BLACK HISTORY MONTH RESOURCES
Black History Month resources help students explore the stories, achievements, and impact of individuals who shaped history. These classroom activities and biography readings provide teachers with engaging ways to introduce important historical figures and meaningful conversations about leadership, equality, and social change.

Black History Month Resources for Teachers
Bio Sphere: Rosa Parks
Students look beyond a single moment to understand the deliberate courage and long-term impact of her actions.
Bio Sphere: Harriet Tubman
This biography highlights resilience, strategy, and leadership, helping students see Tubman as more than a symbol—she was a force.
Bio Sphere: Frederick Douglass
Students examine the power of words, education, and advocacy through one of the most influential voices of the 19th century.
Fuse History: Burning of Black Wall Street
This lesson asks students to confront a lesser-taught event, examining economic success, racial violence, and why some histories were pushed aside.
Alongside these core figures, Bio Sphere also makes space for contributors students may not yet know—like Matthew Henson, the first man to reach the North Pole, and Ida B. Wells, whose investigative journalism exposed injustice and demanded accountability.
Optionally, this week can spotlight a rotating Bio Sphere set, drawing from a wide range of figures across history, culture, science, and leadership—including activists, artists, innovators, and global voices. This flexibility makes it easy to revisit Black history throughout the year, not just in February.

If you’re looking for a meaningful, ready-to-use way to begin Black History Month—one that balances familiar stories with overlooked voices—this is a strong place to start. You can find more social studies resources at this page: https://clarkcreativeeducation.com/world/
– The Clarks