Not in Our School Videos
Find NIOS Videos
-
Four short films about communities today reaching for Dr. King's dream
-
New York middle school students use art in wake of tragic hate crime.
-
Palo Alto, CA students find a creative response to hate.
-
Dorchester, MA students speak out against violence in their community.
-
Lakewood, OH high school students use video to talk about race.
-
Students and teachers react to their story on screen.
-
An African American student challenges racial stereotypes.
-
The PBS special that sparked a national movement against hate.
-
Rockford, IL middle school students use skits to challenge stereotypes.
-
Youth reactions to the violent attack of a California student
-
Lakewood, OH high school students use video to talk about race.
-
Art students at Patchogue-Medford High School wanted to do something ...
-
On the edge of the Mojave Desert in California, educators, political leaders, and students join in a citywide Not In Our Town campaign as they face the dangers of bullying after teen suicides devastate two nearby towns. A local middle school counselor initiates this anti-bullying program for several districts with over 35,000 students where youth take the lead. This film features high school students mentoring younger students. It is the final segment in the PBS special, "Not In Our Town: Class Actions," which premiered nationally in Feb. 2012. For more information, visit http://www.niot.org/classactions
-
As a high school student, Alana Garrett mentored fourth grade students and taught them how to prevent and stand up against bullying as part of a Not In Our School project. In this 2009 video she also shares her story of going from a person who was bullied to an anti-bullying activist and leader. Alana is now studying sociology at Baldwin Wallace University and is a community organizer for the Children's Defense Fund where she is working to stop violence among youth in inner city Cleveland.
-
Dr. Joseph Marshall, Jr. is an author, activist, and veteran street soldier. Founder of the anti-violence movement Alive & Free, Marshall draws audiences from across the country to his weekly radio program, Street Soldiers— a name Dr. Marshall uses to describe people working to eliminate violence in their communities. To help keep his own community safer, Dr. Marshall co-founded the Omega Boys Club after years of working as a middle school teacher and seeing too many of his students lost to drugs and violence.
-
Adarsha Shivakumar and Apoorva Rangan are siblings that have used the power to TEACH rural Indians how to produce environmentally- and economically-sustainable fuel. After witnessing the devastation of local ecologies, Adarsha and Apoorva spent months in India convincing locals that processing a native fruit and using the byproducts as fuel presents a solution that balances human energy and local ecosystem needs.
-
At Orange High School in Pepper Pike, Ohio, students are mapping their school to locate the spaces where bullying takes place. After identifying the "bully hotspots," including the cafeteria, media lab, and locker rooms, students created a flash freeze demonstration to raise awareness about bullying, and opened the conversation about how to create a safer school.
-
Dorchester, MA students speak out against violence in their community.
-
Patchogue, NY after the murder of Ecuadorian immigrant Marcelo Lucero
-
In the heart of the South, students at the University of Mississippi question whether traditions tied to the Confederacy and segregation continue to belong on their campus. When a chant and football fight song surface old racial tensions and divide the Ole Miss community, student leaders, supported by their chancellor, bring people together. This is the first segment in the PBS special, "Not In Our Town: Class Actions," which premiered nationally in Feb. 2012. For more information, visit http://www.niot.org/classactions.
-
Abbott Middle School students filmed and acted out a skit about bullying, in San Mateo, CA.
-
Theater director stages play to revisit tragic murder and its lessons.
-
Alex Epstein is a college student who, during high school, was compelled to help rebuild New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Using the tool of VOLUNTEER, Alex made multiple trips and engaged with the local community.
-
-
How one teacher handles hearing the saying in her class
-
Students shine at national Not In Our Town gathering.
-
High school football captains join their community in taking a Not In Our Town pledge to stand up to bullying and hate.
-
-
Palo Alto, CA students use video to talk about discrimination.
-
Youth reactions to the violent attack of a California student