Journal entry: Autism awareness month
April 26, 2025 Navigating the First Year: A Special Educator’s Reality in NYC As a first-year special education teacher in a New York City middle school, I walked into the

April 26, 2025 Navigating the First Year: A Special Educator’s Reality in NYC As a first-year special education teacher in a New York City middle school, I walked into the
Spring arrived. I thought it was the perfect time to sow seeds for a vegetable garden. The rain had started—gentle, steady—so I scattered the seeds into the soil, feeling hopeful.
Continue readingJournal entry: Spring through the glass of hope
Narrator 🗣️ “People of all abilities 🌎—let’s communicate with hands, hearts, and hope.” Objective:Participants will identify elements of climate change 🌪️ and demonstrate ways to reduce their carbon footprint 👣
Chapter 1: Recording Your Episode Record solo or with friends using your phone, tablet, or computer You don’t need fancy equipment! Most phones, tablets, and computers already have a voice
Long ago, before the rivers forgot their songs and the forests fell quiet under machines and metal, the people lived by rhythm — of drum, of breath, of wind. They
Amanda Gorman is an American poet, activist, and author who gained international fame after delivering her powerful poem “The Hill We Climb” at the inauguration of U.S. President Joe Biden
These characters are designed to resonate with children, each symbolizing a theme—memory, balance, courage, and forgetting—and can be used for animation, puppet shows, or school plays. Main Character Profiles 1.
Continue readingWaya and the Fire of Memory character development guide
শিশুদের উপযোগী করা কাহিনীর বাংলা অনুবাদ— ওয়াইয়া ও স্মৃতির আগুন একটি চেরোকি-প্রেরিত রূপকথা পর্দা ১: অতীতের সেই সময় [সুর: নদীর কলকল, বাঁশির আওয়াজ] অনেক, অনেক বছর আগে, টেনেসির সবুজ পাহাড়
A Children’s Story with a Moral Lesson Once there was Waya, a brave and wise Native American girl. Her grandmother used to say, “If the fire of memory dies, the
A long time ago, in the 1800s, a Native American woman named Amanda lived in Oregon. She belonged to the Coos tribe and was blind, which means she couldn’t see.
Continue readingThe Long Walk Home: A New Ending to the Trail of Tears