Sep 23, 2022
After teaching in New York City public schools for 30 years–twice winning State Teacher of the Year–John Taylor Gatto no longer wanted “to hurt kids to make a living.” Gatto resigned in the op-ed pages of the Wall Street Journal in an essay titled “I Quit, I Think.” He spent the last 27 years of his life...
Sep 16, 2022
In his autobiography, Up From Slavery, Booker T. Washington shows how traits such as self-reliance, honesty, and enterprise led him to become the first principal in Alabama’s Tuskegee Institute. Tuskegee's mission was to teach black students both intellectual and practical skills, so they could create value in the...
Sep 15, 2022
From the founding fathers and the Wright brothers to the builders of the Panama Canal and Brooklyn Bridge, historian David McCullough told stories of industrious Americans and their exceptional achievements with unabashed glory.
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Sep 5, 2022
Anne Sullivan went from an
orphaned child living in an asylum, to a world-famous educator. She
persevered in teaching the deaf-blind Helen Keller how to
communicate and acted as the latter’s eyes and ears for fifty
years.
Their story of adversity, education, and
friendship is brilliantly dramatized in the play and...
Sep 5, 2022
Between July and December 1944, Swedish businessman Raoul Wallenberg saved the lives of thousands of Jews in Nazi-controlled Hungary. The Soviets captured him in January 1945, and Wallenberg was never seen again in public.
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