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        Marching Into Women’s History Month
  From now on, when we talk about women’s history, the Women’s March should be part of those lessons. Here’s why.
      
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        Teach This: HBCUs Are Not Pioneers of School Choice
  This week’s statement from Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos on historically black colleges and universities is a prime example of whitewashing U.S. history. Classroom teachers for grades 6-12, however, can use this moment as a teaching opportunity.
      
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        Learning How to Know in 2017
  How do your students learn how to know? And what does your teaching look like in the face of a devaluing of shared truth, deepening political polarization and the mainstreaming of intolerance?
      
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        Learn Something New Every Day
  Antisemitism is alive and well in the United States, and its proponents feel emboldened. The antidote? Anti-bias education.
      
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        Mix Longevity With Student Leadership…and Bake
  The importance of relationships and community are woven into this school’s culture. How do they do it?
      
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          Signs behind the bar, in Birney, Montana
 
  
  This photograph, from 1941, was taken by Marion Post Wolcott in Birney, Montana.
      
  February 27, 2017
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        When Students Have Space to Talk About Their Cultures
  An elementary school principal highlights what can happen when educators give students opportunities to talk about their cultures and to learn about the cultures of other students.
      
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        The Disturbing “Monkey Business” of U.S. Black-White Race Relations
  Representations of black people as animals is both a past and present manifestation of the United States’ complicated history with race.