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  563 Results
article
        17 Good Things That Actually Happened In '17
 
  
  In a year when hate thrived, we thought it was important to remember some of the good things that happened in 2017.
      
    lesson
        
          Chapter 1: Editorials
  An excerpt from A Whale Hunt, How a Native-American Village Did What No One Thought It Could by Robert Sullivan. This piece is to accompany "Holding Onto Heritage: Native Whale Hunts & Diversity" lesson.
      
  July 14, 2017
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        Create Safety by Modeling Vulnerability
 
  
  This teacher’s choice to be vulnerable with her students transformed the learning experience.
      
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            Informational
      
    
          Danger on my Doorstep
  Linda Schubert recounts the fear that consumed her Jewish family living in Nazi-Germany in the late 1930s. Each family member endured individual stress and anxiety, but each also contributed to the family's greater good of the family.
      
  July 7, 2014
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        Educating “Those Kids”
  After a colleague told her, “I’m not coming back next year,” this teacher reflected on what makes her an effective anti-bias educator.
      
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          Supporting LGBTQ+ Rights and Inclusion
  This resource page includes articles, webinars, guides, children's stories, podcasts and film on LGBTQ+ history, inclusive education practices and recommendations for being an ally.
      
  March 25, 2024
  article
        Hate at School: May 2019
 
  
  Racist yearbook photos and “promposals” gone wrong are among this month’s hate incidents that marked the end of the school year.
      
    article
        Why Our Students Need ‘Equity Literacy’
  Several stacks of fake dollar bills enclosed in a Plexiglas case sit at the center of an exhibit entitled “RACE: Are We So Different?” at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. One stack towers over the others. This teetering pile of bills represents the average net worth of “white” people’s assets in relation to those of other racialized groups based upon data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau from 1997 to 2000. While the “Asian” stack is almost as high, the “black” stack can hardly be called a stack at all; the “Latino” stack is almost as low.