This week is the one-year anniversary of the Parkland shootings.
You might also be interested in a series of Best lists on gun violence, which you can find here.
They include:
Florida School Shooting Tragedy Resources, Including Advice On Talking With Students
The Best Articles & Videos Showing How Parkland’s Teens Are Responding To Tragedy
The Best Resources Sharing The History Of Teens Organizing For Justice
The Best Resources For Learning About The National Student Walkout On March 14th
A Compilation Of Resources To Support Student Organizing
The Best Resources For Learning About “The March For Our Lives”
Here are some resources specifically on the anniversary, and I’ll continue to add to this list:
Parkland anniversary: A year after mass shooting, ‘every day for me is Feb. 14’ is from NBC News.
To Honor Parkland Victims, David Best Is Building A Temple, Then Setting It On Fire is from NPR.
‘Parkland changed everything’: As anniversary approaches, new book examines the school shooting and the students who turned their sorrow into a movement is from The Chicago Tribune.
“Now You Have A Seven-Hour Rehearsal Where You Have To Sing And Cry”: After Parkland Students Survived The Shooting, Their Show Had To Go On. is from BuzzFeed.
A school shooting a year ago in Parkland, Fla., kicked off a year of debate over a whole span of issues related to school safety and guns. And it forever changed the lives of those most personally affected. Hear it in their own words. https://t.co/aTNqbDrMSq pic.twitter.com/yYY0hDjQhk
— Evie Blad (@EvieBlad) February 13, 2019
A group of teenage reporters have written obituaries for every child who died since Parkland due to gun violence.
There are 1,200 stories.
You can read them here:https://t.co/xbpM1PrqCY
— Emily Wilkins (@emrwilkins) February 12, 2019
As the anniversary of #Parkland approaches, we talk to young people who are generally left out of our guns convo: young black and brown kids who experience violence in their neighborhoods sometimes every day. https://t.co/fjWrBaiMND
— Sam Sanders (@samsanders) February 12, 2019
Parkland: A Year After the School Shooting That Was Supposed to Change Everything is from The NY Times.
Ex-Marjory Stoneman Douglas Student’s Quest To End Gun Violence is from NPR.
Parkland Student Survivors Brace For 1st Anniversary Of School Shooting is from NPR.
For the project “Since Parkland,” teenage journalists wrote profiles for every child killed by gun violence in the year since the school shooting in Parkland, Florida https://t.co/k8F7pZ994j
— The New York Times (@nytimes) February 14, 2019
At @sunsentinel, Tony Montalto — whose daughter Gina was killed in the Parkland shooting — reflects on loss. https://t.co/NOBhEXKvii
— The Marshall Project (@MarshallProj) February 13, 2019
Gun control. Red flag laws. Arming teachers. Here’s how America has responded to the Parkland massacre over the past year. https://t.co/GfowtiwgtI
— The New York Times (@nytimes) February 13, 2019
Black students at the Parkland school felt ignored in the aftermath of last year’s school shooting. But they have something important to say. pic.twitter.com/tdIAD0gtjm
— HuffPost BlackVoices (@blackvoices) February 14, 2019
"My life is not normal. It will never be like before."
Anthony Borges, 16, suffered 5 bullet wounds as he barricaded a classroom door to protect other students. His wounds have healed but his recovery is far from over. https://t.co/8QiCquQCiY pic.twitter.com/QRFQMQeV00
— The New York Times (@nytimes) February 14, 2019
"Most victims were minorities in communities awash in firearms." https://t.co/KOir9a5FxJ pic.twitter.com/S3E7CIZvd2
— Alexander (@alexanderrusso) February 14, 2019
On the anniversary of Parkland, a psychiatrist writes about her newfound hope about the possibilities of preventing school shootings. https://t.co/5hkSAUwaVm
— NYT Opinion (@nytopinion) February 14, 2019
How teens want to solve America’s school shooting problem | #StudentVoice via PBS @NewsHour Extra
Teens across the U.S. shared their voices with Extra following the #Parkland tragedy. Their responses poured in and then poured in some more. #MSDStrong https://t.co/R8fbJ2Tir8
— PBS NewsHour Extra (@NewsHourExtra) February 14, 2019
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