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Teaching Reconstruction Is Absolutely Necessary

Teaching Local History in Tulsa

Teaching Active Kindness With a Little Spy Work

Teaching About Sexual Assault and Consent
Allegations of sexual assault and harassment have dominated the news this week. This edition of The Moment offers resources that can guide you through tough but necessary classroom conversations about consent and responsibility.
- The Brett Kavanaugh Controversy Has Inspired a Dangerous Defense
- Say No to “Boys Will Be Boys”
- Teaching Consent Doesn't Have to Be Hard
Teaching Toward Liberation With Love: Q&A With Author Jamilah Pitts

The Courage to Teach Hard History

Teaching and Learning About Reconstruction
The PBS series Reconstruction: America After the Civil War has viewers across the country learning and talking about this critical period in U.S. history. These resources offer ways for educators to carry the lessons of Reconstruction into their schools and communities and a reminder of why we must be honest with students about the hard history of American slavery.
- An Intersectional Lesson From Reconstruction
- Be Your Own Historian
- The Courage to Teach Hard History
Teaching in the Wake of Police Violence
Yesterday, the police officer who shot Atatiana Jefferson inside her home during a wellness check was charged with murder. But the grief and righteous anger at her killing continue today. How will you talk with your students about injustice, police violence and the fact that black lives matter? Here are a few places to begin.
- Don't Say Nothing
- Discussing Race, Racism and Police Violence
- Why Teaching Black Lives Matter Matters | Part I
Teach This: Politics and History Textbooks
