This film tells the complex and compelling history of the Mississippi voter registration struggles of 1961-1964: the interracial nature of the campaign, the tensions and conflicts, the fears and hopes.
This guide contains a flexible collection of activities, readings, lessons, and strategies designed to help you develop a meaningful civic education experience in your classroom.
Trace Eleanor Roosevelt's development into a renowned human rights leader and her pivotal role in creating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights with this resource.
Through footage and interviews with SS officers and Jewish survivors, this documentary outlines the history of the Nazi persecution of the Jews, showing events leading to the “Final Solution.”
After WWII, a migration of African Americans from the rural South to the North took place. Four million black people created a dynamic urban culture outside the South, changing America forever.
This Frontline special takes viewers inside the private worlds kids are creating online, raising important questions about how the Internet is transforming the experience of adolescence.
A lesbian student at a Jewish high school confronts her identity as a Jew and a lesbian, and is determined to establish a Gay-Straight Alliance at her school.
This guide to the documentary film I Learn America prompts educators, students, and school communities to reflect on the role of schools in welcoming newcomers to the United States.
Issues of race and identity unfold as a group of high school students in Buffalo, New York, try to integrate tables in the school cafeteria after grappling with self-segregation.