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  1,121 Results
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          Text-Dependent Questions for “Slavery as a Form of Racialized Social Control”
  These questions accompany Teaching 'The New Jim Crow' Lesson 3: Slavery As A Form Of Racialized Social Control.
      
  July 17, 2017
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        A Wise Latina Woman: Reflections on Sonia Sotomayor
  “I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.” These few words, spoken casually by Sonia Sotomayor at the annual Mario G. Olmos Law and Cultural Diversity Lecture at UC-Berkeley in 2001, came back to haunt President Barack Obama’s nominee for the United States Supreme Court during the spring and summer of 2009. Hard to believe that this brief statement could cause such anguish, particularly among the conservative white senators who form part of the Senate Judiciary Committee, yet they led to days of arrogant grilling by the Senators and weeks of newspaper articles and commentary by television pundits speculating on what Sotomayor meant, whether it would hurt her confirmation, and what it would signal for the new court.
      
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        When Empathy Is Paramount
  Putting empathy into action is a daily calling for Kelly Wickham Hurst.
      
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        Bridging the Cultural Gaps in ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’
  This year marks the 50th anniversary of the novel To Kill A Mockingbird. Harper Lee’s work is so powerful and popular that it has never been out of print, selling more than 30 million copies.
      
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        Name Changers
  The names of Confederate and segregationist leaders label the landscape of the South. What are the consequences when these names belong to schools?
      
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          Music Reconstructed: Adia Victoria and the Landscape of the Blues
  Installment 3 When we consider the trauma of white supremacy during the Jim Crow era—what writer Ralph Ellison describes as “the brutal experience”—it’s important to understand the resilience and joy that sustained Black
      
  April 12, 2022
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        Books Can Build a Bridge of Understanding
  "Sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me." I was sitting outside on the playground bench wiping the tears of a child when this proverb came to mind. It isn’t true, of course. Nancy was a second-grader going through an evaluation process to help us understand why she couldn't read. Kayla was one of her classmates. As they were climbing the ladder of the slide, Kayla yelled out, "Nancy is retarded!" Ouch. Words can break our hearts.
      
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        Teaching Reconstruction Is Absolutely Necessary
  Most state standards don’t accurately represent the Reconstruction era. The Zinn Education Project’s new Teach Reconstruction campaign and report highlight why truthful teaching about this period is a must.
      
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        Hate at School: February 2019
  Instead of lessons about black history and culture, February brought slurs, blackface, threats and even violence at some U.S. schools.