Resources for Juneteenth

Charles T. Davis leading the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute 1978 seminar on "20th Century Afro-American Culture."

To celebrate Juneteenth, we are pleased to highlight our curricular resources on African American history. Since its launch in 1978, the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute, a partnership between Yale University and New Haven Public Schools, has been committed to providing public school teachers with the resources and opportunities to create culturally relevant curricula on African American history. Since 2005, the Yale National Initiative has invited public school teachers from across the country to New Haven each year as Yale National Fellows to take national seminars led by Yale faculty. In that time, Yale National Fellows have created hundreds of K-12 curriculum units on or related to African American history.

Our Topical Index contains a top-level entry for "African Americans" with links to over two hundred curriculum units that either focus on or incorporate African American history and culture. It also contains entries specifically for curriculum units on African American history and African American literature. Additionally, the Index contains entries for related topics and themes, such as "Race," "Social Justice," "Civil Rights," and "Diversity."

Teachers looking for Juneteenth resources may also find it useful to browse our curriculum unit database through a list of national seminars. Among the one hundred national seminars we have offered since 2005 are "Narratives of Citizenship and Race since Emancipation," a 2012 national seminar led by Jonathan Holloway, then Professor of History, African American Studies and American Studies, and "The Rise, Fall, and Rise Again of the Civil Rights Movement," a 2009 national seminar led by the late Robert A. Burt, Alexander M. Bickel Professor of Law.

More broadly, several recent national seminars have allowed teachers to explore the concepts of race and racism in the legal and school systems, including "Race, Class, and Punishment," led by James A. Forman, Jr., Professor of Law, "Teaching about Race and Racism Across the Disciplines," led by Daniel Martinez HoSang, Associate Professor of Ethnicity, Race, and Migration and American Studies.

A few individual curriculum units worth noting are:

The Yale National Initiative to strengthen teaching in public schools, now in its seventeenth year, is a long-term endeavor to influence public policy on teacher professional development, in part by establishing exemplary Teachers Institutes for high-poverty, high-minority schools in states around the country. Teachers Institutes are educational partnerships between universities and school districts designed to strengthen teaching and learning in a community's high-need public schools. These Institutes follow the approach developed originally in New Haven and implemented now in other cities.