AbstractThe article introduces and defines a theory of Culturally Digitized Pedagogy (CDP), an extension of asset pedagogies, namely culturally relevant and culturally sustaining pedagogies. The purpose of this framework is to add a critical lens for examining digital literacies and integrate culturally sustaining pedagogy principles with the reality of youth of Color's online lives. Research and practice need theories and pedagogies—such as youth digital literacies on social media—situating the conversation in new contexts and the possibilities these spaces cultivate for resisting monocultural and monolingual society by centering the asset‐orientation of youths' grassroots activism in online worlds. Thus, this paper introduces a conceptually grounded framework, culturally digitized pedagogy, which presents a pedagogical proposal aligned with contemporary educational practices and supported by current research. First, I describe the central argument of the article, forwarding a framework of culturally digitized pedagogy. Next, I frame culturally digitized pedagogy by discussing advancements it provides in current research. Then, I situate the unique activism of BIPOC youth. Last, I provide pedagogical interventions, grounded in the framework.