February 22, 2022

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Do you want the next issue of Learning for Justice magazine delivered for free to your mailbox? March 1 is the last day to sign up to receive the Spring issue. Please check to ensure you’re on our subscriber list so you never miss an issue. Just sign in to your LFJ profile or create an account to subscribe or manage your subscription preferences.

Partnering With Families to Support Black Girls // Dr. Adam Alvarez and Eshe Price

It Has Stayed With Me // Coshandra Dillard

Humanizing Asian Americans in the Classroom Through Children’s Literature // Dr. Monisha Bajaj
Upcoming Webinar: Justice in the Science Classroom 
Join Learning for Justice and cohosts from the Smithsonian Science Education Center on March 9 for a webinar on integrating social justice into science education. Register now! Learn about social justice and STEM education with a focus on our environment and about ways to support your students as they take sustainable action. 

New Podcast Episode: The Harlem Renaissance

During the Harlem Renaissance, more Black artists than ever before were asking key questions about the role of art in society. In the newest episode of our Teaching Hard History podcast, scholar Julie Buckner Armstrong urges educators to look deeper into the texts left to us by these artists and come to a fuller understanding of this stage in a long chronology of Black artistic expression.

LFJ Educator Fund Virtual Information Sessions

To explore how the LFJ Educator Fund program could complement your goals for your school community, register for our upcoming Q&A and orientation. We will cover the basic guidelines and articulate what reviewers look for in a great proposal. April 1 is the first application deadline, so if you’d like to learn more about the program, please join us!

How to Support Student-led Action and Protests

As some states and districts drop mask mandates amid the COVID-19 pandemic, many students continue to petition and stage walkouts to demand safer health protocols. Some students are protesting against instances of racism and sexual assault as well. These LFJ resources provide guidance for supporting your students who are demanding that their concerns are taken seriously.

Check Out What We’re Reading

“Black history offers America a chance to see itself both as what we have failed to become and as we wish ourselves to be.” — The New York Times

“‘It is an ethical impossibility to tell the story of Black liberation struggles without talking about Black LGBTQ participation, involvement and leadership.’” — The Washington Post

“‘Because teachers are often pressured to “teach to the test,” fruitful discussions about Black political, cultural, and economic autonomy, the potential of radical democratic participation, and the destruction of Reconstruction is lost.’” — Facing South

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