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Teaching and Affirming LGBTQ Youth after the ‘Bostock’ Decision
Teaching the Hard History of Indigenous Slavery
Teach This: The Voting Rights Act
Teaching Digital Literacy This Election Season
Teaching the Election and Digital Literacy
This Media Literacy Week, it’s more important than ever to ensure your students are informed digital citizens. As Election Day approaches, your students are encountering plenty of online information about issues that affect them and their communities. Our digital literacy resources can help you teach them to evaluate and check sources for bias, interrupt hate speech, and critically analyze and discuss online information about the election.
- Teaching Digital Literacy This Election Season
- The Mind Online Podcast
- Digital Literacy
Teaching Through Coronavirus: What Educators Need Right Now
Teaching Hard History: American Slavery | Classroom Videos
Teaching as Activism, Teaching as Care
Teach the Truth of the Tulsa Race Massacre
On May 31, 1921, white supremacist terrorists attacked the Greenwood community in Oklahoma, killing up to 300 Black residents and burning over 1,000 homes. We don’t know the exact number: For too long, the history of this and other acts of racist terror across the United States were intentionally kept quiet. We urge you to teach the truth about Tulsa and other hard histories. These resources can help.
- Remember the Tulsa Race Massacre
- Recovering and Teaching Local History
- Toolkit for “A Museum. A Memorial. A Message.”