Check out Part One: Important Tweets About The Murder Of George Floyd
You might also be interested in all my “Best’ lists related to racism, particularly:
New & Revised: A Collection Of Advice On Talking To Students About Race & Racism
Here are some tweets:
I keep feeling like I should be writing something but the cycle of police killings and black grief and rage is so regular I’ve already written the same story several times. https://t.co/oOKbakk9Tr
— Ida Bae Wells (@nhannahjones) May 31, 2020
Will this weekend's unrest trigger a "whitelash?" @NHannahJones' response: "There's a whitelash to black Americans no matter what black Americans do when black Americans are demanding their rights." https://t.co/sTjtXXtFMr
— Brian Stelter (@brianstelter) May 31, 2020
Please note. This isn't about our individual behaviors, but the nation's collective consciousness, structures, and practices that use education as the engine of structural racism, beginning with who is and isn't learning to read. @lwteach98 I am glad you it's working for you. https://t.co/pmKqYJ8srn
— Zaretta Hammond (@Ready4rigor) May 31, 2020
Quite a photo. https://t.co/edSAS7qCjY
— Yamiche Alcindor (@Yamiche) May 31, 2020
Peep this 4 part serious I wrote on #whitefragility in education and what we can do to build antiracist schools.
Here’s part 1: https://t.co/DXcBwJqMPh
— Joe Truss – Culturally Responsive Leadership (@trussleadership) May 31, 2020
Being culturally responsive means you not only have a bi-cultural lens, but you have racial literacy around structural racism. @KathleenOstaNEP breaks it down. J. Baldwin said it well – If white people don't understand our own country's systems of apartheid, nothing will change https://t.co/Gf2CShAWLF
— Zaretta Hammond (@Ready4rigor) May 31, 2020
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