A best-of-the-best collection of resources for social justice- and equity-focused educators.
Teaching and learning happen within cultural, political, and social circumstances. As much as we want to deny it, we all have biases based on our life experiences. Each of us -- teachers and students alike -- enter classrooms from different perspectives and points of view. We must learn to negotiate those differences to better understand each other and our worlds, and to advocate for a better, more equitable future. To do so, we need to build a set of social and cultural literacies via multicultural education, social justice education, and culturally responsive pedagogy that help us navigate difficult conversations, acknowledge and challenge bias and prejudice, create inclusive classroom spaces, and fight for social justice.
In this collection, you'll find hand-picked, regularly updated resources to help you better understand and practice these important social and cultural literacies. At the top, there are featured resources as well as more comprehensive curricula. Then you'll find lessons, videos, downloadables, and games organized by a few key topic areas like facilitating tough conversations, understanding bias and prejudice, and getting students civically engaged.
Jump down to a section
Social and Cultural Literacy Curricula
Challenging or Difficult Conversations
Bias and Prejudice
Civic Engagement, Activism, and Social Justice
Inclusive Communities
Research on Social and Cultural Literacy
Social and Cultural Literacy Organizations to Explore for More
= one of our favorite resources
Social and Cultural Literacy Courses and Curricula
The providers below offer more comprehensive resources for media literacy, from courses (from just a few hours to weeks) to a curriculum linked to a scope and sequence and standards.
- Black Lives Matter at School: These teaching materials, including an in-depth curriculum resource guide, will help you bring the principles and commitments of the Black Lives Matter movement into your classroom.
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- Educating 4 Democracy (by the Civic Engagement Research Group): This series of videos (featuring real students and teachers) and associated lesson materials is backed by research and sure to inspire and support productive classroom discussions.
- Talking About Race (by the National Museum of African American History & Culture): This toolkit provides in-depth resources for caregivers, educators, and individuals to reflect on race, power, and privilege, all in the interest of having constructive, equity-oriented conversations.
- The Teaching Tolerance Social Justice Standards: A Professional Development Facilitator Guide (by Teaching Tolerance): This downloadable not only features a set of social justice standards schools can use to make anti-bias education a priority in their communities, but also a great PD guide for getting your educators and administrators on board with weaving these practices into daily teaching and learning practice.
Challenging or Difficult Conversations
Controversial and difficult conversations are unavoidable in classrooms, especially those grappling with important cultural, social, and political issues. Fortunately, these conversations are often a lot scarier in theory than in practice given the incredible research and resources available for handling them effectively.
Websites, articles, feeds, and newsletters
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- Talking with Students About Shocking or Disturbing News (by Common Sense): Use this article's age-based tips and lessons to help students process upsetting events.
Lesson plans and activities
- Building Classroom Community: Lessons for the First Day of School (by Facing History): Framed as a back-to-school toolkit, these five lessons will help prep classrooms to have meaningful, respectful conversations about identity and more.
- Critical Practices for Anti-Bias Education: Classroom Culture (by Teaching Tolerance): These PD activities and reflections for educators help teachers make their classrooms more open and respectful, leading to better discussions and outcomes for all students.
- Identity Charts (by Facing History): This time-tested teaching strategy preps a classroom for conversations across differences by having each student map people's identities. Having students do this for themselves -- and share with others -- can be a great way to prime a classroom and form bonds among students. There's also a video of this strategy in action.
- KQED Learn (by KQED): Get students to discuss high-interest issues in media, culture, politics, and more with other students around the country. For more, check out our review.
- "Where I'm From" Poem (by Remix at the University of Notre Dame): Use this poetry lesson to get students reflecting on -- and sharing -- who they are. Along the way students also get some experience using Audacity, an audio recording and editing tool.
Videos
- Civil Discourse Online (by Common Sense Education): Cameron Kasky, one of the survivors of the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, and a March for Our Lives activist, offers some lessons learned and advice for having political discussions online.
- Helping Kids Process Violence, Trauma, and Race in a World of Nonstop News (Common Sense): Join child development, children's health, and trauma-care experts in this practical talk about how parents and educators can help kids process potentially traumatic news.
- Racism and Violence: How to Help Kids Handle the News (Child Mind Institute): Learn about the best, research-backed ways to handle tough conversations with kids about racist violence in the media and news.
Handouts, infographics, and posters
- The Backfire Effect (by the Oatmeal): This humorous, web-based comic explains how our brains are wired to resist facts that challenge our worldviews. While it doesn't offer any easy answers to this issue, it encourages us to be open to new ideas.
- Creating the Space to Talk About Race in Your School (by NEA EdJustice): This downloadable offers educators and administrators 10 ways to challenge the silent status quo around race through honest, cross-cultural dialogue and understanding.
- Digital Citizenship and Social Emotional Learning: Navigating Life's Digital Dilemmas (by Common Sense Education): This guide offers educators discussion activities that show how digital dilemmas like bullying or digital drama can be better navigated with character strengths and social and emotional skills.
- Fostering Civil Discourse: A Guide for Classroom Conversations (by Facing History): While this requires a login to download, it's a worthwhile, overarching resource for how to build a classroom culture focused on constructive discussion.
Games, apps, and tools
- Help students build collaboration and communication skills using the tools on these lists.
- Best Student Collaboration Tools (by Common Sense Education)
- Writing, Journaling, and Blogging Website for Students (by Common Sense Education)
Bias and Prejudice
We all carry biases, and it's important to reflect on them and work to expand our perspectives, experiences, and communities so we act and think with less prejudice and take aim together at systems of oppression.
Websites, articles, feeds, and newsletters
- 8 Ways Teachers Can Address White Supremacy in the Classroom (by Common Sense Education): Take these steps to make sure your classroom is actively anti-racist.
- Anti-Racism Resources for All Ages (by Nicole A. Cooke): An excellent collection of videos, books, articles, and lessons on anti-racism, activism, and critical race theory curated by Dr. Nicole A. Cooke of the University of South Carolina.
- Anti-Racist Resources: This comprehensive, crowd-sourced Google doc (created in the wake of the Charlottesville, Virginia, white supremacist rally) is a must-bookmark resource for any educator committed to combating bias and bigotry in their classroom and community.
- Critical Media Project: An indispensable collection of videos and activities focusing on how identity is represented and negotiated in media. For more, check out our review.
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- Research-Based Advice on Teaching Children Not to Be Racist (by the Atlantic): Two researchers offer proven and age-appropriate strategies for reducing bias and prejudice in the early grades.
- Social Justice Books (by Teaching for Change): A highly recommended resource for preschool and elementary school educators, this list of books intersects with all kinds of important cultural and social issues and will help students build perspective.
Lesson plans and activities
- Anti-Bias Tools & Strategies (by ADL): A collection of ADL's articles ranging from teaching strategies to historical info to topical and definitional overviews, all aimed at anti-bias education.
- Civic Engagement and Communication as Digital Community Members (by Teaching Tolerance): This lesson features a great "Step In, Step Out" activity that helps students identify times they've experienced bias/prejudice and to imagine how to respond to these incidents in the future.
- Real Fake News: Exploring Actual Examples of Newspaper Bias (by Common Sense Education): Have students go beyond the buzzword, and explore inaccurate or outright false reporting about Black people, driven by bias, prejudice, and racism.
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- Teaching About Race, Racism, and Police Violence (Teaching Tolerance): This combination of articles, lessons, professional development, and more is a great starting point for classroom discussions about police violence and its role in systemic racism.
Videos
- 26 Mini-Films for Exploring Race, Bias, and Identity with Students (by the New York Times): These great short videos and associated resources can help kick-start conversations about identity issues with students.
Handouts, infographics, and posters
- 10 Tips for Teaching and Talking to Kids About Race (by Embrace Race): These tips explain how adults can help kids combat bias and prejudice, and develop more open perspectives.
- Confronting White Nationalism in Schools (by the Western States Center): This toolkit is the best classroom-focused resource we've seen for addressing white supremacy.
- Equity and Diversity Awareness Quizzes (by the Critical Multicultural Pavilion): These clever quizzes can disarm people around equity issues and show a group of people or classroom how we all have things to learn.
Games, apps, and tools
- PenPal Schools: One of the best ways to battle bias is to expand one's worldview and to make connections with people from different backgrounds. PenPal Schools offers students opportunities to collaborate on projects with other young people from around the world. For more, check out our review.
- StoryCorps: These absorbing and emotional short podcasts featuring conversations between all kinds of people demonstrate that we're all connected by our common struggles and triumphs. For more, check out our review.
Civic Engagement, Activism, and Social Justice
When studying tough topics like injustice and oppression, it's important to connect people -- especially young people -- to outlets for their frustration, rage, and political goals. This is where activism comes in: It can channel these feelings toward meaningful ways to build community and create social change.
Websites, articles, feeds, and newsletters
- 10 Organizations That Empower Latinxs in America (by Cultura Collectiva): A good overview of Latinx-focused organizations for students looking to advocate for the rights and futures of Latinx people worldwide.
- 10 Ways Youth Can Engage in Activism (by ADL): Share these methods with students to give them an outlet for their political passions.
- 28 Organizations That Empower Black Communities (by the Huffington Post): While this is far from comprehensive, this list has a lot of great organizations for Black activists, and some are led by young people.
- International Indigenous Youth Council: Started during the Dakota Access Pipeline protests at Standing Rock, this organization fights to protect the natural world and indigenous culture while encouraging young people to become leaders in their communities.
- March for Our Lives: Formed in the wake of the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, March for Our Lives has mobilized young people to end the epidemic of gun violence.
- LGBT Youth & Schools Resource Library (U.S.) (by ACLU): An excellent roundup of organizations offering resources for supporting, protecting, and empowering LGBTQ+ students in your classroom and/or school community.
- Sunrise Movement: This youth-led climate change organization has been making headlines the past two years, most notably for being behind the push for a Green New Deal.
Lesson plans and activities
- Activism Online (by Teaching Tolerance): A great introduction to both the possibilities and limitations of online activism.
- Democracy & Civic Engagement (by Facing History): There are dozens of lessons -- across all grade levels -- available at Facing History that help students understand past struggles for justice and encourage them to imagine possible futures.
- Social Media for Social Action (by Teaching Tolerance): Get students thinking more deeply about how social media can be leveraged for activism and change, but also about the negative effects inherent in the medium.
- Transformational action through Art Build (by NEA EdJustice): This article shows how several school communities brought their schools and communities together to create and showcase activist art. There's also checklist of tasks you can use to organize your own Art Build event.
- Vote by Design (by Stanford d.school): This non-partisan, free curriculum aims to get students civically engaged by having them think about and discuss the qualities they want in a President.
Videos
- Stepping Up (by KQED): These four videos feature the stories of youth activists and how they got started. There's also a handout students can use to take notes while they watch.
Handouts, infographics, and posters
- 7 Ways to Highlight Resistance Efforts When Discussing Oppression with Children (by Embrace Race): It's important to balance discussions of oppression with examples of resistance and activism, and this tip sheet covers ways to do just that.
Games, apps, and tools
- Best Government and Civics Websites and Games (by Common Sense Education): These resources are perfect for showing students the history of social justice struggles, and connecting them to modern opportunities for advocacy.
- Civil Rights and Social Justice Resources for Classrooms (by Common Sense Education): A best-of list of websites, games, and apps committed to forwarding social justice education, and helping students create change.
Inclusive Communities
To be good citizens -- and digital citizens -- we must actively work against toxic ideas and communities rife with conspiratorial thinking, cynicism, and hate. Instead, we must create spaces where everyone is welcome and ideas and points of view are discussed constructively.
Websites, articles, feeds, and newsletters
- Increasing Inclusivity in the Classroom (by the Center for Teaching at Vanderbilt University): This is one of the best roundups of mostly academic research and best practices for inclusive teaching and facilitation.
- A Look at Implicit Bias and Microaggressions (by Edutopia): Bias manifests in many subtle, unconscious ways, and this list of resources will help you recognize small steps you can take to forge a more inclusive classroom.
Lesson plans and activities
- Awareness Activities (by the Critical Multicultural Pavilion): These icebreakers and reflective activities help classrooms map and discuss their identities, differences, and commonalities.
- Constructively Engaging in Digital Communities (by Teaching Tolerance): An in-depth lesson that ends with students developing classroom guidelines for effective community participation.
- Countering Hate Speech Online (by Common Sense Education): Get students to explore the relationship between hate speech and xenophobia and how they can combat it in digital spaces.
- Part of a Community Online (by Teaching Tolerance): Introduce young kids to the idea of emotionally supportive and empathic community-building.
- Participating in Digital Communities (by Teaching Tolerance): Get students to make a commitment to creating inclusive communities and to practicing how to respond to bias and prejudice.
- Responding to Online Hate Speech (by Common Sense Education): Help middle schoolers learn techniques to deal with hate speech when they see it or experience it.
- Should Online Hate Speech Be Censored? (by Common Sense Education): Is hate speech free speech? Use this lesson to get your high school students to explore this quandary and offer an informed perspective.
Videos
- Teen Voices: Hate Speech Online (by Common Sense Education): Young people offer their understanding of -- and experiences with -- hate speech on the internet.
- Zaretta Hammond "Culturally Responsive Teaching" at the San Francisco Public Library (by the San Francisco Public Library): For educators: This is a great recording of a Zaretta Hammond lecture on culturally responsive teaching.
Handouts, infographics, and posters
- Critical Practices for Anti-Bias Education (by Teaching Tolerance): This downloadable guide for educators features excellent teaching strategies and tips for creating a pro-social and equitable culture in classrooms and engaging families of all cultures and backgrounds.
- Five Culturally Responsive Teaching Moves (by Ready 4 Rigor): Culturally responsive pedagogy is often misunderstood, so use this quick summary as a refresher.
- No Place for Hate Coordinator Handbook & Resource Guide (by ADL): Everything an educator needs to implement ADL's No Place for Hate program within a school community.
Games, apps, and tools
- Great Online Communities for Kids (by Common Sense Education): These sites offer kids opportunities to communicate with others productively and creatively.
Research on Social and Cultural Literacy
Below you'll find some researchers and research organizations that focus on social and cultural literacy. We've also highlighted a few key pieces of their work.
- Biased (by Jennifer L. Eberhardt): Dr. Eberhardt provides a highly readable mapping of the landscape of research into bias, bias's impact on our world, and ways forward.
- Culturally Responsive Teaching & the Brain (by Zaretta Hammond): This book and study guide offers an important perspective on how to create inclusive but challenging classroom environments that are equally attuned to the way our brains work and how culture affects the way we engage with each other and the world.
- Equity Literacy Institute (by Paul Gorski and others): Dig into this extensive list of equity-focused books and articles published by longtime educator and social justice advocate Paul Gorski and his collaborators.
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Social and Cultural Literacy Organizations to Explore for More
- Courageous Conversations
- EduColor
- Facing History
- NEA EdJustice
- Rethinking Schools
- Teaching Tolerance
News and Media Literacy Resource Center
Help students think critically about current events and media with this collection of lessons, videos, and more.