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Calibrate, Collaborate, Celebrate: Elementary Working Group Reconnects for Black History Month Discussion and Resources
The Elementary working group began their February meeting by selecting an item from their space that reflected their current emotions and discussed why they connected to it. Participants shared items that sparked confidence, strength, and joy, including a Post-It note from their mom and a puzzle that their students are collaborating on.
D.C. Area Black Lives Matter Week of Action Celebrated in DC State Board of Education Resolution
During the February D.C. State Board of Education (DCSBOE) meeting, Ceremonial Resolution CR22-3 was passed celebrating Black History Month and Black Lives Matter at School.
Reconnecting and Restoring: Secondary Working Group Discusses Restorative Justice for February Meeting
By Bridget Fuller
On February 12, the DCAESJ People’s History Secondary Working Group met to connect as a community of educators, discuss a people’s history lesson about transportation protests, and continue their Teaching for Black Lives book study.
Black History, Black Present, Black Future: Exploring the Tulsa Race Massacre from an Economics Lens
By Kimberly Ellis and Vanessa Williams
What is the Tulsa Race Massacre? How do we, as a nation, tell the story of the massacre? What is owed to the Black community as a result of the massacre? Ashley Bryant created two weeks of lessons to explore these questions in celebration of the Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action and Year of Purpose.
Art as Empathy: An Early Childhood Educator’s Reflection and Application
By Makai Kellogg
During this session, Rapoport led participants in an activity where we thought about our favorite place and associated a color with it. We then added feeling words, more colors, and sensory experiences connected to the place.
Demanding They Be Heard: MacFarland Middle School Students Take Up BLM at School Guiding Principles and Demands
By Kimberly Ellis
At MacFarland Middle School (DCPS), Melanie Holmes’ students spent the week contemplating how to ensure all Black lives matter at their school.
Virtual Curriculum Fair: Black Lives Matter at School 2022
On Saturday, January 22, 2022 Teaching for Change hosted a virtual curriculum fair featuring workshops, a keynote speaker, and time for educators to learn more about the Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action, taking place January 31-February 4, 2022.
2021 D.C. Area Black Lives Matter at School Virtual Curriculum Fair
The D.C. Area Black Lives Matter at School Curriculum Fair, hosted by Teaching for Change and the Howard University School of Education, was held virtually on Saturday, December 11 from 10am - noon ET.
D.C. Area Teachers Pledge to Teach the Truth
D.C. Area Educators for Social Justice and the African American Civil War Memorial and Museum invited D.C. area teachers and allies to a convening to decry the GOP legislation that would require teachers to lie to students about the role of racism, sexism, heterosexism, and oppression throughout U.S. history on Saturday, June 12. The rally was part of a national day of action to Teach the Truth organized by the Zinn Education Project and Black Lives Matter at School.
Stories from the 2021 DC Area Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action
From February 1-5, 2021, Teaching for Change's D.C. Area Educators for Social Justice hosted the fourth annual D.C. Area Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action. This local week of action is part of the National Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action and Year of Purpose campaign taking place in cities across the U.S. to promote a set of national demands based in the Black Lives Matter guiding principles that focus on improving the school experience for students of color.
Students Explore Black Lives Matter through Dialogue and Reflection
Students in Sam Chiron’s Introduction to Law class at Thurgood Marshall Academy PCS discussed images and text related to the questions: What is Black Lives Matter? What are the 13 Guiding Principles? The lesson was an introduction to a month-long unit on the Black Lives Matter movement.
Outline for the BLM Week of Action in a High School ELA Class
Students in grades 9/10 English Language Arts classes in the International Academy (newly arrived immigrant students) and a grade 11/12 elective course at Cardozo Education Campus (DCPS) collaborated throughout the Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action. This followed a unit on the Civil Rights Movement.
Third Graders Learn about Restorative Justice and Loving Engagement Through the Civil Rights Movement
Third graders at Concord Hill School learned about the principles of Restorative Justice and Loving Engagement by studying the role of young people in the Civil Rights Movement.
Fourth Graders Discuss ‘Don’t Touch My Hair’
Fourth Grade students at Milton Gottesman Jewish Day School read and discuss Don’t Touch My Hair.
Teaching Consent: Centering Empathy, Diversity, and Loving Engagement in Early Childhood
Using the Black Lives Matter guiding principles and the book Don't Touch My Hair to discuss consent with young children.
Teaching the 13 Black Lives Matter Guiding Principles in Early Childhood Classrooms
On February 15, 2021, 36 preservice teachers from Gallaudet University, Kendall Demonstration Elementary School, and the Maryland School for the Deaf, gathered for a virtual workshop presentation titled Teaching about the Black Lives Matter 13 Guiding Principles in Early Childhood Classrooms.
Peace of Mind and Arts Education During the Black Lives Matter Year of Purpose
Students and staff from Lafayette ES gathered virtually for a special “Wellness Wednesday” during the Black Lives Matter at School Week featuring an introduction to the Black Lives Matter Movement 13 guiding principles and a lesson on the history of Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing.
Reflections on the Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action and the Vital Role ECE Anti Bias Group
By Lila Chafe
On the warm Wednesday evening of March 3, 2021, early childhood educators joined the DCAESJ Anti Bias ECE Working Group’s monthly meeting. As they logged on, participants shared memories from years of collective joy and action, preparing for the departure of the working group’s coordinator, Rosalie Reyes.
Community Meeting and Video Celebrating What Black Lives Matter Means
On February 2nd, educators and school leaders at Two Rivers PCS organized an all school virtual community meeting celebrating the themes of Black excellence, joy, freedom, and culture. Members of the school community recorded and shared in a video their responses to the prompts: What does Black Lives Matter mean to you? and What is Black joy?
2021 Black Lives Matter at School Virtual Curriculum Fair
On January 30, 2021 Teaching for Change and the Howard University School of Education co-hosted an annual curriculum fair to help educators to learn more about the Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action and Year of Purpose. More than 500 educators from 42 states and the District of Columbia deepened their practice as they learned from the keynote speakers and participated in workshops.