Posted inInterviews

Chalkboards and Beats

A Conversation with Award-Winning Educator and Recording Artist, MR Carter It’s no secret that more Black male educators are needed in the classroom. Nothing makes it more evident than the post that’s been floating around Facebook for years. It reads, “What grade were you in when you had your first Black male teacher?” Although I’m […]

Posted inCulturally Responsive Teaching, Instruction & Curriculum, Instructional Strategies, Middle School, Pedagogy

Adding Pop Culture to Your Lessons isn’t Hard- Here’s Why

Have you signed up for The Educator’s Room Daily Newsletter? Click here and support independent journalism! Pop culture: Imagine entering a high school. The hallways are alive with discussions and debates, creative and well-thought-out student projects, and teachers as facilitators. I witnessed this with my own eyes several years ago. At a local high school, […]

Posted inCurrent Events in Education

Critical Race Theory Haters Find a New Target: Social Emotional Learning

Have you signed up for The Educator’s Room Daily Newsletter? Click here and support independent journalism! In growing numbers, parents and political groups have a lot to say about education. Certain acronyms are drawing especially intense criticism. CRT, SEL, and DEI have inspired ravenous debate. The absurd assertion that educators are teaching white children to […]

Posted inInstruction & Curriculum

Finally An Afrofuturist Textbook!

An Interview With the Editor of Conjuring Worlds Have you signed up for The Educator’s Room Daily Newsletter? Click here and support independent journalism! Afrofuturism is highly-desired, but frequently a missing puzzle piece in many English Language Arts curriculums. B. Sharise Moore, a veteran educator and author of Dr. Marvellus Djinn’s Odd Scholars, hopes to change […]

Posted inCulturally Responsive Teaching

Where Are All the Black Mermaids? How Afro-futurism and Black Joy Saved my Black History Month

Have you signed up for The Educator’s Room Daily Newsletter? Click here and support independent journalism! Inevitably, as we ring in the new year, teachers begin to pull out their tried and true Black History lessons. Our shortest month begins to fill up with Jackie Robinson and Langston Hughes coloring packets, Civil Rights Icon research […]