Guidance for Elementary Teachers:
Talking about the Recent Violence Against Black Lives
by Erica Pernell
Give parents/guardians a heads up that the topics will be covered in an age-appropriate way. Mention that this discussion is consistent with our mission.
Make sure students understand the gravity of the conversation they are having to avoid any insensitivity.
Share facts and set boundaries and barriers for the conversation beforehand: what we will and will not talk about and why.
Represent different perspectives with clarity & ask students their own perspectives on how they feel about police.
Use race-conscious language:
Build racial identity:
Teach about protest:
What can kids do?
Activities from the amazing Wee the People
"SIDEWALK CHALK ART: Talk with kids and neighbors and create some bold, artful messaging for everyone who walks by. What do you want them to know and do right now? What kind of change do you want to see in the world?
SIGN-MAKING: Invite children and neighbors to make signs and post them for the community to see.
TOY PROTEST: Make mini-protest signs with tape and small pieces of paper. Grab your stuffies, action figures, and dolls and give them their own voice about what needs to change.
8-WORD PROTEST POEM: As multi-generational as it gets: Invite young and old to create poems as long or short as feels right, incorporating the following EIGHT WORDS that resonate with this moment: POWER * JUSTICE * UNITY * CIRCLE * LISTEN * STAND * HEAL * RESPECT
CANDLES: Light a candle (or several) for the Black and Brown lives impacted and lost to the pandemic, to racism, and to White supremacist ideology.
PLAYLIST PROTEST: Make/share a playlist of protest songs in honor of Black and Brown lives. Send us a youtube video of the protest song that most speaks to this moment and Wee will post it! Wee will also be posting/sharing our own faves throughout the day.
SAY THEIR NAMES: Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd -- each one of them belonged to their own loved ones, their own families, their own communities. Design their names in chalk, in a notebook, on a T-shirt, with a paintbrush."
More resources:
100 race-conscious things you can say: http://www.raceconscious.org/2016/06/100-race-conscious-things-to-say-to-your-child-to-advance-racial-justice
4 things we should teach kids about racism: http://www.blackgirldangerous.com/2015/07/teach-kids-about-racism/
For adult learning, a history of the Minneapolis Police Department: https://www.mpd150.com/report/overview/