Sarah Ford | February 3, 2015
SPLC鈥檚 Teaching Tolerance magazine examines power of storytelling to promote social justice
Storytelling can be a powerful classroom tool that helps increase understanding, spark empathy and reduce stress as students tell their own stories and learn from the stories of others, according to the new issue of听Teaching Tolerance听尘补驳补锄颈苍别.
鈥淚鈥檓 proud of every issue of听Teaching Tolerance听鈥 but this one seems, to me, to embody the essence of Teaching Tolerancemore than most,鈥 said Teaching Tolerance Director Maureen Costello. 鈥淪torytelling is the closest thing to walking in another鈥檚 shoes if you want to see the world from someone else鈥檚 point of view. And that is, after all, what we encourage every day.鈥
罢丑别听听offers educators multiple perspectives on how and why to encourage storytelling. In 鈥,鈥 author Howard Stevenson discusses the racial stress that students of color often feel. To combat this stress, Stevenson encourages teachers to allow children to engage in racial storytelling and to listen to the positive and negative ways their peers experience the realities of their own racial identities.
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