Showing posts with label #TSJCF16. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #TSJCF16. Show all posts
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Mariame Kaba, #TSJCF16 Keynote

November 20, 2016 0 comments

Missed the 2016 Teaching for Social Justice Curriculum Fair? You can check out Mariame Kaba's talk here.

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#TSJCF16 - the 2016 TSJ Curriculum Fair - Workshop Schedule!

October 19, 2016 0 comments

The 15th Annual Teaching for Social Justice Curriculum Fair 
#TSJCF16

Uplift High School
900 W. Wilson Avenue
Chicago, IL 60640

Saturday, November 19, 2016
10:00 am - 4:00 pm




ThemeDefund Policing: Fund Schools and Communities

KeynoteMariame Kaba, Project NIA. 
Mariame Kaba is an organizer, educator, curator, and founding director of Project NIA, a grassroots organization that works to end youth incarceration. She has co-founded several organizations including the Chicago Freedom School and the Chicago Taskforce on Violence Against Girls and Young Women. Mariame is currently organizing with Survived and Punished to address the criminalization of survivors of violence. Mariame is an abolitionist who is committed to transformative justice. 

Register online NOW!: here


Workshop Titles and Facilitators

TEACHERS FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE CURRICULUM FAIR WORKSHOPS
Download session descriptions here.

SESSION 1-12:00 - 1:15 PM
1. "ODE: Operation Defend Education" -- Poetry Writing Workshops for the Education Struggle(Adam Gottlieb, Diana Zwinak, ODE: Operation Defend Education/Chicago Revolutionary Poets Brigade).
2. Restorative Justice in Schools: Abolishing the Schools to Prison Pipeline. (Jason Ware).
3. Deschooling Ourselves and Liberating Education. (Uplift Community High School Students and Teachers).
4. Education Not Militarization: If Our City/Country Truly Cares About Youth and Stopping Violence, Fund Education. (Arny Stieber, Veterans For Peace - Chicago Chapter).
5. WE ARE STILL HERE: Building a People of Color-Led Ethnic Studies Movement in Chicago (Ethnic Studies Educators of Color - Chicago)
NOTE: This workshop is designed to be a healing and building space for people of Color.
6. Creating a Sustainable Community School District: From the Dyett Hunger Strike to the CTU Contract Victory (Johnaé Strong, Grassroots Education Movement, Chicago; Monique Redeaux, TSJ/CTU; Jitu Brown, Dyett Hunger Striker/Journey for Justice Alliance)
7. Anti-Racist Pedagogy in Early Childhood Education. (Sarah E. Dennis, Ph.D., Loyola University).
SESSION-2:00-3:15
8. '63 CPS Boycott: The Legacy of Racial Inequalities in Chicago Public Schools (Rachel Dickson, Kartemquin Films).
9. In Search of Justice in the Social (Aja Reynolds, Lamar Sanders, Evan M. Taylor, Jessica Suarez, Concerned Students of Color [UIC])
10.  The Struggle for Social Justice Adult High Schools in Chicago: Politics and Possibilities(Byron Sigcho, Rita Sacay, Megan Wells, Janise Hurtig, UIC Center for Literacy, Community Writing Project, Centro Autónomo Popular Education Adult High School, Dorothy Stang Adult High School)
11. "Coins, Cops, & Communities." A toolkit for youth workers & educators (Melisa Stephen, Alexandra Marie, Nicole Trinidad, Debbie Southorn, American Friends Service Committee, Chicago)
12. Understanding and Transforming Whiteness(Naomi Milstein, Chicago Freedom School).
13. The Attacks on Special Education: Know Your Rights and Fight! (Sarah Chambers, Natasha Carlsen, Tammie Vinson, Katie Osgood, Chicago Teachers Union).
14. Build Your Dream School! (Georgette Boateng & Hira Siddiqui, Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago [KINETIC youth program])
15. The Fight to Keep Uptown Affordable and Diverse: A Walking History Tour of Uptown. (Paul Siegel, Northside Action for Justice).
16. "Resisting Federal Efforts to Eradicate Our Culture": Two Oaxacans of La CNTE in Resistance Fighting for Human Rights and Indigenous Curriculum. (Mayem Arellanos Cano, Zapotec Lawyer; Fernando Sobernes Bojorques, Educator). 

CLOSING SESSION
Dialogue: Teaching after the Trump Election

Volunteer to help, email here. We need help with outreach, social media, documentation, setup, cleanup, food serving/cleanup, registration, art and t-shirt making, day-of help, translation (Spanish-English, ASL), and more.

Download flyers in color and in black and white!

Help promote the Curriculum Fair by putting up posters at your school, library, local coffee shop, or favorite community space. Poster distribution points:

  • North side - contact emmahardy29@gmail.com 
  • South side - Kenwood Oakland Community Organization, 4242 S. Cottage Grove (ask for TSJ posters)
  • Central - UIC College of Education, 1040 W. Harrison Street (ETMSW building), 3rd floor copy room (look for box marked TSJ posters)

Please email teachersforjustice@hotmail.com with the number of posters you took and where you posted them (note we have limited posters)

 
You can view and share our Google Slides presentation about the curriculum fair here



Watch a short video from the 2010 CF here


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Call for Tables and Workshops #TSJCF16

September 16, 2016 0 comments

TSJ Curriculum Fair
Call for Tables & Workshops
Due October 31

Not sure about which to apply for? What's the difference between a 'curriculum exhibit' and 'resource table'? Just want to know more about what the TSJ Curriculum Fair is all about? Click here for more info.


Download WORKSHOP FORM

Theme: Defund Policing. Fund Schools and Communities.
Date: Saturday, November 19
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September 13, 2016 0 comments

TSJ Teach-In: Are Police Necessary?

Date: September 24, 2016
UIC College of Education
1040 W. Harrison Street, Room 3427
Time: 5:00-7:00 pm

Sign up for the Teach-In here.

Download the flyer here. 

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TSJ General Meeting Sat. June 11 - Discussion and planning for #TSJCF16

May 9, 2016 0 comments


TSJ General Meeting and Curriculum Fair Planning

Date: Sat, June 11th
UIC College of Education
1040 W. Harrison St, Room 3427
Time : 5:00 PM-7:00 PM

This year's Curriculum Fair theme: DEFUND Police in Schools and Communities: FUND Community Schools and Communities will explore the connections between racial and economic justice, the links between racism and capitalism, and state sanctioned violence in communities and schools.

As educators, parents, and communities members, we know the troubling relationship Black and Brown families often have with police, yet police have become a common fixture in our schools and in our communities. We refuse to accept this as a norm. Our children deserve to be educated not policed.

At the same time we are truly witnessing the "history of the present moment" as groups of activists and organizers in Chicago and around the nation have been fighting back against economic and racial violence in unapologetic, creative, and effective ways. The critical analysis and rejection of the conditions which facilitate and reward over-policing and police brutality toward Black and Brown communities is stronger than any time since the modern civil rights movement began. Our goal is for the Curriculum Fair to build on this work and help educators bring this critical analysis into the curriculum and into the classrooms by discussing and planning workshops (among others) that explore:
    
  -What does it look like to strive to be an anti-racist teacher practitioner?
    
  -How do we understand the political economy of, and the connection between, chattel slavery, the prison industrial complex, and over-policing in Black and Brown communities?
      
 -What are the historic and contemporary issues that contribute to the explosion in incarceration and policing in Black and Brown communities?
    
  -What are the radical possibilities for truly restorative justice in our schools and in the communities in which they are situated?

Join us to discuss and plan the theme for the 2016 Teachers for Social Justice Curriculum Fair #TSJCF16, and begin to plan together to make this the most meaningful and action inspiring TSJ Curriculum Fair yet.
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