Board Member Post

Equity and Inclusion worlds in Minecraft: Education Edition

BY: Diane Main

(Note from blog editor Laura: I missed my deadline and didn’t get this posted by Juneteeth. I apologize. The content is still amazing and worth your time, tho!)

As we approach Juneteenth 2021, I wanted to share some worlds, made by educators for educators, that explore identity and important contributions made by Black Americans and others around the world who have worked and fought for the rights of all people to be treated with dignity, regardless of their identities.

Are You Sure You're Ready to Dig Into Black History Month?

By: Adina Sullivan-Marlow

The focus on Black History Month really starts with the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr birthday/holiday in January. Each year there seems to be a longer and longer list of folks who post an MLK quote for the day. Even those whose demonstrated views and actions are in opposition to his core beliefs like to look as if they are aligned. Some are straight-up hypocritical. Most have not actually read his writings and have disconnected from the context in which his work took place.

This same disconnect happens in schools as well. For the month of February teachers read and talk about famous Black leaders such as Dr. King or Rosa Parks, but a designated month shouldn't be the only time students hear about Black (or Latinx or Asian or Indigenous or...) history topics. Overcoming trauma shouldn’t be the only reason why we talk about Black Americans and Black history didn’t begin with slavery. Since the U.S. is made of many different groups, it should be evident in U.S. education as well. Rather than teaching about individuals out of context, please take a look at where they should already be embedded in the curriculum. It shouldn’t be a special section or subject. Students need to see the diversity that is inherent in our world and history, not individuals pointed out as exceptions. These histories are U.S. histories. They are WORLD history. They are OUR history. And it isn’t just our history. It is also OUR present. 

Don’t feel like you know enough? Me either. I’m in constant catch up mode to supplement what I didn’t get as a student in school. Take some time to dig in for yourself and notice who is telling the story. Understanding more will benefit you and your students.

Resources:

Tolerance.org - Black History

Center for Racial Justice in Education

The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute 

Part 3: Taking Action in the Classroom - Data Literacy

By: Adina Sullivan-Marlow

NOW is the perfect to take those actions toward equity, social justice, and culturally responsive learning further. I say NOW, because right NOW there are election data graphics bombarding us from all sides. Many of those graphics are really, really bad. It isn’t because I agree or disagree with the content, but rather because the graphics themselves use poor data sources, are designed poorly, or are in some other way misleading. Those misleading data representations are used to manipulate emotions and opinions, including those that impact how students, families, and communities are seen and treated.

Here are a couple of non-political example from https://www.reddit.com/r/dataisugly:

Screen Shot 2020-11-12 at 1.02.15 PM.png

These examples are pretty low-stakes. Political and financial data graphics have much larger consequences. If students are going to be able both understand the data representations they see and have the ability to create data representations that allow them to back up their own conclusions, they need data literacy. This is particularly true for students who are English-learners or are in other ways more reliant on visuals over large amounts of text.

We start teaching students about data visualizations in preschool and kindergarten. Graphs of the students with birthdays each month and how students arrived at school are some of the first ones I remember teaching in Kindergarten classes. Later in elementary we moved to line graphs and pie charts. In middle and high school the complexity continues. Students are now also taught to create infographics more and more as they have become more popular in print and digital media forms. Regardless of the grade level or subject area content, teaching students about data literacy and recognizing misleading data representations is a tangible step you can take to help students have a more equitable chance of success as citizens. 

Here are some lessons resources to help you teach data literacy:

Resources for understanding and practicing with misleading data representations:

Cover Image by janjf93 from Pixabay

Taking Action in Your Classroom (because good intentions, social media posts, and emoticons aren't enough)

Taking Action in Your Classroom (because good intentions, social media posts, and emoticons aren't enough)

Right now, you might be full of good intentions. You are horrified at atrocities in the news. You believe racism is wrong. You believe all kids should have equitable opportunities for educational success. You liked posts on social media and maybe even posted something yourself in support of people of color…Without action, the rest is like shoving junk into a closet and saying your house is clean. It’s all surface level.