• What's Your Story?

    Promoting youth literacy through storytelling and narrative change.

    Date: Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021

    PANEL DISCUSSION: via WebEx

    Eric Ford is the Director of the Choice Program at UMBC and is passionate about improving public education outcomes, reducing the confinement rates for youth of color and developing future change agents for these causes.

    Haleemat Adekoya is a UMBC Student in the Governor’s Summer Internship Program (GSIP). Her major is political science with a certificate in elementary ed. She’s interning at the Maryland State Department of Ed this summer through GSIP and also has had the chance to develop her own storytelling through our digital stories project.

    WORKSHOP: via WebEx

    Attendees will participate in a facilitated story circle, sharing a story from their life in response to a prompt. Everyone will be encouraged to arrive as they truly are and tell their story in a supportive space

  • A Discussion with D. Watkins - 4.6.22

    We Speak For Ourselves

    by D. Watkins

    From the row houses of Baltimore to the stoops of Brooklyn, the New York Times bestselling author of The Cook Up lays bare the voices of the most vulnerable and allows their stories to uncover the systematic injustice threaded within our society. Honest and eye-opening, the pages of We Speak for Ourselves “are abundant with wisdom and wit; integrity and love, not to mention enough laughs for a stand-up comedy routine” (Mitchell S. Jackson, author of Survival Math).

    Watkins introduces you to Down Bottom, the storied community of East Baltimore that holds a mirror to America’s poor black neighborhoods—“hoods” that could just as easily be in Chicago, Detroit, Oakland, or Atlanta. As Watkins sees it, the perspective of people who live in economically disadvantaged black communities is largely absent from the commentary of many top intellectuals who speak and write about race.

    Unapologetic and sharp-witted, D. Watkins is here to tell the truth as he has seen it. We Speak for Ourselves offers an in-depth analysis of inner-city hurdles and honors the stories therein. We sit in underfunded schools, walk the blocks burdened with police corruption, stand within an audience of Make America Great Again hats, journey from trap house to university lecture, and rally in neglected streets. And we listen.

    “Watkins has come to remind us, everyone deserves the opportunity to speak for themselves” (Jason Reynolds, New York Times bestselling author) and serves hope to fellow Americans who are too often ignored and calling on others to examine what it means to be a model activist in today’s world. We Speak for Ourselves is a must-read for all who are committed to social change.

    From Amazon.com