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Past Events from November 12, 2022 – October 28, 2023 – Teaching Against Erasure Past Events from November 12, 2022 – October 28, 2023 – Teaching Against Erasure

LGBTQIAA++ in the African Diaspora

Zoom

In this two-hour session, we will analyze primary and secondary sources, as well as teaching strategies for including queer Black voices into your World History and World Literature classes, advisory, and Gender/Diversity clubs. Together, we will explore contemporary media, short stories, autobiographical writing, and legislation. This workshop asks how Black diasporic contexts challenge Western or … Read More

Indigenous Histories: On and Off the Page

Zoom

Decolonizing teaching and learning through greater inclusion of First Nation voices in our curriculum. Join us for our virtual event crossing over Teaching Against Erasure and Urgent Conversation discussion about decolonizing teaching and learning through greater inclusion of First Nation voices in our curriculum. Drawing on the scholarship, activism, art, and writing of Amber Starks, Dr. Kyle … Read More

Free

Teaching Against Erasure Convening

Registration open! This convening will offer thematic workshops led by scholars, community leaders, and veteran teachers. Sessions will emphasize strategies for integrating content focused on Black, Latinx, LGBTQIA+ and Dis/Abilities studies material into the existing New Jersey core curriculum content. Participants may register for a morning and afternoon workshop, go.rutgers.edu/registerTAE. 9:30am: Check-in and Breakfast 10am: … Read More

Songs of Resistance and Resilience

This workshop will explore the rhythms of resistance and resilience with songs that encouraged marginalized people to continue their fight for social justice and change. It will use music to … Read More

Affirming Indigenous Epistemology Through a Land Curriculum

A Work in Progress In Collaboration with Lunaape/Lenape Tribal Nation and the Public History Project  Through a land curriculum, this workshop explores the knowledge, experiences, and histories of the New Jersey Lunaape/Lenape peoples. During this eighty-minute workshop, we will discuss ideas and engage in activities that ground land curriculum and affirm indigenous ways of knowing … Read More

Words Are Things: Using Poetry as an Extension to Your Curriculum

In this eighty-minute workshop, participants will explore several diverse methodologies that revolve around the practice of spoken word and performance poetics through the optics of the Nuyorican poetry school which is responsible for writers like Miguel Algarín, Victor Hernández Cruz, Nancy Mercado, Willie Perdomo, and Elisabet Velasquez. The Nuyorican school is well documented in Latinx … Read More