On Thursday, Oct. 29, the School of Education at CU Boulder is hosting a special virtual gathering of Ed Talks that will explore the effects of the pandemic and racial justice movements on today’s classrooms and the educators who lead them.
Theseshort, engaging talks are inspired by TED Talks and will be led by five educators—from a first-year teacher grappling with whether to follow the prescribed curricula or center social justice to a seasoned educator who says 2020 feels like her first year due to remote teaching and more.
The series also includes a co-founder and principal of an innovative student-led school in Denver and a student teacher building empathy for teachers and students into her first and futureclassrooms.
The speakers share the struggles that this year has brought to many educators, parents, and students, and a thread connecting each of the educators’ perspectives is the opportunity to learn from this moment, address inequitiesand establishnew futures in education.
“Let’s be honest inequities in schooling based on race and class have always been there,” said Brian Lightfoot, Ed Talks 2020 speaker. “Suffering has always been unequally distributednationally and globally. This pandemic gives us the opportunity to acknowledge the impact of inequity and use that awareness as a tool for change.”
CU Boulder’s Ed Talks will begin at 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29, and the virtual talks will be followed by a live Q&A with the educators. Registration is required to receive Zoom meeting information.
Learn more about the talks and the speakers at Colorado.edu/education/edtalks or .