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2,177 Results
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Guideposts for Equity
An educator reflects on her commitment to building a just and equitable society.
teaching strategy
Community Inquiry
Critical Listening Guide
A guide to help students interpret, analyze and evaluate information encountered in a variety of media formats. Use this guide with the spoken and performed texts included in the Perspectives anthology.
July 13, 2014
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Lessons of Tolerance
One young girl's experience on the school bus mirrors problems going on all over the country.
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What We're Watching
Dim the lights and get ready to learn with these TT-approved films!
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One Hundred Years in the Making
Get to Know the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.
the moment
Becoming a Village to Nurture Children
Nurturing children requires a community’s efforts to come together, as reflected in the proverb “It takes a village to raise a child.” Our nation’s children deserve love, not just in words but in our actions. These new Learning for Justice magazine articles offer models for parents, caregivers, educators and community members to nurture children’s growth, learning and well-being. And they remind and encourage us that: “[We] are better together and more effective when we work together rather than in isolation.
- Loving and Nurturing Young People
- Becoming a Village
- The Heart of Facilitation in Restorative Justice
lesson
What Does 'Post Racial' Mean, Anyway?
In this activity, students in the middle and upper grades will explore whether Obama's selection as the president of the United States marks a new era in America, one where race doesn't matter.
July 6, 2009
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Lessons We Can Learn
Web Exclusive activities for John Lewis’ Reflections on a Dream Deferred from Teaching Tolerance No. 33.
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Tour Brings American History To Life
Through a grant from Teaching American History, I was part of a group of teachers who spent months reading, listening and watching films and videos about the civil rights movement before we took a trip to the South. But still it was history—far away, untouchable and remote. That was until the first day in Sumner, Miss.