Click on this link to download the PDF of "Speak up at School: How to respond to everyday prejudice, bias and stereotypes," a guidebook for teachers by Teaching Tolerance, A Project of the Southern Poverty Law Center.
https://www.tolerance.org/sites/default/files/2017-06/Speak_Up_at_School.pdf
Excerpt:
You’re tongue-tied.
Someone has said something biased that makes you uncomfortable, or even angry. You want to say something, but you’re not sure what to say.
It happens “almost daily,” one teacher relates. Maybe it’s one of your students. Or it’s a colleague. Or an administrator. And maybe you laugh along—a forced or awkward laugh—because you don’t want to be rude. You see students grappling with the same issues.
This guidebook offers tools and strategies to prepare you to speak up against prejudice, bias and stereotypes at school.
Because whoever it is, and wherever you are, there are ways to be ready for such moments, ways to make sure that you aren’t caught tongue-tied, ways to make sure that you don’t let hate have the last word.