Have you ever wondered why bell hooks does not capitalize her name? Or that bell hooks is her scholarly pen name? Born Gloria Jean Watkins, bell hooks took on her great grandmother’s name in her honor and lowercased her name in order to put distance between her name as the author and the scholarship she was producing. Ironically, her choice to lowercase bell hooks generated attention and curiosity from readers, increasing the attention paid to her scholarship. And we are all the better for it! As we celebrate Black History Month, it is important to reflect how inclusion and diversity in the classroom, as well as the honoring of one’s cultural and family histories and funds of knowledge, supports and strengthens this celebration. Inspired by the seminal work of Paulo Freire, bell hooks began a career focused on how education can become culturally responsive and inclusive to support marginalized students in the school system. In her book Teaching to Transgress, for example, she discusses was to infuse engaged pedagogy in the classroom through feminist, sociocultural and critical lenses. Hers is a call to action to normalize a classroom focused on joy, honored lived experiences and countering suppression through the inclusion and support of diverse identities in the classroom. Below are some recommended readings to reflect on pedagogical strategies that can be used to support all students of color in the classroom: |