Learning about Martin Luther King Jr. and nonviolent protest

Teaching kids about the holiday we’re marking today seems especially important this year. How can we help our children understand and embrace the power of nonviolent protest in a time when they see adults engaged in so many violent acts?

We’ve rounded up a range of approaches for parents and educators who want to open up discussions with kids about activism for freedom, equality, and justice on the day that honors Martin Luther King Jr.—or any day. Please share any books, videos, or other resources you love in the comments below!

Something Everyone Can Do

NPR’s Kwame Alexander and Rachel Martin would like people to “write our way out of the unprecedented events of the past year and into the space of possibility.” They suggest we write a poem beginning with the line, “I dream a world.” We can do this just for ourselves and our families or share it with the folks at NPR, and they will create a community crowd-sourced poem out of many of the submissions.

For Older Kids

KQED recently created a learning video and materials for discussion called Is There a Right Way to Protest? It’s up-to-date and terrific for launching conversations on a variety of topics, both historical and contemporary.

The King Institute at Stanford University has a set of Lesson Plans on Nonviolent Resistance designed for kids in middle school and high school. They include primary sources for deeper study and critical reading. And be sure to take a look at King’s Six Principles of Nonviolence. PBS Learning has a unit on Peaceful Protests that combines lessons from women’s activism in Liberia with a lesson on MLK and his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail.”

For Younger Kids

If you’re the parent of a younger child who needs a first introduction to the concepts of segregation, inequality, and peaceful protests, Scholastic has produced a lovely five-minute film: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr: A Leader and Hero.  And Dory Lerner of the National Civil Rights Museum recommends the book My Uncle Martin’s Big Heart by Angela Farris Watkins.

Social studies teachers LaNesha Tabb and Naomi O’Brien created resources on Martin Luther King Jr.  they share for a small fee on a platform called TeachersPayTeachers. In a YouTube video, Naomi walks through the basics for K–2 students, suggesting moments when you can pause for questions and discussion. Even if you’re not looking for more formal lessons, you’ll find that her guidance for sharing vocabulary and ideas around racism in the past and present is valuable. She urges people not to shy away from these topics just because they’re uncomfortable.

And Finally . . .

The MLK Center for Nonviolent Social Change offered a virtual tour of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park  with a park ranger last year. It’s a more personal story of the man that includes an intimate view of his childhood home.


Shelley Sperry | Sperry Editorial

Media Monday: On the trail of civil rights in Texas

This week many schools will honor the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with activities, readings, and projects related to the struggle for racial equality. For this Media Monday, I decided to look for some not-quite-so-well-known civil rights stories based in Texas. Families can visit some historic sites and learn the history together, or students may want to use the stories of these Texas struggles as jumping-off points for their own projects.

Juanita Craft, Texas civil rights hero

Juanita Craft, Texas civil rights hero

  • Austin’s African-American Cultural Heritage District includes a wide variety of sites that students can visit and explore, from the Carver Museum (in what used to be the segregated African American branch of the Austin Library system) to the Texas State Cemetery, where many civil rights leaders are buried.
  • The Dallas home of Juanita Craft  is preserved as a tribute to a woman who started an astonishing 182 NAACP chapters and helped integrate universities, theaters, restaurants, and other public spaces in Texas.
  • Bessie Coleman, an “aviatrix” and the first African American to earn a pilot’s license, has an exhibit dedicated to her at the Atlanta Historical Museum in an old railroad depot full of many other history exhibits in Atlanta, Texas.
  • Calaboose African American Museum in San Marcos was formerly a jail, then a USO dance hall for black soldiers, and now features stories of African Americans in Texas, from the era of the Buffalo Soldiers to the Civil Rights Movement.
  • Starr County Farm Workers’ Strike originated in Rio Grande City as part of a labor movement organized by the National Farm Workers Association in the 1960s, protesting low wages and brutal working conditions. The protests culminated on Labor Day 1966 with a march on the State Capitol in Austin.


We all know that Austin has truly amazing, world-class collections related to Texas history, African American culture, and civil rights at the Bullock Museum and the LBJ Presidential Library, and our kids are lucky to have those resources so close at hand. But I also want to point out just a few additional resources for learning Texas history that helped me find some of the stories above:


Shelley Sperry