Award-winning author, scholar, and activist Zetta Elliott (Say Her Name) explains the importance of representation, not just diversity, in literature, as well as the incredible contributions of Black women writers.
The more we can “prove” our worth, the more librarians will be seen as an important partner in schools.
With educational intent, role-playing games can provide a narrative that holds students' attention and be customized to teach specific lessons.
A middle school librarian and makerspace teacher planned a unit focused on the works of Edgar Allan Poe.
When even the most esoteric information is only a Siri question away, why waste time memorizing anything? Neuroscience can give us some clues as to why.
The New York Times Magazine's 1619 Project and companion curriculum is being used by teachers to change the narrative of American history lessons in the classroom.
Bring students in from the sidelines to participate fully in group discussion.
After her son died by suicide in April, Michelle Oliver collaborated with an English teacher to look at Shakespeare's famous "love story" in a new way and to teach her students about suicide awareness.
Hours of research and conversations with survivors aided the author as she pieced together the tragic story a 1940 attack on a ship carrying children from war-torn England to Canada.
We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing