A sampling of Howard Zinn's essays, quotes, trial testimonies, and correspondence related to prisons and prisoners.
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The Zinn Education Project will provide free people's history books and lessons to Mississippi middle and high school teachers and librarians in response to the proposed Patriotic Education Fund.
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We are offering free copies of Vanguard: How Black Women Broke Barriers, Won the Vote, and Insisted on Equality for All by Martha S. Jones to teachers who share their experience with teaching any of the three lessons in "Who Gets to Vote? Teaching About the Struggle for Voting Rights in the United States."
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The free workshop will include an opportunity to examine the report findings for South Carolina, learn about Hastings Gantt (who donated the land for the Penn School), and discuss approaches to teaching Reconstruction with fellow people's history teachers in the state.
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On February 21, 2022, historian Martha S. Jones spoke about the role of Black women in the long and ongoing fight for voting rights. This session was part of the Zinn Education Project’s Teach the Black Freedom Struggle online people’s history series.
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Maeve Conran of Free Speech TV's "Just Solutions" interviewed Jesse Hagopian about our new national report Erasing the Black Freedom Struggle: How State Standards Fail to Teach the Truth About Reconstruction.
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Our new national report, Erasing the Black Freedom Struggle: How State Standards Fail to Teach the Truth About Reconstruction,includes a teachable vignette from a freedman navigating the era of emancipation in Mississippi.
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In the first month of his administration, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin has unveiled a host of directives to ban “inherently divisive concepts” from the state’s classrooms. Youngkin’s initiatives join a well-orchestrated right-wing assault on truthful teaching about race.
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Georgia Educators, Students, and Community Members, please sign this petition that will be delivered to state legislators.
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Students are invited to conduct research to complete the online database of Congress members who enslaved people -- and one of the researchers is available as a guest speaker.
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We want to hear about your feedback about use of our lessons on Reconstruction. In appreciation for your time, we will send you a free copy of Sugar by Jewell Parker Rhodes.
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We invite you to use the power of your voice to protect teachers and ensure that our children learn the truth about history so that they can shape a more just future.
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We, the undersigned educators, refuse to lie to young people about U.S. history and current events.
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Dr. Martin Luther King describes the critical importance of W. E. B. Du Bois's Black Reconstruction to "restore to light the most luminous achievements" of the Reconstruction era.
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The Zinn Education Project produced a national report on the teaching of the Reconstruction era. The report examines state standards, course requirements, frameworks, and support for teachers in each state. It also includes stories about creative efforts by districts and/or individual teachers in each state to teach outside the textbook about Reconstruction.
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Historian Jeanne Theoharis shed light on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s stance on a range of issues, including his longstanding critique of police brutality. This session was part of the Zinn Education Project’s Teach the Black Freedom Struggle online people’s history series.
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Although the coronavirus’s threat to the safety of our schools is dire, there is another threat that should not be ignored. Right wing politicians and media outlets are attacking educators’ most basic responsibility — to teach young people accurately and truthfully.
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North Dakota passed a law to ban teaching "that racism is systemically embedded in American society and the American legal system to facilitate racial inequality." Instead, teachers must say that "racism is merely the product of learned individual bias or prejudice."
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Quotes about the Reconstruction era and why it should be taught.
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In 2021, the Zinn Education Project (coordinated by Rethinking Schools and Teaching for Change) supported and defended the right to teach truthfully about U.S. history. Please help us continue this essential work and expand our reach in 2022, the 100th anniversary year of Howard Zinn (born 1922).
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No wonder the right-wing is upset. More than 17,000 teachers signed up to access people's history lessons in 2021, bringing our full registration at the Zinn Education Project to more than 140,000 teachers from every state in the country.
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Here are just a few of our favorite 2021 young adult non-fiction and historical fiction titles.
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On December 6, we hosted Jarvis Givens for a talk on his book, Fugitive Pedagogy: Carter G. Woodson and the Art of Black Teaching, in conversation with Jesse Hagopian and Cierra Kaler-Jones.
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It is wonderful to see Clint Smith's How the Word Is Passed in Times Square. We'd be even more thrilled to see photos and stories about how you use the book in your classrooms.
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