Your Unconscious Bias Trainings Keep Failing Because You’re Not Addressing Systemic Bias (Forbes, Dec. 29, 2019)
- Michael Harriott, How to Be a Better White Person in 2020, The Root (Jan 9, 2020)
- Cheryl I. Harris, Whiteness As Property, Harvard Law Review, Vol. 106 No. 8 (June 1993)
- Robin DiAngelo, Ph.D., White Fragility, Beacon Press, ©2018