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Talking to Our Kids About Charlottesville

Boston Globe
Credit Boston Globe

The latest events in Charlottesville have people engaging in conversation about race, diversity and supporting each other. 

There are some tremendous assets to help educate and frame those discussions.  Whether at home or in the classroom or in the workplace, let’s talk. 

West Virginia LearningMedia - a curated digital library searchable by grade level, content area, type of resource.  Geared toward teachers, but open to everyone.  And it is FREE.

Teaching Tolerance Teaching Tolerance provides free resources to educators—teachers, administrators, counselors and other practitioners—who work with children from kindergarten through high school.  Our program emphasizes social justice and anti-bias. The anti-bias approach encourages children and young people to challenge prejudice and learn how to be agents of change in their own lives. Our Social Justice Standards show how anti-bias education works through the four domains of identity, diversity, justice and action.

  • Discovering My Identity (grades 3-5) Learning Plan:Enduring Understandings: Everyone has multiple identities. Peoples’ identities are similar in some ways and different in others. It is important to see my identities as well as the identities of others in the stories I read.
  • Developing Empathy (grades 6-8) Learning Plan: Essential Questions: What does it mean to put yourself in someone else’s shoes? How empathetic am I? How can I better show empathy toward others? 
  • SPLC Releases Campus Guide to Countering ‘Alt-Right’How can college students respond when white nationalists show up on campus? This guide offers answers.

BrightlyA company that believes reading has the power to illuminate kids’ lives. They have created some great reading list from early readers to adults.   

Copyright 2017 West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Kate has called West Virginia home for over 30 years. A native of Ohio, Kate came to West Virginia in the 80's to teach in a one-room school in Mingo County. Kate has spent her time in West Virginia working with community groups around the state on economic development issues and in a school setting, serving as vice-principal at a private middle/high school.