Learn effective strategies to share with your students so that during the summer they can better listen, empathize and engage in the world around them.
Learn effective strategies to share with your students so that during the summer they can better listen, empathize and engage in the world around them.
Explore ways to critically examine your identity as an educator, examine teaching strategies to build community and trust, and share methods to facilitate reflective conversations.
Learn strategies to support your students to develop effective skills for civic participation.
Join us as we consider short films, lesson ideas, and poetry through which students can learn about the Holocaust.
Explore ways to incorporate survivor and descendent testimony into lessons about the Holocaust.
Explore frameworks for having rigorous, nuanced, and identity-safe conversations about race.
Explore frameworks for having rigorous, nuanced, and identity-safe conversations about race.
The letter exchange between George Washington and the Hebrew congregation of Newport was not the only landmark event in the early history of America that dealt with issues of religious freedom and identity. Seixas’ letter and Washington’s subsequent response exist within a timeline of many other events during which the newly formed country faced those issues. Continue reading below for information about some of those events.
Learn about the challenges schools face when confronting the persistence of racism and antisemitism, explore resources to help you respond to hatred in your school, and increase your ability to facilitate respectful classroom dialogue.
Explore the motivations, pressures, and fears that shaped Americans' responses to Nazism, the European refugee crisis of the 1930s, and the Holocaust.
Explore remote teaching strategies and approaches to creating community and sustaining student-centered learning in a digital environment.
Learn insights from educators to promote civic skills in your students.