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Stories of Our Political Life in Full Color

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If you think civics and history are boring, you’re doing it wrong.
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If you think civics and history are boring, you’re doing it wrong.

STEM, STEAM, and the absurdity of teaching isolated subjects in a vacuum.
Go to the profile of Trish Everett
Trish EverettMar 6
From Civic Minded to Politically Engaged: Stepping Across the Political Threshold

From Civic Minded to Politically Engaged: Stepping Across the Political Threshold

As part of the much discussed, often maligned, and sometimes glorified millennial generation, I often think about what differentiates my…
Go to the profile of Hana Leshner
Hana LeshnerMar 8
Call for Submissions: Everyday Leadership and the Question, “Why Don’t We Do it?”

Call for Submissions: Everyday Leadership and the Question, “Why Don’t We Do it?”

Many “political nerds” have their favorite heroes. Notorious RBG t-shirts aren’t hard to find. These heroes also make for spirited…
Go to the profile of Shellee O'Brien
Shellee O'BrienMar 1
How to Start Something: Criminal Justice Reform and Buying In

How to Start Something: Criminal Justice Reform and Buying In

This article was originally published on Politicolor.com where individuals engaged in civic life show their work.
Go to the profile of Shellee O'Brien
Shellee O'BrienMar 11
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Call for Submissions: The Music is the Message

Call for Submissions: The Music is the Message

In Nick Offerman’s 2015 book, Gumption, he talks at length about music. He talks even more about wanting to marry Jeff Tweedy. Offerman…
Go to the profile of Shellee O'Brien
Shellee O'BrienFeb 2
Write with Politicolor: Where Engaged Citizens Show Their Work

Write with Politicolor: Where Engaged Citizens Show Their Work

If you believe political life has more potential than red vs. blue or even waving the red, white and blue, chances are that you have a…
Go to the profile of Shellee O'Brien
Shellee O'BrienJan 31

Bursting the Bible Bubble: Thoughts on Womanhood as a Political Act

“What do you think is wrong with society today?” my high school Bible teacher once asked us. No one said anything, so he continued. “We’ve…become a society disconnected with God. We’ve strayed away from what is pure and good, and have delved into sin and filth.” He paused, and I waited for what he would say next. “We had it better in the 50’s,” he said. ¶ He was a full-fledged WASP- upper middle-class, coach of the football team, son of the church’s senior pastor, telling a classroom full of teenagers –half of which were girls of color- that their existence would have somehow been better in the days of Jim Crow and gendered…
Go to the profile of Karina Daniela DaSilva
Karina Daniela DaSilvaDec 31, 2015
The Awesome Power of Yosemite

The Awesome Power of Yosemite

Submitted by Keith Gall
Go to the profile of Shellee O'Brien
Shellee O'BrienDec 9, 2015
Politics, politics everywhere, teaching me how to think

Politics, politics everywhere, teaching me how to think

How the quest to identify my first political act turned a timeline into an infinite loop.
Go to the profile of Trish Everett
Trish EverettNov 24, 2015
The Citizen’s Mind: A New Lab for Innovation

The Citizen’s Mind: A New Lab for Innovation

Discovery is an essential civic skill.
Go to the profile of Shellee O'Brien
Shellee O'BrienNov 23, 2015
Political Storytelling — The Illustrated Version

Political Storytelling — The Illustrated Version

During the presidential election of 1996, I was in Mr. Olbin’s fifth grade class. Our teacher wanted us to be as engaged with the world as…
Go to the profile of Hana Leshner
Hana LeshnerNov 21, 2015
My First Political Act: On the Shoulders of Hippies

My First Political Act: On the Shoulders of Hippies

I am the daughter of two proud hippies. My childhood was full of Simon and Garfunkel sing-alongs, food from the Moosewood Cookbook, and…
Go to the profile of Mirah Curzer
Mirah CurzerNov 20, 2015
My First Political Act: Stand-Up, Neck Ties and the Civil War

My First Political Act: Stand-Up, Neck Ties and the Civil War

Submitted by Keith Gall
Go to the profile of Shellee O'Brien
Shellee O'BrienNov 14, 2015

My First Political Act: The Donkey, The Elephant, and Da Bears

It was 1992 — a big year for me. We moved to a new town and I started second grade at a new school. “Newness” wasn’t really my thing, so…the fact that I was drowning in change forced me to figure out how to swim. ¶ Naturally, I took comfort in predictability. Watching dad work in the garage on Sundays and shout at the radio as he listened to his “crummy Chicago Bears” brought me much-needed solace. Just a season before, he was in the garage cheering on the White Sox, but he never got his hopes up, as they always “blew it after the All-Star break.”
Go to the profile of Heidi Wilbrandt
Heidi WilbrandtNov 15, 2015
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