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Trans Rights and Bathroom Access Laws: A History Explained

Women’s Equality Day
Despite the diverse coalition of activists who fought for its passage, the 19th Amendment didn’t bring voting equality to all women. Women’s Equality Day offers an opportunity to correct the record and explore how a whitewashed version of history is sustained and supported to this day. These resources can help you encourage students to think critically about this important anniversary, celebrate steps toward justice and recognize the injustices we still need to fight.
- Perspectives on Women’s Equality Day
- Ain’t I a Woman?
The Black Panther Party and the Transition to Black Power
Support for National Suicide Prevention Week
This Suicide Prevention Week—September 10 is World Suicide Prevention Day—support your students and your school community. These resources can help. Use this toolkit to help reduce mental health stigma, promote wellness and acknowledge the mental health needs of students and staff alike. Inform your students about support available through the Crisis Text Line, and use the E.D.G.E. technique to help students support one another throughout the year.
- Toolkit for "Demystifying the Mind"
- SMS SOS
- Worried About a Friend? Use Your E.D.G.E.
Rosa Parks Was Arrested on December 1, 1955
To mark the anniversary, teach a more complex version of this historic milestone and the civil rights movement. LFJ has resources to help. Listen to this podcast episode and watch this webinar—based upon our guide by the same title—to help students delve deeper into the history of Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott. For additional context, students can discuss Browder v. Gayle, an often unheard-of civil rights case that overturned segregated public transportation in the South.
- The Real Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott
- ‘Browder v. Gayle’
The New Deal, Jim Crow and the Black Cabinet
Teaching the Historical Context of January 6

A Supremely Historic Moment

Where Do We Go From Here?
