


School Media Reviews for the Passages Crew
The “magic money” program, aka ICCAAN, is just one of many ways the public libraries offer support to teens as they consider their options after secondary school. We can’t thank Katrina enough for personally visiting with all of our students inside Belmont’s school library, building bridges, and signing students and staff up for library cards. --Jessica Fenster-Sparber
This fictionalized memoir begins with a confrontation between Huda and her mother who is holding up a mediocre report card and demanding to know where Huda keeps her drugs.
After grabbing the reader’s attention in media res, the story rewinds back to Huda’s move with her mother and four sisters to Dearborn, Michigan. There the sisters attend public school for the first time with other hijab-wearing Muslim girls.
This picture-book brings the reader into the world of a Greek refugee camp populated by children from Iran and Afghanistan living in repurposed shipping containers. The author effectively anthropomorphizes the camp as she writes, “The Waiting Place doesn’t mind. It wants more children and mothers and fathers. It doesn’t want you to visit the nearby lake… to learn your new language, or to work, or build, or learn.”
The Waiting Place invites the reader to investigate refugee crises past and present.
Back matter includes a lengthy afterword by the Iranian American author who is a refugee herself, as well as a helpful glossary.
This is an excellent picture book for older readers and a jumping-off point for conversations and explorations of purgatories, asylum, undocumented persons, migration and, immigration, and may pair well with When Stars are Scattered. Teachers and facilitators may find engagement materials here, including a six page discussion guide from the publisher.--Jessica Fenster-Sparber
On Tuesday, May 30 and Wednesday, May 31, the library hosted mindful coloring workshops led by Passages’ school psychologist Rebecca Fernandez. All groups were invited and Ms. Fernandez played calming, ambient music throughout and encouraged participants to reflect on the experience after they had 15-20 minutes of practice. Everyone present was noticeably calmer.
Both high school seniors now, Prince tells Dani he can make her fall in love with him in three dates - will she give him the chance to win her heart? Set in Detroit with well-developed characters and alternating perspectives, teens looking for a romance read will enjoy this one.
The publisher has made Julia E. Torres’ nine page curriculum guide available here for teachers wanting to engage students in reading contemporary YA literature. --Jessica Fenster-Sparber
Ms. Bespalova and Ms. Ikawa in collaboration with Ms. Fenster-Sparber Ms. Tamika and the NSD staff arranged a trip for Richmond Hill to go to BAM to see the 46th annual Dance Africa Festival.
We were in good company with 2,000 people in the audience dancing in their seats and enjoying the show! This year’s production featured music and dance from Ghana entitled “Golden Ghana: Adinkra, Anase and Abusua.” During the introduction, we learned that the people of Ghana welcome visitors with the wonderful word “Akwaaba” which literally translates as welcome! The students also enjoyed call and response with the words “ago," and "ame” which were first uttered from the BAM stage by Baba Chuck Davis, the founding father of Dance Africa. “Ago” means "attention" and “ame” means "you have my attention." Well, Dance Africa certainly grabbed our attention! --Lori Ikawa
On Wednesday, April 26th Belmont’s St. John’s group had front row seats for BAM’s annual celebration of poetry and hip-hop called Word. Sound. Power.
This year’s performance highlighted the griot as emcee with the ever-fresh artist-poet Baba Israel in that role. Students’ favorites included Dahlak Brathwaite, Helixx C. Armageddon, Silent Knight, and Pri the Honey Dark.
All Passages students - secure, limited and non-secure - now have access to Duolingo. The free application allows students to use their Passages Academy Google Classroom credentials to log in, sign up for one of the 40+ languages, and begin their journey to learning a new lingo.
Did I mention it’s all free and accessible through their chromebooks! Big thank you to Mr. Garvey for making it happen.– Claudio Leon
This excellent and important guide entitled Connections has been around for a long time and this new edition is the best one yet. It has wonderful artwork and opening narratives by the powerful and brilliant voices of Grace Detrevarah, Kelley Harnett, and Terrence Coffie.
If you, or those you work with are now incarcerated, or have been, this is the single most important guide to read. And note if you’re reading this on a digital device, you can access Connections here, free from the New York Public Library.
The 400+ page guide provides resources for dealing with Covid-19, housing, financial assistance, physical and mental health, addiction, legal and immigration issues, veterans, women’s and elder issues, LGBTQI+ issues, youth needs, parents and caregivers’ needs, and very importantly offers resources to help with the job search.
Also included is a 2023 calendar, blank pages for notes, and an index, with artwork and quotes sprinkled throughout. Hats off to editor Kate Heenan and the writers for this invaluable volume. Thank you to Sarah Ball and Ricci Yuhico for ensuring it reaches every site at Passages Academy.--Jessica Fenster-Sparber
Congratulations to our student authors just published by 826NYC in the anthology No Matter What I Should Be Myself Fully. Out this week and available exclusively at Passages, this volume collects writing crafted with the gifted teaching artist Jaydra Johnson in February as part of our Frederick Douglass interdisciplinary project. Participants read about Douglass' life in Bolden's biography, then read excerpts from Douglass' autobiography, and finally drafted their own pieces of memoir and poetry to share with the world. --Jessica Fenster-Sparber
You probably know who Rosa Parks was, and it’s likely you’ve also heard of Claudette Colvin. But did you know the two women knew each other? And do you know what teenager Colvin was up to during the time of the 1955-56 Montgomery Bus Boycott?
In this double biography of the two civil rights figures author Baptiste and illustrator Grant give readers the missing pieces needed to better understand the events of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, and the brave actions of Parks and Claudette, all done in comic book format.
Adolescent readers who enjoy comics as well as reading about history and civil rights heroes will enjoy this book as will Social Studies teachers. --Jessica Fenster-Sparber
Baptiste, Tracey. History Comics: Rosa Parks and Claudette Colvin. New York: First Second, 2023. Print.
Finally they’ve split themselves apart. The Hulk and Bruce Banner are now two separate beings able to go their separate ways - at least that’s what they think! After wanting nothing more than to live without the Hulk, Bruce Banner’s wish finally comes true, only to realize he needs the monster within him more than he expected.
Meanwhile The Hulk believes his life will be different now that he is rid of Banner, but trouble finds them both descending into a pit of madness and suddenly they find themselves intertwined once again through unforeseen circumstances.
Can The Hulk and Bruce Banner keep their separate identities? Or will fighting for their individuality destroy everything around them? Any Marvel or Action comic book reader should be sure to pick this one up.--Claudio Leon
Aaron, Jason. The Incredible Hulk by Jason Aaron: The Complete Collection. New York: Marvel, 2017. Print.
This is a well-rounded look at data security written on at a middle school reading level explaining how data breaches happen and how readers can protect themselves. Readers are also given information about digital literacy, and each chapter introduces important vocabulary, as how to research more about digital data security. The author also explains how to evaluate primary, secondary and tertiary sources.
Text blocks are broken up by pictures, charts and graphs to highlight information. This book is a great starting point for learning about digital data security and information literacy.--Claudio Leon
New York City mayor Eric Adams wrote a note prefacing this account of the towering 19th century figure Frederick Douglass making the book especially relevant and timely to us New Yorkers today.
In his intro the book’s editor provides the reader with context for meeting Douglass through the eyes of the poet Walt Whitman and the “varied reactions to his positions on abolition and black equality thus illustrate the ways in which those issues shaped the city in its formative decades.”
Each of the book’s chapters highlights a speech Douglass made in Brooklyn between 1859 and 1893 and are fascinating primary sources including contemporary public responses to his ideas. Thus the reader is given crucial, often painful insight into how Brooklynites viewed issues of equality 160 years ago.
Footnotes add important context. Recommended for educators.--Jessica Fenster-Sparber
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Mike Ramsey at Bronx Hope 12/22/22 photo credit: Jamila Abdulrashid |
Happy 2023! While we are looking forward to what’s ahead in the new year we didn't want to forget to tell you about last month’s percussion workshops with the brilliant percussionist and music educator Mike Ramsey. Mr. Ramsey visited with all students in all groups at both of Passages’ non-secure sites, Bronx Hope and Belmont and students drummed their hearts out.--Jessica Fenster-Sparber
Now Jess has a plan to catch her mother’s killer and the whole world is going to be part of it.
Readers of One of Us is Next, Disappeared or The Female of the Species will very likely enjoy this murder mystery.--Claudio Leon
For the reader looking for a very basic understanding of cryptocurrency, this book provides just that. Written at a 6th grade reading level, Cryptocurrency keeps things very simple covering the history of how this relatively new currency came about, how it works, its advantages and disadvantages, and how one acquires and uses cryptocurrencies.
And finally the book addresses the dangers that have emerged with cryptocurrency’s proliferation.
We are the library team at Passages Academy, the New York City Department of Education school for incarcerated and detained youth. Our goal is to build a culture of literacy at our school in a variety of ways, including talking more about what we're reading and what we're teaching, and how students respond to these materials.
We sincerely appreciate the contributions of our guest bloggers—teachers and community partners who know our students and our libraries so well. Thanks, everyone!