How to Start a Culturally Rich Book Club

by | Oct 1, 2020 | Books, Homeschool, Race

One of the homeschool activities I’m asked about most is our Heritage Book Club. It’s an off-shoot of the local support group I run for black homeschooled children and their families, and it’s one of our most popular activities. We don’t limit the children to one type of book, but most of the selections feature Black authors and/or characters. We designed the book club to bathe our children in cultural mirrors that they don’t often find in other literary environments, and since launching our culturally-rich book club the children have read over 100 books! I can’t help but smile as I write this.

The goals of Heritage Book Club are to:

  • Foster a life-long love of reading
  • Provide a fun environment in which to safely build lasting friendships
  • Promote opportunities for leadership and public speaking among peers
  • Expose children to a variety of literary styles, authors, and genres
  • Enhance literacy skills and increase vocabulary

Our homeschool support group started in 2016, and the book club launched the following year. Since then, we’ve had various age/grade breakdowns to best meet the needs of our membership, but this is what things look like this year:

Most of the groups meet monthly (teens meet weekly), and here are some helpful resources for determining placement:

Book club is NOT school, and the children do not have to maximize their potential reading levels. It is a fun activity, with friends, focused on one book a month. When making placement decisions, we ask parents to consider their child’s social needs, maturity, and the subject matter of certain books in addition to reading levels.

Meeting Format (1 hour):

10 minGroup check-in with ice-breaker question or general conversation
25 – 35 minChild-led book discussion facilitated by child/parent team (rotated monthly)*
15 – 25 minSnack, craft, game, or activity based on the book

*Exception: While meeting on Zoom during COVID-19, the groups are fully led by parent volunteers because it is difficult for the students to lead engaging meetings virtually. As often as possible, students will have opportunities for leadership roles during meetings.

Here are my notes from a recent meeting if you’d like to see an example of how to run a book club meeting. Normally, we’d have one or more hands-on activities because we typically meet in person (with the various age-based groups meeting simultaneously in different rooms), but all of our book club groups are meeting via Zoom for now.

Ground Rules (Parents are asked to review these with each child):

  1. Come prepared to discuss the book.
  2. Allow the child facilitator to lead the meeting (with help, as needed).
  3. Be a good listener and participate in the discussion.
  4. Raise your hand if you would like to talk.
  5. Be respectful of your friends.
  6. Ask questions.
  7. Feel free to disagree with your friends but do it respectfully.
  8. Have fun!

General Guidelines (provided to parents):

  1. Meetings are led by the children (with help from parents, as needed). If you find that you’re unable to attend the meeting that you and your child are scheduled to facilitate, it is your responsibility to find a replacement ahead of time so the meeting can successfully go on.
  2. Please encourage your children to remain open-minded about books they may not normally choose themselves. The diversity of thought/choice is one of the alluring aspects of a book club.
  3. If your child does not enjoy a certain book, please have them come to the next meeting prepared to discuss specifically why they disliked the book, what they wish the author had done differently, how the book compared to other books that they’ve read, etc. rather than just “I hated it.” Disagreement is expected and healthy. Being disagreeable is not.
  4. All groups are mixed gender with boys and girls meeting together. We may decide to break out into separate gender-based groups at some point, but they will meet jointly for now. This means that your child will read books with both male and female protagonists. Please encourage them to be open-minded and not pigeon-hole books as being solely for girls or boys.
  5. Latecomers can be distracting, so please make every effort to arrive on time.
  6. Silent reading? Yes! Audio books? Yes! Read alouds? Yes! Feel free to read books aloud, tag-team read with your child, or utilize an audio book if a title is chosen that is above your child’s current reading level or if your family just wants to enjoy sharing a book together. That’s TOTALLY OK!
  7. Please remind your child to check in at the front table to receive a book charm (1 per meeting).
  8. Please remember that this is supposed to be a stress-free, fun, enrichment activity for the children and parents. Let’s keep it sweet & simple!

Book Selection Guidelines: We’ve read a ton of books in the past several years .They range from light-hearted and fun to intense and emotional. Some years, the children get on a roll with a certain type of book and other times the selections are all over the map.

Here is a list of our past culturally-rich book club selections. I will be updating this monthly with our current selections, and I’m also still adding in past books.

  1. Books are selected ahead of time based on child/parent recommendations.
  2. All books must absolutely be age-appropriate and family-friendly. If in doubt regarding questionable or mature content, it’s likely not an ideal book for the group. If you’re not sure, PLEASE consult with the other parents in your group before recommending the title. Our families have varying philosophies on when and how to expose their children to sensitive topics or language, so please make a reasonable effort to respect the boundaries of your group. Generally speaking, the Young Adult group has the most latitude for mature topics, but please ask if you’re not sure.
  3. Unless otherwise agreed upon by the parents ahead of time, the Juniors, Middle Grade, and Young Adult book selections should be chapter books in order to provide a healthy challenge, plenty for the children to read over several weeks, and enough substance for a good discussion during the meeting.
  4. We are trying to expose the children to books that reflect their heritage, so most selections will feature Black authors and/or characters. However, some months we choose books that offer windows into a different culture or another aspect of diversity (i.e. ability levels, special needs, etc). Other months we may explore completely unrelated aspects of the human experience, especially when the book is recommended and voted on by the children.
  5. Please consider a variety of genres when making book recommendations:
  • Biography
  • Non-fiction
  • Humor
  • Realistic fiction
  • Folk tales
  • Poetry
  • Adventure
  • Historical fiction
  • Fantasy
  • Mystery

If you’d like to download a copy of all of this info in a single document, here is what I distribute to interested and participating parents each year: Heritage Homeschoolers Book Club Info Sheet. It’s locked so you won’t be able to make changes to the master file, but you can download the file and make as many edits as you’d like to your personal file.

Feel free to ask questions in the comments below, and you can reach me on Instagram @heritagemomblog.

12 Comments

  1. Aimee Fuhrman

    This is so comprehensive–really helpful for those wanting to start their own group.

    Reply
    • HeritageMom

      Thank you, Aimee! I tried to create what I was looking for when I first started the book club groups. I hope it saves other people a ton of time 🙂

      Reply
  2. Kristen

    This sounds fantastic! Thank you for sharing. Will you be adding next year’s book club lists?

    Reply
    • HeritageMom

      Thank you for reminding me! I’ll add this year’s books today 🙂

      Reply
  3. ShaToina

    Thanks so much for sharing in such detail.. I will be adding this to our group. I did want to ask, do you have the meetups at someone’s home or a facility?

    Reply
    • HeritageMom

      Great question! We’re currently paying to rent rooms at a local church, but for the first couple of years we met at a local park. Our groups would sit at the picnic tables or on a blanket. We did this because we needed free space, but it ended up being really nice because everyone would hang out on the playground or just standing around talking afterwards. We eventually moved away from the park because the weather became a nuisance. We briefly met at various homes, but we quickly outgrew that because no one really had enough space for multiple groups to meet simultaneously. Then we met at the meeting room in the library, but that didn’t work because there wasn’t enough space for all of the groups. That’s when we started renting space at a church. Then COVID so we met on Zoom and now we’re back at a different church. I hope this helps!

      Reply
  4. Toni

    I love this! I recently joined a local book club and suggested that maybe we dedicate one month to black authors. The head of the book club pulled me aside to tell me they felt maybe that would be too “complex” and we should keep the book club “fun”. They seemed genuinely afraid of potential conflict. Over reading black authors!!

    It has inspired me to start something of my own. But I’ve been feeling a bit uncertain. In my own personal reading I’ve been reading black authors/poets and feel so excited about learning. I feel hesitant as a white cis person to create a inclusive book club. But at the same time, I feel like my small community would benefit from something like that.

    Your suggestions are great and a perfect blueprint for starting. My son is almost four, and I wish so badly I could join one of your Littles clubs!

    Hugs Amber! ❤️ Love all your content (and your book)!

    Reply
    • HeritageMom

      I wish you could too! It makes me sad that they think that Black books can’t be fun. You don’t have to read about the horrors of enslavement. There are books about Black kids just being kids that are so perfect for a fun and “non-complex” book club. But anyway… Don’t be discouraged by the pushback. You can easily champion an inclusive book club that reads all sorts of wonderful books. I would’ve jumped all over that when my kids were young, but I couldn’t find it so I had to start it myself.

      Reply
  5. Ody

    Wooo this is so interesting am feeling so lucky to have bombed into ur piece on starting a book club I was actually looking for something to read and guidelines as am presently doing a research on how to start one come this summer.please I need you to guide me through and mentor me on it please. Thank you.

    Reply
    • HeritageMom

      I’m so glad that you found this. Feel free to ask any questions you may have after reading the guide.

      Reply
  6. Kris

    Hi! Thank you so much for these ideas and inspiration. Couple questions. Do the parents take turns picking the books or is it collectively decided as a group?
    If it’s your turn to lead do you also plan the activity?
    . Do you find an rsvp necessary or is it laid back, whoever comes will come? 🙂 just some thoughts as I plan our next years book club. Appreciate you!

    Reply
    • HeritageMom

      We’ve done it several different ways over the years. Currently, there is a lead parent for each group who picks and announces all the books for the school year in July. Previously, each parent took a month where they chose the book and they led that meeting (or their child led if they’re old enough). We definitely capture RSVPs because sometimes we have supplies/crafts/activities to go with the book, and we don’t want to waste time or money preparing too many things. We also don’t want to run out. I hope this helps! I loooove our book club!

      Reply

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My name is Amber O’Neal Johnston, and I started this website to document and discuss the joys and trials of raising my kids to love themselves and others.

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