Staff Picks

What We’re Reading

The Teaching Tolerance staff reviews the latest in culturally aware literature and resources, offering the best picks for professional development and teachers of all grades.

Collage of book covers

Few civil rights pioneers carry the romantic aura of the Tuskegee Airmen. That’s why students will find Freedom Flyers: The Tuskegee Airmen of World War II, by J. Todd Moye, a great read. The book lays to rest important myths about the airmen even as it explains how they risked their lives to fight fascism. Just as importantly, Moye’s book shows how men and women at Tuskegee’s Army Flying School challenged Jim Crow and helped pave the way for the civil rights movement.

middle and high school

 

Rosas Bus book cover

In Rosa’s Bus: The Ride to Civil Rights, by Jo. S. Kittinger, Bus #2857 becomes the vehicle for learning about the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the civil rights movement. A great book for very young readers to begin learning about the struggle for equal rights.

elementary school

 

Dear Maxine book cover

Dear Maxine: Letters from the Unfinished Conversation with Maxine Greene, edited by Robert Lake and foreword by Sonia Nieto, is a rich collection of letters written by people who have inspired us—Gloria Ladson Billings, Herbert Kohl, William Ayers, Deborah Meier—to a woman who inspired them. In diverse voices, we hear a single lesson: The paramount goal of education must be freedom.

professional development

 

 

Super Tool Lula book cover

Super Tool Lula: The Bully-Fighting Super Hero! by Michele Yulo. Ten-year-old Lula who loves carpentry, collects rocks and plays the drums is teased. Some classmates tell her those are not girl things. She then spins into action letting classmates know it’s cool to be who they are. Great afterword for educators and parents with tips for handling bullying.

elementary school

 

 

 

We've got a job book cover

We’ve Got a Job: The 1963 Birmingham Children’s March, by Cynthia Y. Levinson, provides comprehensive insight into the events of the Birmingham Children’s March in 1963. Filled with personal stories from protestors and primary documents, We’ve Got a Job will inspire students to learn about the civil rights movement.

middle and high school

 

Marching the Mountaintop book cover

Marching to the Mountaintop: How Poverty, Labor Fights, and Civil Rights Set the Stage for Martin Luther King Jr.’s Final Hours, by Ann Bausum, tells the story of the sanitation workers’ strike that brought MLK to the balcony of the Lorraine Motel. A must-have for any teacher who seeks to tell the full story of the movement and to explain how collective action can bring about real and lasting change.

professional development

 

Out and Allied book cover

Out and Allied: An Anthology of Performance Pieces gives center stage to a compelling collection of plays, poems and monologues written by LGBTQ youth and their allies. The chapters on presentation, production, writing and leadership transform this anthology into a young activist’s handbook.

middle and high school

 

 

 

 

Professional Development

Turning High-Poverty Schools Into High-Performing Schools by William H. Parrett and Katheleen M. Budge

Our Worlds in Our Words: Exploring Race, Class, Gender, and Sexual Orientation in Multicultural Classrooms
by Mary Dilg

Re-Engaging Disconnected Youth: Transformation Learning Through Restorative and Social Justice Education
by Amy Vatne Bintliff

 

Middle & High School

Nilda by Nicholoasa Mohr

Rebound by Bob Krech

Scars by Cheryl Rainfield

Crow by Barbara Wright

The Fat Boy Chronicles by Diane Lange and Michael Buchanan

 

Elementary

Sky Dancing by Ellen Erwin

Only One Year by Andrea Cheng

The Accidental Adventures of India McAllister by Charlotte Agell

Operation Marriage by Cynthia Chin-Lee

 

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