A Black Studies Curriculum Is (Defiantly) Rolling Out in New York City

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Educators are embracing rather than restricting discussions of race in schools. Leaders have said they’ll do so whether the Trump administration approves or not.

Alesha Smith, a teacher, sits at a desk with a student in a classroom.
Alesha Smith is an English Language Arts teacher at Eagle Academy in Harlem, an all-boys school that is using a new Black studies curriculum.Credit...José A. Alvarado Jr. for The New York Times

Bernard Mokam

March 3, 2025, 12:08 p.m. ET

Late last fall at the Hugo Newman School in Harlem, two social studies teachers handed out pages of hip-hop lyrics to their seventh graders, and then flicked off the lights. The students appeared surprised.

They had been studying ancient matriarchal societies, including Iroquois communities that had women leaders. Now, their teachers were about to play the song “Ladies First” by Queen Latifah and Monie Love. The teachers instructed their students to highlight any lyrics that reminded them of the Iroquois women, who were known as the Haudenosaunee Clan Mothers.

Although they did not know it, the middle schoolers were in the midst of their first lesson of “Black Studies as the Study of the World,” a curriculum that rolled out in September and is now available to every New York City public school.

Tristan Vanderhorst, 12, took notes and bobbed to the music. “I had never seen a woman rap like that,” he said afterward.

The curriculum, which spans from pre-K to 12th grade, covers early African civilizations, Black American history and the achievements and contributions of the African diaspora. The curriculum emphasizes what is known as “culturally relevant” teaching, an approach meant to help students connect their own lives with what they are learning. It has been used by dozens of schools across the city since the last school year, to little fanfare.

But the Trump administration has moved aggressively in its first weeks to ban programs related to diversity and equity across government, including in schools.


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