The pandemic is traumatizing students. It must be a wakeup call for us to change how we educate.
Health & Happiness
Eileen Ambrosini moved to the small town of Atwater, California, in 1979. Over the next three decades she met her husband, raised her daughter, and worked as a high school
We could all benefit from being a little kinder to ourselves—especially after the year we’ve had.
As you spend time at the end of this year reflecting and setting goals for 2021, here’s one to consider.
These stories ask the hard questions, directly call out root causes, and remind us that we all have a role to play in creating a more just, sustainable, and compassionate world.
With many families spending more time together now, there are ample opportunities for tension and hurt feelings. But these moments also offer invitations to reconnect.
Many essential workers are parents, too. So as the child care crisis continues, community activists are finding creative ways to support them.
Native communities share heritage ways to live and care for each other during this latest pandemic.
We all deserve to be celebrated for making it through today.
How would you describe 2020? Alarming, chaotic, enraging, or all of the above? Here are some brilliant books to help you make sense of it all and get ready for a new year.
In most cases, calling the police on abusers is unhelpful at best, and at worst makes survivors feel less safe: “It’s really time that we recenter on what the survivors are telling us.”
Businesses owned by people of color are particularly vulnerable to the economic impacts of COVID-19. So this year, consider ditching the big corporations and opt for patronizing these small businesses instead.
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