Kamari Crisp
Tulsa, Oklahoma youth journalist featured in the Rooted + Rising series, where they introduced their background, community work, and plans to cover issues affecting their community as part of a journalist cohort.
Tulsa Youth Leader Says Schools Measure Students More Than Support Them
Komari Crisp presents Tulsa’s Black history, especially Greenwood and Black Wall Street, as a source of identity and power for young people. But she says her school experience often made students feel like numbers, valued most visibly when standardized test scores were at stake rather than consistently supported as people. Crisp points to Tulsa Changemakers and her own Youth Action Coalition as a different model: sustained support that trusts young people to speak, lead, and take part in decisions affecting them.
Tulsa Youth Organizing Targets the High-School-to-College Gap
In a Rooted + Rising welcome video, Tulsa youth journalist Kamari Crisp frames her work around the transition from high school to college, a gap she says led her to start the Youth Action Coalition. Crisp argues that youth and education in Tulsa cannot be separated from race, culture, inequity and local history, including her own experience at Booker T. Washington High School. She says her reporting will also look for positive stories in the city, holding injustice and local possibility in the same frame.