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Behind the Scenes and In Front of the Camera: Filmfest DC 2022 Classroom Visits
Teaching for Change partnered with Filmfest DC: The Washington, DC International Film Festival for an eleventh year to spread the word about the international film festival and to bring filmmakers for some of the films into D.C. classrooms in April 2022.
A Talk to Teaching the Beat: James Baldwin and Go-Go Inspire Secondary Working Group Members
The middle/high school People’s History working group came together for their May meeting on Saturday, May 14, 2022. Alison Rice led the group in an activity reflecting on the words of James Baldwin in A Talk To Teachers.
Demands for Justice: Cardozo Students Pursue Equity and Justice in D.C. Public Schools
By Kimberly Ellis
As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. famously stated, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” This demand for a better world is doggedly pursued by students in Beth Barkley’s Human Rights and Social Justice class at Cardozo Education Campus (DCPS).
Women’s History Month
By Bridget Fuller
On March 29th, the Elementary working group gathered to connect and discuss Women’s History Month and how gender and racial biases are confronted in our schools.
Exposure: Black@Hayfield Photojournalism Project Captures Uniqueness and Universality of Black Experience
By Vanessa Williams
Walking into the front office of Hayfield Secondary School (ACPS), you’re greeted warmly by the office assistant and with cold-looking portraits of the past administrative staff at the school. Nestled in a classroom inconspicuously on the second floor, Ms. Ariel Alford is prepared to launch into a lesson on Black Lives Matter from an international perspective, focusing that day on Denmark.
The Fuller Story: Anti-Bias Working Group Shares Highlights from Their Classrooms and Interrogate Biographies in Early Childhood Education
By Bridget Fuller
On February 26, the Anti-Bias Early Childhood Educator working group met to connect as a community, discuss challenges and successes with the Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action, and share ideas on using biographies in early childhood classrooms.
Filmfest DC 2022
Teaching for Change is partnering with Filmfest DC: The Washington, D.C. International Film Festival (April 21 - May 1) for an eleventh year to spread the word about the international film festival and to bring films and filmmakers for several films into D.C. virtual classrooms.
D.C. and Beyond: Stories from Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action 2022
The fifth annual Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action wrapped up recently and educators in the D.C. area and beyond participated in powerful ways.
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.