These suggested No Place for Hate® activities are differentiated for elementary, middle and high school students. The activities can be used as a follow-up to watching the webinar, “Connecting Stories and Legacies: A Conversation with Author Gordon Korman and Rachelle Goldstein” which aired on 2/11/25. To make this a NPFH activity towards designation, watch the video, engage students in a discussion using the discussion questions and do one of the additional activities included…
Search Results
120 Results

Explore with young people the experiences of people with disabilities, the bias and discrimination they face, and the struggle to continue fighting for their rights.

Teach students about disability rights activist Judy Heumann and what work in schools and communities still remains.

Teach students about what disability means, and the tools and accommodations that people with disabilities need.

Engage in a family conversation about accommodations are and why people with disabilities need them.
New York, NY, September 8, 2022 ... ADL (the Anti-Defamation League) today issued the following statement on the passing of Queen Elizabeth II:
We join with millions of people around the world in mourning the loss of Queen Elizabeth II, the longest reigning monarch in Britain and an inspiring and beloved figure who exemplified respect for all people and cultures. Queen Elizabeth was at the center of many of the most important moments of modern history, from driving a military truck in…
Jonathan Greenblatt
CEO and National Director
July 27, 2022
Dear Mr. Agrawal,
I am once again reaching out regarding Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s chronic violations of Twitter’s terms of service on his accounts of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. We ask that you de-platform him for his continued use of Twitter to promote antisemitism, hate, violence and Holocaust denial.
As I wrote in January 2021 to then Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, Khamenei…

The author and publishers of a new book on Anne Frank's plight have turned one of the few at least partially upbeat stories of Jewish life and thought during the Holocaust into one of Jewish perfidy and treachery. The timing couldn’t be worse: antisemitism is flourishing once again, and Holocaust memory is diminishing.

Use the short evocative videos and films in this lesson plan to engage young people in conversations about identity, diversity, bias and social justice.

By Shaina Rudolph
Ages:4-8

By Maryann Cocca-Leffler
Ages:6-9

By Frank Murphy
Ages:5-8

By Tiffany Hammond
Ages:5-8

By Kelly Fritsch
Ages:6-9

By Nancy Bo Flood
Ages:4-8

By Kelly Yang
Ages:8-12

By Nancy Churnin
Ages:8-12

By Lucy Falcone
Ages:5-8

By Sonia Sotomayor
Ages:4-8