24 answers

Talking to Children About Race

I have a 3 1/2 year old who is contantly asking questions (its the age, I know). I am caucasian and my husband is african american. We knew that we would need to talk to our children about being biracial, but we didn't know it would be this early and we were sort of taken off guard.

A couple of weeks ago we were talking about friends of ours and out of the blue my 3 year old said "is he black?" (he is) and my husband and I were sort of taken off guard and very nicely asked him where he heard that and he at first said "grandma said it" and I know he said that out of fear (I could tell by the way he responded)- I asked my mom and she confirmed that they had not talked about skin color. Then this morning he said "mommy, is Daddy's skin black?" And I tried to see if I could find out where he may have heard this and asked him what color his skin was and mine (he said mine and his were grey) . . .but I can't figure out where he heard this. I know the obvious . . .we ARE different colors, but I have no idea how to handle it.

He is in preschool 3 days a week. I am going to ask his teacher if they have been talking about skin color.

Does anyone have any tips or good books that we can use when talking to our kids about this. It sounds so weird to even be asking this, since it IS an obvious difference, but we were just not prepared to be discussing it now.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you to everyone who responded. We have started a conversation about how everyone is a different shade of beautiful. It turns out, though, that he heard the term "black" at school (which started a whole other conversation). I am not nervous at all about our discussions and they have actually been quite fun. I just wasn't prepared for a question like that from him! So, again, thank you.

Featured Answers

My friend is a dark skinned African American woman and her husband is a very pale white caucasion. Their two daughters are somewhere in between. Whenever kids bring it up...they talk about people's skin color by comparing different skin tones to the colors of food that children like. Their kids and the neighbors kids love trying to think of the exact food to match someone's skin. Chocolate bar, caramel, muffin, etc...

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B.,

I agree with another poster that at 3.5 perhaps the best answer is that God/nature/whatever makes people of all different colors, looks, sizes...etc. But, what matters most is the kind of person you are on the INSIDE. That's the truth of all truth...don't you think?

T.

1 mom found this helpful

I do not come from a biracial background, so I may be off base here, but it seems to me that, as with anything, the bigger deal you make out of it, the bigger deal it will be for the child. Perhaps a simple "God made people with different skin colors, just like we have different eye color and different hair color, but we are still the same on the inside" might be enough for now. Just a thought...

1 mom found this helpful

I am also in a biracial family and I can understand your concern. One thing I would say is to not focus on the color differences. They know we are different colors and right now is the time that they learn from you how to view it. If you see it as a big deal then your child will to. If you don't they won't. I have a 4 year old little girl who sees us all as people some are African American (although my mother in law states that she is Black)and some are Caucasian, like myself. What I would say: is that God created all of us and made us different colors to make life interesting.

While I'm not in the same situation as you, I do have a 4-year-old and just thought I'd add in that keeping it simple would be ideal right now. At this age they can't deal with complex answers. Questions like "why does the rain fall", for example, don't want to be answered with an in-depth description of the ecosystem, but something easy like "because the grass and flowers need a drink of water" will suffice. It is very likely if you answer his questions as simply and honestly as you can, he won't press further yet for any "discussion" on the topic. I'd also agree with other posters who mentioned getting books to read to/with him on the subject, or even a dvd - just make sure you screen the materials first so that you know it's approaching the topic in a way you feel comfortable with before introducing it to him.

Hi!! I have been wondering the same thing with my son. He turned 3 in April and I am waiting for this topic to come about. I am black and my husband is white so i'm sure it will come up one day I just dont know when and what to say to him when it does. It would be nice to have other moms of biracial children to chat with about this. Email me!!

I am not biracial as well, but my husband is half cuban and african american. I think we as adults make too much out of race and skin color. If you put your son's with other kids of any race, they would not see the difference. I think you should tell your son's to embrace both of this cultures and love themselves for who they are and not the color of skin. now a days everyone is mixed with something and as time goes on it is going to ber where race will not be a issue with most people. Good luck and keep us posted.

I like the book "What if Zebras lost their stripes" It talks about how would the zebras treat each other differently if some lost their white stripes and some lost their black stripes. Also, I don't know if you should be so concerned on where he heard black from, it could be a color observation, but i also know that many schools do heritage weeks or diversity weeks and that might be a place to start. My son started making race observations at around three also and we went to the library and showed him a globe and started talking about how people from different places may look different, but they are all still just people and went through differnt books. Honestly, I think the younger you get kids to understand peoples differences whether it be race or special needs or gender, the better because they will definitely here things outside of your home and you want them to accept it with your beliefs rather than some of the ignorant things said by other people. The more upfront you are thebetter because it will cause your child less confusion. Good
Luck!

Hi B.,

We are not multi-racial but I explain to my son how great it is that we are all different. I tell him that he's never going to find someone exactly like him. Some kids will be taller, shorter, darker, lighter, thinner, heavier, etc.
How boring would it be if we were all the same?

There's nothing wrong with being black, white, yellow, orange or purple, but if you act like it is then he will too.

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