REPRESENTED with Annie Gichuru
Welcome to REPRESENTED, the podcast.
This is your weekly dose of inspiration thatโll support you to build a racially inclusive online business without letting the fear of getting it wrong get in the way. These episodes will provide insights, strategies, and discussions that break down barriers and empower you to navigate the racial equity landscape.
Iโm Annie Gichuru, your host as well as a Racial Equity Coach who supports online business owners such as coaches, course creators, membership owners and group program facilitators. Itโs my calling in nature and ability to break-down complex and often uncomfortable conversations around race that has seen me teach over 100 online business owners to be more racially inclusive through my online program REPRESENTED.
Be sure to subscribe, rate and review so this podcast can reach more online business owners and begin to not only normalise racial inclusion in the online coaching space but see us actively shift our perspectives.
REPRESENTED with Annie Gichuru
112. Raising Anti-Racist Kids In An AI World
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When one of my clients told me how her children's school had marked Reconciliation Week here in Australia, it planted the seed for this episode. The school could have easily chosen the convenient and easy path of acknowledging and recognising the week but instead they chose to build relationship. This got me thinking about who is really shaping the way our children come to understand race, history, difference and belonging.
This episode is about raising anti-racist kids in a world where 79% of Australian children aged 10 to 17 years old have already used AI, where the homework helper can slowly begin to feel like a friend and where the first answer a machine offers can look like the whole truth. I bring in the work of Howard Stevenson, Abeba Birhane, Joy Buolamwini and Deborah Raji as well as Palawa scholar Maggie Walter, to explore why teaching our children to be kind to everyone falls short on it's own.
I also share the questions I ask my own daughter at the kitchen table, the ones that help a child notice whose story is missing from the answer in front of them, because raising racially aware children in an AI world begins, the way it always has, with the kind of adults we are willing to become.
How I Can Personally Support You:
The way we raise racially aware children always comes back to the work we are doing ourselves. That is what REPRESENTED is built around, my ten-week program for values-led online business owners who want more depth, care and accountability in how they lead, parent and build. Find out more and join the waitlist ๐๐พ https://anniegichuru.com/represented-waitlist/
Come say hi on Instagram, let me know where you are tuning in from. I'd love to hear from you ๐๐พ https://www.instagram.com/annie.gichuru