These Are the Top Books Black Teachers Want This School Year

From “Pete the Cat” to “The Poet X,” these are the top books Black teachers are requesting at every grade level.

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Katerina Holmes // Pexels

By Maya Pottiger, Word in Black 

It’s no secret that teachers spend a lot of their own coins on classroom supplies — sometimes racking up to thousands of dollars.

So when it comes to more expensive items, like books, educators turn toward crowdsourced funds to help fill in their classroom bookshelves and make sure their libraries are curated, engaging, and reflect their students.

“My students have already begun to fall in love, with some already reading the majority of my library,” Mr. Joyner, a middle school teacher in New Jersey, wrote on his DonorsChoose project page looking to vary his offerings so students can connect to the stories on a personal level.

For some students, their classroom or school library is the only place they can access reading materials. Out of the 97,568 public schools in the United States, 82,300 had school libraries in 2019, according to the American Library Association.