Here are four ways you can celebrate Digital Learning Day and the role technology plays in your life.
Here are four ways you can celebrate Digital Learning Day and the role technology plays in your life.
Official online sources can be powerful tools for developing students' perspectives so they can better understand the world around them.
A second-generation Holocaust survivor shares how she is passing on her mother's legacy one hug at a time.
This teaching idea contains strategies and activities for supporting your students in the aftermath of a mass shooting, terrorist attack, or other violent event.
A record number of women are running for office in the 2018 midterm elections--a good sign for democracy.
Arch Oboler’s 1938 radio play, performed by Katharine Hepburn, pleaded with American audiences to offer more aid to Jewish refugee children. It aired as the country debated over the Wagner-Rogers Bill (Joint Resolution 64).
Remembering British Labor MP, Jo Cox, after she was assassinated.
Political theorists, going as far back as John Stuart Mill and John Dewey, have long argued that exposure to diverse perspectives is vital both to a robust civil society and to the development of individuals within those societies.
Resources from Facing History and StoryCorps designed to help students gain critical thinking skills, empathy and tolerance, and a sense of civic responsibility.
Consider these 10 calls to action to shape your own approach on teaching democracy in your classroom.
The news around the world has been grim recently. During times of conflict and difficulty, we look to history and remember the inspirational words from upstanders of the past—those who shared our goal of creating a better, more informed, and more thoughtful society.
Use these 10 tips to organize your own whole-school read.