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📚

For Educators

Vetted, classroom-ready content for K-12 teachers and post-secondary instructors. Discussion guides, primary source packets, and lesson frameworks — especially for educators in states where curriculum law has restricted what they can teach.

  • ✓ Good Trouble discussion guides (free download)
  • ✓ Primary source packets for Reconstruction era
  • ✓ Civil Rights Movement lesson starters
  • ✓ HBCU Wiki research guide for classrooms
  • ✓ Educator newsletter (separate from Insights)
Educator resources
🎓

For Students

Curated reading paths by topic and age. HBCU prospect resources for students in the admissions process. Research guides for students doing serious academic work on Black history topics.

  • ✓ How to use the HBCU Wiki for research
  • ✓ How to choose an HBCU
  • ✓ Writing a paper on the Civil Rights Movement
  • ✓ Scholarship and fellowship resources
  • ✓ Reading paths by topic and grade level
Student resources
🏠

For Families

Discussion guides for hard history conversations at home. Age-appropriate reading recommendations for children. Black history travel guides and celebration activity packs for Black History Month, Juneteenth, and Kwanzaa.

  • ✓ How to talk about race with children (by age)
  • ✓ Age-band reading lists
  • ✓ Black history travel guide: sites worth visiting
  • ✓ Black History Month family activity packs
  • ✓ Juneteenth and Kwanzaa celebration guides
Family resources
Coming in Phase 3

Classroom Curriculum

Standards-aligned curriculum units for grades 6-12, designed explicitly for schools in states where curriculum law has restricted access to accurate Black history content. Built in partnership with practicing HBCU and K-12 educators. Sold per-teacher and per-district. Launching Phase 3 (months 18-36).

Get notified when curriculum launches

Start Here

Discussion Guide

Good Trouble in the Classroom

A downloadable PDF with biographical context, primary-source discussion prompts, and research links for each of the 19 icons in the Good Trouble archive. Appropriate for grades 7-12 and undergraduate survey courses.

Download (PDF)
Research Guide

Using the HBCU Wiki for Research

Step-by-step guidance for students using HBCU Wiki entries in academic research projects, including how to cite the wiki, how to find primary sources linked from wiki entries, and how to evaluate source quality.

Read the guide
Family Resource

Black History Month Family Guide

Age-band activities, reading recommendations, conversation starters, and a Black history travel bucket list — organized around the sites every American family should visit: Selma, Montgomery, Birmingham, Tuskegee, and Washington, D.C.

Explore the guide