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LISA MOORE WAS FIRST INTRODUCED to ColorLines while working with Teaching for Change, a multicultural resource center in Washington, D.C. The ColorLines subscription was a popular resource there among teachers.
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"Teachers would check out the magazine, copy articles and then go home and create lesson plans around them," Moore says. She believes the draw to ColorLines for educators stems from the fact that it explores history and politics in a way that other magazines do not. The voices in ColorLines, Moore says, are not "what you find in mainstream media."
Though Moore no longer works with Teaching for Change, she has carried on the tradition of sharing ColorLines articles with friends and family. A New Orleans native, Moore has looked to ColorLines for what she calls the "real coverage" of the aftermath of Katrina. Her network ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Reader's corner.(Lisa Moore)(Brief article)