Category: Parent Resources

Guides, tools, and conversation starters to help parents nurture confidence, cultural pride, and purpose in their children—rooted in the teachings of Marcus Garvey.

  • The Garvey Blueprint at the Marcus Garvey Education Academy

    Geoffrey Philp presents The Garvey Blueprint at the Marcus Garvey Education Academy MGEA February 19 2026 7 PM EST event flyer
    Geoffrey Philp presents The Garvey Blueprint at the Marcus Garvey Education Academy (MGEA), February 19, 2026, 7:00 PM EST. Register at bit.ly/garveyblueprint.

    I grew up in Kingston, Jamaica. Marcus Garvey was everywhere and nowhere. His name was on buildings. His face was on the currency. But his ideas were absent from the classroom.

    That absence shaped everything I have done since.

    For thirty years, I studied Garvey’s writings. I spent six years teaching middle school English, and then I taught college for twenty-seven years. And across all that time, one question kept returning: Why do our children learn about Garvey as a portrait on a wall, never as a thinker whose methods they can use?

    The Garvey Blueprint is my answer.

    On Thursday, February 19, at 7:00 PM EST, I will be presenting The Garvey Blueprint at the Marcus Garvey Education Academy. The presentation is open to educators, parents, school leaders, and anyone who believes that Black children deserve a curriculum built from inside their own intellectual tradition.

    The Garvey Blueprint: A Conversation with the Marcus Garvey Education Academy

    February 19, 2026 | 7:00 PM EST

    Register: bit.ly/garveyblueprint

    Direct Zoom Link: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/4045329958

    What Is The Garvey Blueprint?

    The Garvey Blueprint is a three-year Pan-African literacy curriculum for grades 6 through 8. It uses English Language Arts as the medium through which students encounter the intellectual, political, and cultural history of Africa and its diaspora.

    Across 39 instructional weeks per year, students study 31 historical figures per grade. Over three years, they encounter 75 unique historical figures and one fictional character. Nine staple figures return every year, studied through a different analytical lens each time. A sixth grader meets Frederick Douglass through the question of clarity. An eighth grader meets Douglass through the systems that criminalized Black literacy. The figure stays the same. The thinking transforms.

    Three pillars govern the curriculum: the Power of the Mind, the Importance of Purpose, and the Strength of Perseverance. These pillars come directly from Garvey’s educational philosophy. They are structural principles embedded in every quarter, every framing question, and every assessment.

    Why This Curriculum Exists

    Colonial education divided what belonged together. African intellectual history. Caribbean political thought. African American literary tradition. These are chapters of the same story, separated by design. The Garvey Blueprint reconnects them.

    Every instructional week begins with an original historical fiction anchor text. Students enter through story. They meet Harriet Tubman, Arturo Schomburg, Frantz Fanon, Antonio Maceo, Ella Baker, and dozens more as characters in a narrative before analyzing them as strategists and system-builders. The stance toward every figure is operational: What did this person build? What did it cost? Can the method be applied?

    This is what we call Builders and Their Blueprints. Historical figures studied as architects of liberation whose methods transfer to the student’s own condition.

    What I Will Cover on February 19

    The presentation will walk through the curriculum’s architecture. How the three pillars organize instruction across quarters. How the eight developmental stages, drawn from Garvey’s own declarations, form a spine that holds together three years of learning. How the weekly rhythm moves students through four cognitive levels every single week. How the Grit Guardrail Framework ensures that when we study perseverance, we study it alongside the systems that made perseverance necessary.

    I will also address the question that every parent and educator asks first: How does this prepare students for standardized assessments? The answer is direct. The Garvey Blueprint aligns with state ELA standards. Reading, writing, speaking, and listening are embedded in every week. Students write claims with evidence. They build analytical essays. They engage in Socratic discussion. By eighth grade, they defend a capstone portfolio tracing their intellectual development across three years.

    The curriculum does not choose between cultural grounding and academic rigor. It treats them as the same project.

    If you are an educator looking for a curriculum that teaches Black history as a year-round intellectual framework, this presentation is for you.

    Who Should Attend

    If you are a parent searching for something that meets your child where they are and takes them somewhere they have never been, this is for you.

    If you are a school leader considering what a Pan-African ELA curriculum looks like when it is standards-aligned, assessment-ready, and built to last three years, this conversation is where you start.

    Join the Conversation

    Thursday, February 19, 2026

    Time: 7:00 PM EST

    Host: Marcus Garvey Education Academy (MGEA)

    Register: bit.ly/garveyblueprint

    Direct Zoom Link: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/4045329958

    Share this with anyone you think may be interested. The door is open.

    Geoffrey Philp is the founder of The Garvey Classroom LLC and creator of The Garvey Blueprint. He is the author of several books of fiction and poetry, a Silver Musgrave Medal recipient, and a Marcus Garvey Award for Excellence in Education honoree. He has spent twenty-seven years teaching at the college level and six years teaching middle school English.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is The Garvey Blueprint curriculum?

    The Garvey Blueprint is a three-year Pan-African literacy curriculum for grades 6 through 8. It uses original historical fiction anchor texts to teach 75 unique historical figures across three years, organized around three pillars drawn from Marcus Garvey’s educational philosophy: the Power of the Mind, the Importance of Purpose, and the Strength of Perseverance.

    Who created The Garvey Blueprint?

    Geoffrey Philp, a Jamaican-born author and educator with twenty-seven years of college teaching experience, six years as a middle school English teacher, and two decades of Marcus Garvey scholarship, created The Garvey Blueprint through The Garvey Classroom LLC.

    Is the Garvey Blueprint aligned with state standards?

    Yes. The Garvey Blueprint aligns with state ELA standards, including the New York State Next Generation English Language Arts Learning Standards. Reading, writing, speaking, and listening are embedded in every instructional week.

    What grades does The Garvey Blueprint serve?

    The curriculum serves grades 6 through 8 across a three-year developmental sequence. Each grade has its own central question and analytical lens, with nine staple figures returning each year at increasing levels of cognitive demand.

    How is The Garvey Blueprint different from other culturally responsive curricula?

    The Garvey Blueprint is story-driven, meaning every instructional week is built around an original historical fiction anchor text. It studies historical figures as strategists and system-builders whose methods are transferable, rather than as inspirational symbols. Social-emotional learning is embedded in the academic work, with no standalone SEL lessons.

    What is the Marcus Garvey Education Academy (MGEA) presentation?

    On February 19, 2026, at 7:00 PM EST, Geoffrey Philp will present The Garvey Blueprint at the Marcus Garvey Education Academy. The virtual presentation is open to educators, parents, and school leaders.

    Register at bit.ly/garveyblueprint.

  • The Garvey Classroom Resources

    The Garvey Classroom Resources

    The Garvey Classroom was created to give our children the tools to become confident, lifelong learners.

    We build resources that help African children in the West remember who they are, trust their minds, and walk with purpose.

    Parents, teachers, and community elders will find tools here that strengthen identity, clarity, and belonging in our children.

    Start Here

    For parents

    Begin with the children’s books and short videos. These stories and daily teachings help your child grow a strong mind and a grounded sense of self.

    For educators

    Use our lesson plans, ROOTS reflections, and writing guides. These resources help you create classrooms that protect imagination and build confidence.

    For community leaders

    Use our stories and study circles to support youth programs, church groups, and after school spaces.

    Books for Home and Classroom

    Amazon Author Page

    https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B001K819L0

    For Parents and Children

    My Name Is Marcus

    • Amy’s Christmas Gift

    • The Marcus Garvey Coloring Book 

    For Teens and Adults

    The Power of the Mind, Purpose, and Perseverance: A Marcus Garvey Reader

    Unstoppable You: Fifty Quotes from Marcus Garvey to Inspire Greatness

    All titles are available from the Amazon author page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B001K819L0

    Amy’s Christmas Gift (en Español) will be released soon.

    Lesson Plans and Classroom Tools

    The Garvey Classroom on Teachers Pay Teachers

    https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/store/the-garvey-classroom

    Featured resources include:

    • Marcus Garvey speech analysis

    • Pan African heroes lessons

    • Social emotional learning units rooted in confidence and purpose

    • Writing and composition tools that build clarity and flow

    Video Learning for Children and Families

    Unstoppable Heroes: A children-centered video podcast series.

    Daily Garvey Wisdom: Short daily videos that teach clarity, purpose, and perseverance.

    The Work of Freedom: A teaching series with Elder Grace and Elder Samuel.

    YouTube Channel

    https://www.youtube.com/@GeoffreyPhilp

    Courses and Learning Experiences

    • The Garvey Blueprint for Liberation

    • Marcus Garvey in the Age of AI

    • Teacher Training Circles

    Stay Connected

    Newsletter: https://thegarveyclassroom.substack.com

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mynameismarcusgarvey

    Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B001K819L0

    Teachers Pay Teachers: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/store/the-garvey-classroom

  • Liberation Library: Course Video Playlist & Reflection Guide

    Liberation Library: Course Video Playlist & Reflection Guide

    Our children inherit more than names and faces. They inherit stories—some told proudly, others buried under the weight of colonial lies. Too often, history textbooks shrink Africa to a footnote, skip over Garvey’s thunder, and flatten the voices of women, rebels, and dreamers.

    The Liberation Library is here to change that. It is not a playlist. It is a map of resistance, purpose, and liberation across centuries. Each film is a spark. Each voice pushes back against forgetting.

    African Resistance and History

    Pan-Africanism and Black Nationalism

    Key Leaders and Thinkers

    Cultural Icons

    By pairing each module with living voices, students experience Garvey’s blueprint as practice: rooted identity, clear purpose, steady perseverance, and collective liberation. Garvey said, ‘We are going to emancipate ourselves from mental slavery, because whilst others might free the body, none but ourselves can free the mind.’ Each film is a mirror for that work.