Welcome to the Anti-Racism Webpage
This site is designed to support educators in creating inclusive, culturally responsive, and anti-racist learning environments. Resources are intended to support ongoing learning, reflection, and classroom implementation aligned with BC curriculum, the BC Human Rights Code, Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action, and BC Professional Standards for Educators.
- Anti-racism is the active, conscious process of identifying and opposing racism. It goes beyond simply not being personally prejudiced by requiring deliberate action to dismantle the systemic barriers, policies, and institutional structures that perpetuate racial inequality and oppression.
- Systemic racism refers to how societal structures—such as laws, policies, and institutional practices—routinely produce racially inequitable outcomes. Unlike individual prejudice, it operates at a macro-level, meaning organizations and social systems can perpetuate racial disparities even without conscious bias from the individuals running them.
- Privilege is a special advantage, right, or immunity granted to a specific person or group, often to the exclusion of others. It can be something earned, legally sanctioned (like a driver’s privilege), or an unearned advantage based on social circumstances.
- A stereotype is a widely held, oversimplified, and generalized belief about a specific group of people. It involves assuming all individuals in that group share the exact same characteristics, traits, or behaviors, ignoring their unique personalities and individuality.
- A microaggression is a subtle, everyday comment, gesture, or behavioral slight that expresses a prejudiced or stereotypical attitude toward a member of a marginalized group. These remarks are often unintentional and may even be disguised as compliments, but they serve to isolate or demean the recipient.
- Bias is a disproportionate preference or inclination for or against an idea, thing, or group of people, usually in a way that is closed-minded, prejudicial, or unfair. It acts as a mental shortcut that influences judgment and prevents objective analysis.
BC Black Excellence Day is an annual provincial celebration that honours the history, achievements, and contributions of Black people, while celebrating Black joy and resilience. The program features artists, athletes, educators, and leaders sharing their lived experiences and expertise.
You can view past events here:
https://blackexcellenceday.ca/ (2024)
Black History Month provides an important opportunity not only to celebrate the significant contributions of Black Canadians, but also to engage in meaningful learning about the impacts of racism and to reaffirm our collective commitment to ensuring our district remains a safe, inclusive, and respectful place for all members of our community.
LRC Resources
Sankofa Black Heritage Collection, including Teacher Guides for K–1 and Grades 2–3
SD71 and BCTF Resources
· https://www.bctf.ca/news-and-opportunities/news-details/2023/01/04/black-history-month-resources
Additional Online Resources
· https://www.blacklivesmatteratschool.com/guideforblmas.html
· https://teachingafricancanadianhistory.weebly.com/
Thank you for your continued commitment to equity, inclusion, and learning.
January 27 is International Holocaust Remembrance Day. This day offers an opportunity to remember the six million Jewish people murdered during the Holocaust, as well as the millions of other victims of Nazi persecution, and to reflect on the impacts of antisemitism, racism, and state-sponsored violence.
This compilation was developed collaboratively, with contributions from Chantel Parsons (Mark R. Isfeld Secondary School), Lindsay Kolba (Alberni District Secondary School), and Kim Marks (District Elementary Teacher Librarian), alongside district and Learning Resource Centre materials.
In British Columbia, Holocaust education is a mandatory part of the Grade 10 Social Studies curriculum, and these resources may also support learning in Genocide Studies and other secondary courses where themes of human rights, historical injustice, continuity and change, cause and consequence, and genocide are explored.
Local & District Resources
Learning Resource Centre (LRC)
Classroom-ready novels and inquiry kits suitable for upper-elementary and secondary connections.
- Number the Stars (Grades 5–8) – Historical fiction supporting empathy, ethical judgment, and personal narratives.
- Refugee (Grades 5–9) – Accessible novel linking forced migration, continuity and change, and global displacement.
- La valise d’Hana (Grades 6–9) – Survivor-centred text supporting inquiry into identity, memory, and historical evidence.
- Immigration & Refugees Inquiry Kits (Grade 5) – Source-based inquiry aligned with evidence and perspective-taking competencies.
Canadian Government Resources
Canada, the Holocaust and Combatting Antisemitism (Main Link)
Authoritative Canadian context connecting Holocaust history to citizenship, remembrance, and public responsibility.
https://www.canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/services/canada-holocaust.html
International Holocaust Remembrance Day (Canada)
Background and framing suitable for acknowledgements or short lessons on January 27.
https://www.canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/services/canada-holocaust/international-remembrance-day.html
Canadian Holocaust Education Resources (Comprehensive)
Extensive, vetted collection aligned with Canadian curricula and age-appropriate pedagogy.
https://www.canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/services/canada-holocaust/resources.html
Lesson Plans (Grades 8–12)
Holocaust education lessons- includes award-winning and honorable mentions
https://www.canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/services/canada-holocaust/international-remembrance-alliance/award-holocaust-education.html
Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre (VHEC)
Fragments in Focus: A History of the Holocaust (Grades 8–12) *Pro D Opportunity (see above)
Interactive digital museum with artifacts, timelines, glossary, and teacher/student guides—excellent for evidence, continuity and change.
https://fragmentsinfocus.ca/en/
VHEC Website –Highly recommended for BC teachers; strong alignment with BC curriculum competencies. Lesson plans, classroom kits, survivor speakers, antisemitism workshops, and educator professional learning.
https://www.vhec.org/
Azrieli Foundation
Holocaust Survivor Memoirs
Canadian survivor memoirs available as free class sets, supporting primary voices, testimony, and historical empathy (Grades 7–12).
https://memoirs.azrielifoundation.org/education/educational-materials/
Lesson Plans (Elementary & Secondary)
Filterable by subject, grade, language, and lesson length.
https://memoirs.azrielifoundation.org/education/educational-materials/?type=&subject=&grade=&language=&lessonLength=&page=1
Additional Resources
Facing History & Ourselves (Grades 7–12)
Inquiry-based lessons connecting Holocaust history to ethical decision-making and civic responsibility.
https://www.facinghistory.org/
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (Grades 8–12)
Extensive lesson plans, timelines, primary sources; also offers polished Zoom survivor speaker sessions and annual conferences.
https://www.ushmm.org/teach/teaching-materials/holocaust
Royal Roads University – War Memories Conversation Kit (Grades 8–12)
Canadian place-based resource supporting remembrance, dialogue, and local connections.
https://warheritage.royalroads.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/10.-Holocaust-memorial-conversation-kit.pdf
Wassmuth Centre for Human Rights (Grades 8–12)
Powerful lessons exploring testimony, justice, and remembrance, with content spanning the Holocaust and other genocides. Provides a strong foundation for discussions on human rights, ethical decision-making, and historical empathy.
https://www.wassmuthcenter.org/holocaust-education/
A variety of educational materials on Holocaust history—including novels, films and television programs, documentaries, and other media—are available for learning. To ensure resources are age-appropriate, historically accurate, and suitable for your context, please consult your teacher librarians, who can provide curated lists and guidance to support respectful and safe exploration of this important subject. Teachers are encouraged to engage with these resources in ways that are developmentally appropriate and aligned with their course context and professional judgment.
• You and Me: Exploring Personal and Cultural Identity (2 sets)
• Positive Personal and Cultural Identity
• Identity and Diversity: Celebrations and Traditions
• Identity and Diversity: Picture Books with Characters from Diverse Cultures (4 sets)
• Identity and Diversity (2 sets)
• What Makes You, You?: Exploring Personal and Cultural Identity
• Identity and Diversity: Novels with Characters from Diverse Cultures (2 kits)
• The Cay
• Comment devenir anti-raciste
Equity and Belonging Through Literature – Detailed Teacher Implementation Chart Aligned with BC Anti-Racism: A Guide for Teachers: https://curriculum.gov.bc.ca/sites/curriculum.gov.bc.ca/files/pdf/anti-racism/en-anti-racism-education-bc.pdf
Resource Note: These books and resources were selected to support age-appropriate conversations about identity, history, and equity in K–3 classrooms. Some texts explore the experiences of Indigenous children in residential schools and may include references to racism, trauma, or historical injustice. These works are included to support learning related to Canadian history, Truth and Reconciliation, and Indigenous perspectives.
Suggested resource list — educators are encouraged to consult their teacher-librarian for additional vetted titles and available class sets.
| Grade | Text | Step-by-Step Activity | Curricular/Core Competencies | Teacher Guide/Support (links) |
| K-3 | Our Skin: A First Conversation About Race (Megan Madison) | 1) Set norms: we talk about differences respectfully and no one is compared. 2) Read aloud and pause to notice what the author says about fairness and belonging. 3) Mini-lesson: Fair does not mean everyone gets the same thing (use classroom examples like glasses, ramps, language). 4) Identity Circles activity – students draw sections such as family, interests, languages, and traditions to show the many parts of who they are. 5) Reflection discussion: Skin is one small part of us; belonging comes from how we treat each other. | Core: Positive Personal & Cultural Identity; Social Awareness & Responsibility; Communication | Educator guide (PRH): https://www.penguinclassroom.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/28ea38f4-our-skin-educator-guide.pdf |
| K-3 | When We Were Alone (David A. Robertson) | 1) Grounding: “This story includes a hard part of history; we read with care.” 2) Read aloud; use before/after pages to notice changes (hair, clothes, names). 3) Discuss: what was taken? what stayed strong? (Culture, family love). 4) Tradition ribbons: students draw a tradition/strength; connect into a class ‘braid.’ 5) Closing: one support strategy if feelings come up (talk to trusted adult, breathing). | Core: Positive Identity; Social Awareness; Personal Responsibility | Discussion guide (BC HRC): https://bchumanrights.ca/wp-content/uploads/Discussion-guide-When-we-were-alone.pdf |
| K-3 | Main Street (Britt Hawthorne & Tiffany Jewell) | 1) Read aloud; mark moments of inclusion/exclusion with hand signals. 2) Turn-and-talk: “What helped someone feel they belonged?” 3) Belonging Map: map school spaces (welcome / not yet welcome) + why. 4) Class chooses 2 doable actions (greeting routines, inclusive play options). 5) Revisit in 2 weeks: quick check-in – what improved? what’s next? | Social Studies: Community; Core: Communication; Relationship Skills; Responsibility | Teacher guide (PRH): https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/775818/main-street-by-written-by-britt-hawthorne-and-tiffany-jewell-illustrated-by-david-wilkerson/teachers-guide/ |
Equity and Belonging Through Literature – Detailed Teacher Implementation Chart Aligned with BC Anti-Racism: A Guide for Teachers: https://curriculum.gov.bc.ca/sites/curriculum.gov.bc.ca/files/pdf/anti-racism/en-anti-racism-education-bc.pdf
Resource Note: These books and resources were selected to support age-appropriate conversations about identity, history, and equity in Grade 4-8 classrooms. Some texts explore the experiences of Indigenous children in residential schools and may include references to racism, trauma, or historical injustice. These works are included to support learning related to Canadian history, Truth and Reconciliation, and Indigenous perspectives.
Suggested resource list — educators are encouraged to consult their teacher-librarian for additional vetted titles and available class sets.
| Grade | Text | Step-by-Step Activity (1-5) | Curricular/Core Competencies | Teacher Guide/ Support (links) |
| 4-5 | When I Was Eight (Christy Jordan-Fenton & Margaret Pokiak-Fenton) | 1) Activate prior knowledge: “Why do people want to learn to read?” 2) Read aloud; track barriers vs determination (two-column notes). 3) Identify 3 moments of courage; cite evidence from text/illustration. 4) Write: “A skill that matters to me and why” (1 paragraph). 5) Class poster: ‘Learning is power because…’ (student statements). | ELA: Comprehension; Core: Positive Identity; Perseverance (Personal Awareness) | Often paired with Fatty Legs; use as brief entry point if teaching both. |
| 4-5 | I Am Not a Number (Jenny Kay Dupuis) | 1) Pre-discussion: names/nicknames and what they represent (identity, family). 2) Read with 3 pauses: arriving / school rules / return home. 3) Photo inquiry (back matter): Notice / Wonder / Connect (3 sticky notes each). 4) Write ‘My Name Story’ OR ‘A name I would never want to lose.’ 5) Close: “What does respect look like in schools today?” (Class commitments). | Social Studies: Historical perspective; Core: Ethical Reasoning; Identity | Lesson plan (University of Calgary):
https://werklund.ucalgary.ca/sites/default/files/teams/36/I%20Am%20Not%20a%20Number%20Grade%204-6%20Lesson.pdf |
| Grades
4–9 |
Righting Canada’s Wrongs (Series) — James Lorimer & Company | 1) Introduce the idea of redress: When something unfair happens, how can it be made right? 2) Select one case study connected to your unit (e.g., Chinese Head Tax, Japanese Canadian Internment, Komagata Maru, Residential Schools, Africville). 3) In small groups, analyze images/timelines to determine: What happened? Why? Who resisted? 4) Complete a Justice Pathway organizer: Event → Harm Caused → Resistance → Redress → Ongoing Impact Today. 5) Reflection: What responsibility do we have today when we learn about past injustice? | Social Studies: Historical Perspective; Cause & Consequence; Evidence & Interpretation; Ethical Judgment. Core Competencies: Critical Thinking; Social Responsibility; Communication. | https://lorimer.ca/righting-canadas-wrongs/
https://www.canadashistory.ca/education |
| 3-7 | The Anti-Racist Kid (Tiffany Jewell)
*Class Kit-available through LRC |
1) Choose one section (Identity or Justice) and read as a class. 2) Silent write: 2 prompts from the book (private; sharing optional). 3) Pair-share using stems: “I noticed…”, “I wonder…”, “A fair change could be…” 4) Class chooses ONE action (inclusive games list, library representation check). 5) Two-week follow-up: evaluate impact; decide next small step. | Core: Social Responsibility; Personal Awareness; Communication | Activity-forward text; use built-in prompts as the guide. |
| 6-8 | New Kid (Jerry Craft | 1) Mini-lesson: panels, gutters, facial expression, symbolism (10 min). 2) Read a key scene; annotate belonging/exclusion with evidence. 3) Discuss microaggressions/assumptions using sentence stems (text-based). 4) Create a 6-panel comic showing an inclusion problem + repair. 5) Exit: one school routine that could increase belonging. | ELA: Media literacy; Core: Communication; Social Awareness; Critical Thinkin | Teacher guide: https://b0f646cfbd7462424f7a-f9758a43fb7c33cc8adda0fd36101899.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/teaching-guides/TG-9780062885531.pdf Author resources: https://jerrycraft.com/resources |
| 6-8 | My Name Is Seepeetza (Shirley Sterling | 1) Context mini-lesson: residential schools + resilience; establish care norms. 2) Teach diary voice; 2-column journal: Event / What it shows about the system. 3) Midway check-in: feelings + supports; clarify misconceptions with facts. 4) Write: diary entry from Seepeetza OR a ‘safe school’ entry from today. 5) Synthesis: 3 learnings + 1 question for further inquiry. | Social Studies: Historical perspective; Core: Ethical Reasoning; Identity; Communication | Novel study (SD61): https://ied.sd61.bc.ca/wp-content/uploads/sites/112/2019/02/My_Name-_is_Sepeetza_Novel_Study.pdf FNESC guide (IRSR): https://www.fnesc.ca/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/PUB-LFP-IRSR-5-2015-07-WEB.pdf |
| 6-8 | Fatty Legs (Christy Jordan-Fenton & Margaret Pokiak-Fenton) | 1) Pre-teach vocabulary + context; set norms for respectful talk. 2) Track symbols (red stockings, names, language) and meaning. 3) Quick writes: What happened? What did it show? (3-4 sentences). 4) Resilience Map: challenge → supports → response → strength. 5) Discussion: how do we create schools that protect identity and dignity? | ELA: Theme & inference; Core: Empathy; Social Awareness; Communication | Teacher guide (SD61): https://ied.sd61.bc.ca/wp-content/uploads/sites/112/2019/02/Fatty-_Legs_Teacher_Guide.pdf |
Equity and Belonging Through Literature – Detailed Teacher Implementation Chart Aligned with BC Anti-Racism: A Guide for Teachers: https://curriculum.gov.bc.ca/sites/curriculum.gov.bc.ca/files/pdf/anti-racism/en-anti-racism-education-bc.pdf
Resource Note: These books and resources were selected to support age-appropriate conversations about identity, history, and equity in Grade 4-8 classrooms. Some texts explore the experiences of Indigenous children in residential schools and may include references to racism, trauma, or historical injustice. These works are included to support learning related to Canadian history, Truth and Reconciliation, and Indigenous perspectives.
Suggested resource list — educators are encouraged to consult their teacher-librarian for additional vetted titles and available class sets.
| Grade | Text | Step-by-Step activity (1-5) | Curricular/ Core Competencies | Teacher Guide/Support (links) |
| 9-12 | This Book Is Anti-Racist (Tiffany Jewell)
*Class Kit-available through LRC |
1) Private identity map (opt-out allowed). 2) Read one chapter; think-write-pair-share with sentence stems. 3) Small groups create discussion questions and norms for respectful talk. 4) Action planning: 1 change in self / class / school (choose ONE to start). 5) Reflection: what support/resources are needed to do this responsibly? | Core: Positive Identity; Responsibility; Communication | Teacher notes (Quarto): https://www.quartoknows.com/public/dynamic/files/product_file/TBIAR-Teacher-s-Notes4086.pdf Activity guide (Teaching Books): https://school.teachingbooks.net/media/pdf/activity_guides/50761.pdf |
| 9-12 | Braiding Sweetgrass (Young Adult Edition) (Robin Wall Kimmerer / Monique Gray Smith) | 1) Read 1-2 excerpts on reciprocity/gifts (teacher-selected). 2) Discuss: “What do we take? What do we give back?” (community + land). 3) Reciprocity audit: school/community/land relationships (small groups). 4) Create a gratitude/reciprocity practice (short writing or class routine). 5) Small action project: stewardship or community care (plan + reflect). | Science/Humanities: Interconnectedness; Core: Responsibility; Systems Thinking | Teaching guide (Lerner): https://lernerbooks.blog/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Braiding-Sweetgrass-for-Young-Adults_Teaching-Guide.pdf |
| 10-12 | Indian Horse (Richard Wagamese | 1) Trauma-informed norms + grounding practice (2 minutes). 2) Track symbols (ice/hockey/silence/name) with evidence quotes. 3) Seminar: “What does healing require personally and collectively?” (Text-based). 4) Literary analysis paragraph: choose one symbol and argue meaning with evidence. 5) Optional: teacher-led connection to TRC Calls to Action (selection, respectful framing). | ELA: Theme & symbolism; Core: Empathy; Ethical Reasoning; Social Responsibility | Study guide: https://www.indianhorse.ca/downloads/study-guide.pdf Discussion guide (BC HRC): https://bchumanrights.ca/wp-content/uploads/Discussion-guide-Indian-Horse.pdf |
| 11-12 | They Called Me Number One (Bev Sellars) | 1) Mini-lesson: what is a policy? how can policy shape daily life? 2) While reading: collect examples of policy-in-action (names, language, discipline). 3) Create ‘Policy → Practice → Impact → Resistance/Resilience’ infographic. 4) Seminar: “Why do memoirs matter for understanding history?” 5) Reflection: responsibilities we have as learners/citizens after learning this. | Social Studies: Governance/rights; Core: Ethical Judgment; Social Responsibility | Teacher resource (FNESC – BC First Peoples 12): https://www.fnesc.ca/wp/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/BC-First-Peoples-12-Teacher-Resource-Guide-2022-final.pdf |
• You and Me: Exploring Personal and Cultural Identity (2 sets)
• Positive Personal and Cultural Identity
• Identity and Diversity: Celebrations and Traditions
• Identity and Diversity: Picture Books with Characters from Diverse Cultures (4 sets)
• Identity and Diversity (2 sets)
• What Makes You, You?: Exploring Personal and Cultural Identity
• Identity and Diversity: Novels with Characters from Diverse Cultures (2 kits)
• The Cay
• Comment devenir anti-raciste
Anti-Racism
Teachers across the province have been working hard to make their classrooms more anti-racist. Feedback from many teachers made it clear that they needed more information and supports before they would feel confident having these conversations in their classroom.
The ministry has worked with a team of IBPoC (Indigenous, Black and People of Colour) educators to develop Anti-Racism: A Guide for Teachers (1MB, PDF). This guide gives teachers in British Columbia additional tools and strategies to include anti-racism education as part of their teaching practices and to help foster learning, address hatred, and celebrate diversity.
- Curriculum guide to Anti-Racism (PDF, 1MB)
- L’antiracisme : Guide à l’intention des enseignants (PDF, 1MB)
Resources
- Learning to Be Anti-Racist (Introductory Course): This non-mandated, self-paced, seven-module course helps educators identify racism, understand bias and privilege, and adopt anti-racist behaviors. It includes interactive scenarios.
https://mytrainingbc.ca/anti-racism_course/
- UBC Anti-Racism Awareness Course: A free online course focusing on implicit and explicit systemic racism, designed for teachers, leaders, and staff.
Educational Resources
- Safe, caring and inclusive schools – video from the Government of BC
- “A short animated video about the importance of schools fostering inclusive classroom environments where everyone regardless of race, culture, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity or ability, is welcome and feels safe.”
- Companion Guide for video from the Government of BC
- Active Witness Foundary
- Anti-Racism resources – Government of BC
- K-12 Anti-Racism Action Plan – BC Ministry of Education and Child Care
- Anti-Racism: A Guide for Teachers – BC Ministry of Education and Child Care
- Anti-Racism Lesson Plans and Tool Kits – Safe At Schools
- Indigenous Anti-Racism Resources
- Hope Inclusion Project Anti-Oppression in Early Education Resources
- Inclusive Calendar Guide – BC Ministry of Education and Child Care
- Racism in Canada – Elementary lesson plans – BCTF
- Racism in Canada – Secondary lesson plans – BCTF
- Anti-Racism Classroom Resources – BCTF
- Anti-Racism resources – ATA
- Equity and Anti-Racism resources – One Love Consulting (Dr. Lisa Gunderson) – an extensive list of resources
- Anti-Racism Resources – Moms Against Racism
- Anti-Racism Resources and Lesson Plans – Anti Oppression Educators’ Collective
Responding and Reporting Resources
- Erase – Anonymous Reporting Tool for Students
- Racism Response Guidelines – BC Ministry of Education and Child Care
- Speak up at School – Learning For Justice – “This guide is for educators and all adults in schools, and it offers advice for ways to respond to remarks made by students and other adults. It also gives guidance for helping students learn to speak up as well. And modeling the kind of behavior we want from students is one of the most effective ways of teaching.”
- Be An Active Witness – Foundry
Anti-Racism Workshop (March 2026)- Mandart Chan
Diverse & Inclusive Classooms -Handout – UPDATED March 2026
Rubric for Auditing Your Music Program (1)
TBAR inspired journal prompts (2)
Compassionate Systems Leadership (May 2026)- Joanne Schroeder
Calling In vs Calling Out
Calling in and calling out are different approaches to responding to a racist incident.
Calling in and calling out can each include possible risks depending on the situation. Both approaches can be complex and should be addressed in a thoughtful way.
In choosing to respond to a racist incident, consider if calling in or calling out is appropriate to the situation that has occurred. It is important to consider the power of your influence when deciding to either call in or call out.
Calling In
Calling in is an invitation to learn. It involves explaining to someone how and why their words or behaviour are harmful. This can be done through a non-public conversation after an incident has occurred. The conversation can be an opportunity to learn and grow.
Calling in can be used:
- When the person responsible for the racist incident may be open to understanding and learning more about why their actions were harmful
- To help shift someone’s thinking, values, or approach towards more respectful, equitably and non-racist ways
- To focus on reflection and learning from an incident, rather than simply reacting or seeking to reprimand the person for what they did wrong
Calling in usually occurs in a non-public space or in private conversation. Examples of how to start a conversation might include the following:
- I’m curious why you said what you said? Can you explain what you meant?
- What were you ‘getting at’ when you said that?
- What impacts do you think your comment (or behaviour) had on the person?
- How do you think others might have felt when you said that (or did that)? How do you think they experienced it?
Calling Out
Calling out occurs when public attention is drawn to highlight a harmful incident or behaviour. This can be done by questioning, challenging, or identifying a harmful incident as it is occurring or shortly after.
Calling out can be used:
- To let someone know that their actions or words are unacceptable and will not be tolerated
- To address an incident involving a person who is not open to a ‘calling in’ approach
- To interrupt the racist behaviour and to prevent further harm and escalation from taking place
There are many ways you can engage in calling out. For example, you might say:
- What you’re doing is not okay — please stop.
- What you’re saying is not okay and I’m asking you to stop now.
- Your comment is racist and here’s why________.
- Your comment (or behaviour) isn’t appropriate — stop.
- As a school leader (or teacher, or friend, or colleague, etc.) I need to let you know that your comment (or behaviour) isn’t appropriate or okay.
Reference:
