
As part of the Zinn Education Project’s Teach the Black Freedom Struggle online people’s history series, author Clint Smith joined Rethinking Schools editor Jesse Hagopian and educator Jessica A. Rucker about the new young readers edition of How the Word Is Passed, adapted by Sonja Cherry-Paul.
Several Teaching for Black Lives study group members were in attendance along with other social justice educators, students, parents, and community members. Here are a few comments shared in the evaluation:
The Zinn Education Project hosted a follow-up curriculum workshop on an abbreviated version of “Echoes of Enslavement” lesson by Ursula Wolfe-Rocca, which is part of a suite of activities developed to accompany Clint Smith’s How the Word Is Passed. Hagopian invited all participants to think about how slavery impacted even places where it later was abolished, areas that greatly profited from the institution of slavery in the South, while they watched a 4-minute from the online class.
Educators engaged with the lesson by considering “echoes of enslavement” in their own locale and sharing what they found in small breakout groups. Then, they brainstormed ways to adapt the lesson and other resources for the classroom. Here are key takeaways from the evaluation:
