The Power of Place: Visiting George Floyd Square with Young Children

George Floyd Square in Minneapolis has become a creative memorial and gathering space for healing. It also tells a much bigger story about racism, policing, and the struggle for racial justice in this country and around the world. All of this can be complicated and confusing for a young child. So how can we help children make sense of this? In this episode, Early Risers host Dianne Haulcy visits George Floyd Square with early childhood education expert Sheila Williams Ridge. Together they unpack how parents and caregivers can prepare to bring young children here, including what to do and say to help children heal.Guest: Sheila Williams RidgeSheila Williams Ridge is co-director of the Child Development Laboratory School at the University of Minnesota. She’s also co-author of “Nature-Based Learning for Young Children: Anytime, Anywhere, on Any Budget.”Download the Discussion Guidehttps://files.apmcdn.org/production/245348fa8a040a803928bb7ec3c2f182.pdfMore Resources:George Floyd Global Memorial George Floyd and Anti-Racist Street Art ArchiveFrom MPR News with Angela Davis: Coping with prolonged grief over George Floyd, mass shootings and the pandemicFrom NPR: Many know how George Floyd died. A new biography reveals how he lived

Om Podcasten

George Floyd’s death was a tragedy and a wake up call — expanding a global conversation about race and racism. And young children have been watching it all. So how do we help them make sense of this? Early Risers is a podcast from Little Moments Count and MPR with frank facts, engaging stories and real how-tos for anyone who cares about raising children with a clear-eyed understanding of cultural differences, race and implicit bias. Hosted by Dianne Haulcy of The Family Partnership.