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‘Bel-Air’ Shows How a Black Teacher Could Be Punished for Expanding Book Access

⚠️ Spoilers ahead! Watch the series on Peacock.

Peacock’s Bel-Air not only united the original Ashley Banks with the new Ashley Banks, but the reboot drama united them in a storyline highlighting the near erasure of Black literature in the classroom.

The show is a serious portrayal of the 1990s NBC sitcom The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air that brought rapper Will Smith to the silver screen. The new version stars Jabari Banks, who has an uncanny resemblance to Will and holds the fictional last name of the TV family in real life. It’s still the same story of a Black teen boy from West Philadelphia who must move to the upscale Los Angeles enclave of Bel-Air with his aunt and her immediate family to stay out of trouble. 

Tatyana Ali, who played Ashley in the sitcom, made a guest appearance in the second season of Bel-Air by playing teacher Ms. Hughes to the reimagined version of her former character Ashley, played by Akira Akbar. 

At the elite Bel-Air Academy, Ms. Hughes gives Ashley a book, The Revolution Has Come: Black Power, Gender, and the Black Panther Party in Oakland, by Robyn C. Spencer, in the premiere episode “A Fresh Start.” Ms. Hughes asks for a two-page summary, which is an extra credit assignment since the book is outside of the curriculum. 

In the second episode “Speaking Truth,” Ms. Hughes hands Ashley another book after class. This time, it’s I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness by Austin Channing Brown. A White classmate glares at their exchange in the background. The look of disgust on the classmate’s face shows the concern that Ms. Hughes is showing Ashley more preference because they’re both Black. Soon, we learn a complaint has been filed against Ms. Hughes. And it’s not the first.

When Ashley later bumps into Ms. Hughes in the hallway with a box of her effects inside, she asks why the teacher is leaving. Ms. Hughes gives Ashley words of encouragement, but Ashley is obviously devastated that her favorite teacher, one of the very few Black teachers in the school, is gone. 

Ashley tells her parents Vivian, played by Cassandra Freeman, and Phil, played by Adrian Holmes, about Ms. Hughes’ firing. They discover that Ms. Hughes was let go over providing books outside of the approved curriculum at a parent advisory committee meeting. Vivian even lists the authors Ashley is now exposed to because of Ms. Hughes’ influence, such as James Baldwin, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Toni Morrison, and Paula Giddings.

Will, Ashley’s cousin, and Carlton, Ashley’s brother played by Olly Sholotan, get involved by bringing the issue to the high school’s Black Student Union in an effort to keep Carlton elected as class president by maintaining the Black student vote. A protest comes up as the best response to Ms. Hughes’ firing. Except Carlton has a chance to win the school’s highest student award and be the first Black student to win the award. The BSU adviser, who is Black, dissuades Carlton to plan the protest; it’s not worth sacrificing the award over a fired teacher who wasn’t following the rules. 

The third episode “Compromise” shows the BSU dealing with the administration’s threat to suspend them all if members and allies walk out during classes. Then Carlton and BSU president strike a deal with the administration: Students can walk out but can’t make speeches or hold signs. The middle school students like Ashley are already barred from participating in the walkout. 

On the day of the walkout at 11 a.m., Carlton leads participating students to the quad in protest of not only Ms. Hughes being fired but also in support for a more inclusive curriculum. The pressure to go against the compromise made with the administration revs up Carlton’s anxiety. Will says he has Carlton’s back as he takes a large sign and runs up staircases to end up on the roof. He unrolls a sign that reads “Black Teachers Matter.” With a raised fist, he starts the chant “Black Teachers Matter.” Students below join in the chant. 

According to Tatyana’s Instagram post, this episode is her last appearance, so the Ms. Hughes storyline may end there. But how students are walking out in protest over demanding inclusive curricula is an example of art imitating life. 

Students in Virginia walked out last fall due to Governor Glenn Youngkin’s transgender student policies. Last month, students across Florida walked out to protest Governor Ron DeSantis’ plans to defund diversity, equity, and inclusion programs at colleges and universities. 

At the root of the issue in Bel-Air is that a Black female teacher mentored a Black female student by giving her books that would never be read in the classroom or approved for a syllabus at a predominantly White upper-crust school. But the mentorship was severed by complaints from other classmates not getting the same attention. 

To be fair, unfairness should be reported in situations like classroom settings where teacher favoritism could affect your grades, but that part of the conversation is not discussed. The repercussions of firing a Black teacher over providing Black stories go deeper with dismantling a literary mentorship that had already opened a student’s mind.

One in five Black or African American private school teachers worked at schools with less than 25% enrollment of students of color, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. That shows how rare a relationship is between a Black teacher and a Black student at a predominantly White private school. 

Out of 3,420 children’s books in 2021, 36% were “books by and about Black, Indigenous and People of Color,” per data from the Cooperative Children’s Book Center at the School of Education, University of Wisconsin–Madison. As books by authors of color seem to see higher rates of bans and attempts at bans, students of all backgrounds may not know about those books if they’re not available to them at school or the public library. Hence, Ms. Hughes giving Ashley books on the side to read that explore the experiences and identities of people of African descent is viewed as an act of defiance.

Although the storyline is rooted in students demanding a more inclusive curriculum, the issue of approved literature impacts many educators who are currently witnessing conflicts with some of their local and state regulators restricting what is taught in classrooms. 

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Here’s Why Dollar Store Inflation Affects Literacy Access

Hardcover and paperback editions of some of the top-ranking books of the last few years have flooded dollar-store shelves. The phenomenon of finding a best-seller in new condition for about a dollar is due to publishers over-ordering copies of a particular book, and in its retail life cycle, that surplus bypasses bookstores and ends up at discount stores.

Though the books are still coming to shelves, consumers who buy necessary items from a Dollar Tree, Dollar General, or 99 Cents Only store, for example, may leave the deeply discounted books behind with shrunken budgets and the price hikes recently put in place due to inflation.

Inflation is the general increase on goods and services across the market. As prices go up at gas stations and in supermarkets, the average consumer budget saved for shopping at dollar stores may just zero in on the essentials, and not on education materials like books.

The top four categories for items bought at dollar stores are food products, personal care items, party supplies, and home goods, according to GOBankingRates.

No mention of books in the financial outlet’s survey, but with summer translating to pool time, the pack of soda and the blow-up floats will be higher priorities for consumers. Buying only the staples for the average shopper may cut aisle browsing as books fall out of view, yet price increases at dollar stores may mean shoppers are not buying items they had purchased before inflation.

Dollar Tree Inc., which operates Dollar Tree stores in the U.S. and Canada and Family Dollar stores in mostly middle-class neighborhoods, increased prices at its nearly 16,000 stores by 25 cents to $1.25.

“We experienced a strong finish to the quarter, as shoppers are increasingly focused on value in this inflationary environment,” said Dollar Tree CEO and president Michael Witynski in a November press release of the $0.25 increase. “Our Dollar Tree pricing tests have demonstrated broad consumer acceptance of the new price point and excitement about the additional offerings and extreme value we will be able to provide.”

On Dollar Tree’s website, consumers can buy a random assortment of 14 adult fiction books. Despite the mixed reviews, if you’re a reader open to books the universe gives you, it could be a fun purchase.

A recent Dollar Tree book haul featuring Her Daughter’s Mother by Daniela Petrova; The Upside of Being Down by Jen Gotch; Unpregnant by Jenni Hendriks and Ted Caplan (name misspelled on spine); Ordinary Girls by Jaquira Díaz; The Beautiful No by Sheri Salata; and Women’s Work by Megan K. Stack.

Now that some consumers know they can find decent books at a dollar store, a few resort to reselling these books on Amazon.com and other seller sites at marked-up prices. If you prefer to buy your books from a bona fide bookstore online, check the names of the sellers.

Another nationwide retailer, Dollar General, instead is promoting its $1 items even more to spite its competitors. Dollar General, which operates over 18,000 stores, tends to be located in rural areas serving low-income consumers. The company also runs the Dollar General Literacy Foundation that provides grants to programs supporting literacy within a 15-mile radius of one of its stores or distribution centers. 

In May, the foundation announced it will give nearly $9.2 million in grants to 1,000 schools, libraries, and nonprofit organizations. So, shopping at Dollar General could translate into supporting literacy programs such as those benefiting elementary school students.

The West Coast, mainly California, shops at the 99 Cents Only Stores that has 350 stores in four states. Going more for the cheaper alternative to Walmart, this chain has a fresh produce section, unlike its competitors that mostly sell food products in cans and in the freezer.

This month, the chain applied another 0.99 cents to all items, according to its website, translating to items being rounded up to the closest dollar. Though it rings confusing the way the chain describes its pricing policy, more items at the chain are now over its well-known 99-cent sticker, including some media items like books.

Prices going up at dollar stores have forced the companies to push their promise of discount offers while consumers’ pockets are being hit in general by accumulating household costs. More shoppers are heading to dollar stores for some relief, but families who may have bought books to entertain their children now could be skipping the books aisle to make sure they have enough money for food.