5,409 Results
Pandemic Pedagogy: A Call to Educators to Bring Their Classrooms to Reality

Educators’ and Students’ Rights During COVID-19

Join TT’s Future Voter Project
We’ve updated our Future Voters Project! Check out our new resources, including a lesson bank for teaching about voter suppression, PD for managing partisanship in your classroom, discussion guides for addressing current events and more! Educators in the Deep South can check out our grants supporting school-based voter registration. And educators nationwide can sign up for this week’s free webinar on registering student voters during this unprecedented election season!
- Future Voters Project
- My School Votes
My School Votes

Resources for Confronting White Nationalism

The March on Washington Mirrors the Movement Today
This weekend, thousands of people from across the country will assemble on the National Mall to commemorate the 57th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. The event is a rededication of the 1960s movement while also capturing the urgency of today’s commitment to fight for Black lives amidst a global pandemic and a year marked by police violence. Use these resources to help students draw connections between the marches for justice—and the vital roles of young people—then and now.
- Ten Things to Know About the March on Washington
- Gary Younge: Heroes Are Human
Teach This: Texas Students Fight for Their Right to Vote

Talk About Police Violence With Your New Students
After this weekend, we—like many members of our community—are mourning the police shootings that killed Trayford Pellerin in Louisiana and left Jacob Blake in serious condition in a Wisconsin hospital. We understand how hard it can be to know how to support students in the face of ongoing police violence against Black people in the United States. We hope these resources will help.
- Don't Say Nothing
- Discussing Race, Racism and Police Violence
- “No, I Am Not OK.” Thanks for Asking.