Welcome!
Course Description:
We all have a voice. But if you are silent though your cause is just, how can you make a difference? In the 1950s and 1960s one person, and then another, decided that they could no longer let their voices be silent; together they formed the Civil Rights movement. The voices that rose from the Civil Rights movement helped us learn how to effect social change.
Request Access:
To gain access to this service, please contact School and Community Relationships Coordinator Aisha Noel at 757-961-3737 or Scheduling@Arts4LearningVA.org
Funding for this grant has been provided by Virginia Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the American Rescue Plan (ARP) and the NEH Sustaining the Humanities through the American Rescue Plan (SHARP) initiative.
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Main Office
Arts for Learning
420 North Center Drive
Suite 239
Norfolk, Virginia 23502
Phone: 757-466-7555
Arts for Learning
420 North Center Drive
Suite 239
Norfolk, Virginia 23502
Phone: 757-466-7555
Roberta Lea is both a performing artist at Arts for Learning and a teaching artist. She’s specially trained as one of our Coastal Virginia Wolf Trap Teaching Artists who works in the classroom with young learners. Her performing career has hit high notes recently, both as an individual singer/songwriter and as part of the Black […]
Sign up to receive the latest news on arts integration from Arts for Learning! Thank you for supporting arts-in-education.