Jasmine Bradshaw is a researcher, educator, and podcaster who truly believes that creating a more loving, inclusive, and just society starts within the sacred walls of our homes. Her podcast, First Name Basis, exists to give parents the tools they need to teach their children about race, religion, and culture. Her community makes parents feel empowered and gives them the confidence they need to create lasting change in their sphere of influence.\nI have been binging Jasmine\u2019s show since we first met online a few months ago.\xa0She is a truly talented and generous educator.\xa0I am so grateful for her work and really delighted to share this conversation with my community.\xa0I think you\u2019ll learn a lot and I really hope you\u2019ll invest in Jasmine\u2019s work by subscribing to her show and joining her Patreon membership.\nListen in to hear Jasmine share:\n\nWhy and how race exists as a social construct\n\nHow to have early conversations about race and skin tone with your kids\n\nHow to lay the groundwork for conversations about race in order to have deeper, more difficult conversations with kids as they get older\n\nHow to talk to your child\u2019s school about their efforts toward diversity and inclusion\n\nHow to talk to your child\u2019s school about the versions of American history they teach\n\nHow to be a better anti racist in order to teach your children to be anti racists\n\nHow you can move from good intentions to confident action in your anti racism work\n\nLinks mentioned:\xa0\n\nConnect with Jasmine: Firstnamebasis.org\n\nJasmine on IG: @firstname.basis\n\nJoin Jasmine\u2019s Patreon: patreon.com/firstnamebasis\n\nTeaching Tolerance Resources: https://www.tolerance.org/\n\n\nThank you to our sponsors:\n\n\nMagic Spoon: Go to magicspoon.com/SMA to grab a variety pack and try it today! And be sure to use our promo code SMA at checkout to get free shipping.\n\n\nBest Fiends: Download FREE on the Apple App Store or Google Play.\n\n\xa0\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices