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Wednesday, August 13
 

7:30am EDT

Check-in
Wednesday August 13, 2025 7:30am - 8:30am EDT
Wednesday August 13, 2025 7:30am - 8:30am EDT
The Icon 200 Walker St, Detroit, MI 48207, USA

8:30am EDT

Opening Remarks
Wednesday August 13, 2025 8:30am - 9:00am EDT
Wednesday August 13, 2025 8:30am - 9:00am EDT
Auditorium

8:30am EDT

Community Resource Fair
Wednesday August 13, 2025 8:30am - 4:00pm EDT
Wednesday August 13, 2025 8:30am - 4:00pm EDT
Lobby

9:00am EDT

Keynote Speaker: Dr. Hasan Kwame Jeffries
Wednesday August 13, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
Wednesday August 13, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
Auditorium

10:15am EDT

Youth Panel
Wednesday August 13, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EDT
Wednesday August 13, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EDT
Auditorium

11:15am EDT

Freedom-Seeking and Resistance in Detroit: Designing Place-Based Case Studies for Inquiry-Based Learning
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
In this session, participants will explore an historical case study of freedom seeking in Detroit through an activity that is inquiry driven and designed to promote disciplinary literacy learning. They will then learn about underlying pedagogical frameworks, design tools, and additional case studies they can use in their own classrooms in practical, manageable ways. In addition, session participants will get access to multiple text sets and lesson plans they can adapt and use across grades 6 to 12 to explore the complex history of our region and nation through the experiences and narratives of communities often silenced in conventional curricula and textbooks (while still aligning to our GLCEs and HSCEs!).
Speakers
DS

Darin Stockdill

Marsal Family School of Education, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
Darin is the Instructional and Program Design Coordinator for the Center for Education Design, Evaluation, and Research (CEDER) at the University of Michigan's Marsal Family School of Education.  In this role, he partners with educational        organizations, teachers, and UM... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Room 5

11:15am EDT

Lifting Untold Stories from our Landscape Using Place-Based, EcoJustice Education
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
This session introduces EcoJustice Education as a model for critical place-based learning, with a focus on the different relationship structures developed between ecologically-centered cultures and dominant individual-centered cultures. We will use a particular place (Detroit) as an entry point into the larger story of diverse community histories – human and nonhuman, paying specific attention to discourses associated with them and what this reveals about values held by different world views.
Speakers
avatar for Lisa Voelker

Lisa Voelker

Southeast Michigan Stewardship Coalition (SEMIS)
NE

Nigora Erkaeva

Southeast Michigan Stewardship Coalition (SEMIS)
AB

Anna Blazer

SEMIS Director, Southeast Michigan Stewardship Coalition (SEMIS)
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Room 3

11:15am EDT

Migration and Religion: Two Tales from Detroit
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Looking at two of metro Detroit's ethno-religious communities-- Chaldean Catholics and West African Muslims– this session will explore how each group's religious identity has influenced their experience of migration to Detroit and in turn shaped the landscape of the city.

Participants will learn from community members through oral history, observations, and other media, the ways that religious belief and practice have reinforced community identity for two ethno-religious minorities in metro Detroit. As this topic is deeply place-based, participants will be able to look with new eyes at the physical and cultural landmarks around them which bear the marks of these groups' influence.
Speakers
CH

Carole Hawke-Diop

Westwood Community Schools
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Room 2

11:15am EDT

Teaching Arab History with Accuracy and Empathy
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
This session is designed for educators who want to bring a more accurate and nuanced understanding of Arab history and culture into their classrooms. Participants will explore key aspects of Arab culture, language, and history while learning how to challenge common stereotypes that often shape perceptions of the Middle East. The session will also offer practical strategies for teaching about Middle Eastern conflicts in a way that balances historical accuracy with empathy and cultural awareness. Educators will leave with concrete tools to facilitate respectful discussions on complex topics, helping students engage with global histories and diverse perspectives in meaningful ways.
Speakers
avatar for Rania Hammoud

Rania Hammoud

K-12 Curriculum Coordinator, Plymouth-Canton Community Schools
Rania Hammoud is a passionate educator and curriculum leader dedicated to making history education more inclusive and meaningful for all students. As the K-12 Curriculum Coordinator for Social Studies, World Language, and School Climate at Plymouth-Canton Community Schools, she works... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Room 4

11:15am EDT

Teaching Social Studies in Michigan: It's a Mission
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
This session will provide updated information on and around current Michigan policies as related to social studies. This will include discussion around best approaches to create comprehensive social studies learning spaces. In addition, attendees will learn about current resources to share and use to support their work for student learning.
Speakers
SK

Scott Koenig

Michigan Department of Education
Scott Koenig serves as a Social Studies Consultant for the Michigan Department of Education (MDE). His work focuses on guiding educators with their efforts implementing Michigan’s social studies content expectations. Scott’s work includes supporting the creation of inclusive learning... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Auditorium

11:15am EDT

True Inclusion is Revolutionary: Combating Ableism
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Detroit Disability Power (DDP) presents "Leveraging the Power of the Disability Community". This is a condensed, one-hour version of DDP’s two-hour Anti-Ableism workshop designed to provide foundational insights into disability justice. This interactive session will explore introductory concepts including disability as a cultural identity, ableism as an intersecting system of oppression, and models of disability—covering who is included in the disability community, appropriate language, and engagement strategies. Participants will begin to build concrete tools for creating inclusive environments and developing effective allyship skills across professional and personal spaces.
Speakers
RL

Ruth Le

Detroit Disability Power
Ruth Le is an educator, coach, and project manager. She was born and raised in Boston, MA and earned her bachelor’s degree in Public Policy from the University of Southern California and master’s in Special Education from Loyola Marymount University. Ruth spent nearly a decade... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Room 6

11:15am EDT

Zines and Democracy
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
In this session, I will share two guides (one for K-8 and another for 9-12) about the history of zines, how they have been used throughout various social justice movements, and how the creation of zines promotes democratic principles. Instructors will have the opportunity to make their own zines and discuss ways to utilize zine-making in the classroom.
Speakers
AE

Angelica Esquivel

Affiliated with YpsiWrites and Washtenaw Community College
I am a Xicana writer, artist, and educator from Fostoria, Ohio. I received my BFA in English and Creative Writing at the University of Michigan in 2018, during which time I completed a poetry and fiction collection. For my work, I received three Hopwood Awards and the Quinn Prize... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Room 1

1:45pm EDT

A Community's Effort to Document its Rich and Colorful History
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
A couple of years back current and former members of the Latino community in southwest Detroit formed VOCES: Southwest Detroit History Project team in an effort to more completely document the rich history of the Mexican and Latino communities in Detroit which dates back over 100 years. The current team is made up of a journalist, social workers, an educator, a businesswoman, film makers and a museum specialist. A couple members had been documenting the stories of elders, community activists, educators, and musicians going back almost 15 years through filmed and audio interviews as well as through community newspaper articles. Their success generated enthusiam and a desire from other community members to "pick up the mantle" in promoting community based historical research. In a recent community forum, well over 70 community residents from different generations expressed whole hearted support and encouragement for the team's efforts. A number of those present expressed a desire to help this effort.

The team panel will share with session participants their motivations, and successes and challenges in promoting a community based approach. The team understands the need to promote the importance of research and oral history collection among younger community members. It is part of our intergenertional organizing approach. We are in current discussions with some university instructors on how we can recruit undergraduate students in this process. Our hope is that this interest and possible involvement can "trickle down" to high school aged youth.
Speakers
V

VOCES

VOCES: Southwest Detroit History Project Team
Latinos have rich and enduring ties to Southwest Detroit. Beckoned by industry, Mexicans and Puerto Ricans arrived in the city at the turn of the 20th century and planted roots—their destinies shaped by shifting policies, promises of work, and social mobility. What ensued was the... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Room 2

1:45pm EDT

Black Bottom Archives
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Black Bottom Archives (BBA) is a living community archive dedicated to sharing and preserving the stories of Black Detroit and resisting the erasure and whitewashing of Detroit’s history. Before its destruction in the 1960s, Black Bottom thrived as a predominantly Black neighborhood, home to thousands of residents, over 100 Black-owned businesses, schools, churches, and cultural landmarks. The tragic process of “urban renewal,” often referred to as “negro removal,” led to the devastation of homes and cherished spaces as the city prioritized profit over the vibrant community. Once a thriving center of Black culture and life, it was replaced by a freeway, displacing business owners and residents alike. Today, this crucial history still remains unknown to many Black Detroiters, but Black Bottom Archives (BBA) is committed to changing that narrative through community organizing and digital tools. The organization employs visual installations like the Black Bottom Street View exhibit alongside innovative digital mappings to honor and reclaim the legacy of a neighborhood that served as the heartline for Black Detroiters during the Great Migration. This session will provide hands-on instruction on incorporating BBA's digital archive materials into their classroom, including oral histories and an interactive digital map that reconstructs the Black Bottom and Paradise Valley communities. Attendees will also learn best practices for discussing the history of Black Bottom and making connections to present-day realities of displacement.
Speakers
MB

Marcia Black

Director of Archives and Education, Black Bottom Archives
Marcia (she/her) is a proud Detroiter, Black queer feminist archivist, memory worker, and abolitionist organizer. Marcia is an alum of Marygrove College where she received her Bachelors in Political Science and Sociology, and an alum of the University of Texas at Austin where she... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Room 5

1:45pm EDT

Facing Histories (Part 1) featuring Dr. Hasan Kwame Jefferies
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Speakers
HK

Hasan Kwame Jefferies

The Ohio State University
A Brooklyn, New York native, Dr. Jeffries earned his undergraduate degree from Morehouse College, where he was initiated into the Pi Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. He went on to earn a Ph.D. in American history, specializing in African American history, from Duke University.Dr... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Auditorium

1:45pm EDT

Native American Authors: Incoporating Native American Texts in Grades 6-12
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Our session will introduce educators to student-appropriate Native American books. It will explore how Native American literature can be used in the classroom to introduce students to culture, heritage, and ways of life that may differ from their own.This could be in the form of projects or cultural activities. This session will celebrate diversity and inclusion of students and focus on building a safe learning environment.

In this session, secondary level educators will be introduced to a variety of authors and books with Native American (Indigenous) characters to help foster cultural understanding, equity, and inclusion in the learning community. According to Michigan’s state data there are approximately 8,291 Native American students enrolled in public schools. Native American students need to see characters like themselves being represented in texts to encourage them to grow into themselves. “By promoting diversity in children’s literature we can ensure the next generation of Native American children can see themselves represented in the books they read” (Squires The Importance of Native American Literature).

By including lessons on Native American history and culture, teachers can successfully expose students to accurate and truthful information, including assimilation and boarding schools. Even though some pieces of their history can be challenging to learn, teachers can also foster excitement and joy by bringing in different cultural activities. Including bringing in tribal elders from the community for storytelling with the students, taking them on experiential field trips, and implementing culture into the classroom.

In our session’s slide show we will showcase books for students at a variety of grade levels that are easily accessible for teachers to locate and purchase. After time to browse hard copy books, you will walk away with lists of grade appropriate books, online links, and resources. Work time will be provided where you can reflect on how to incorporate Native American literature into your current lessons or units being taught. Many Native American texts are a great way to introduce a project to your students.

Our session will also explore how to evaluate quality texts and materials for authenticity. We will provide a rubric from the National Museum of American Indians with an explanation of how they score materials for culturally appropriate and responsive texts. We will explain how to evaluate Native American texts for authenticity and accuracy by using the following sources: The National Museum of the American Indian NativeKnowledge360 Rubric, and The American Indian Library Association recommended book list. These sources will give teachers the tools to make selections of texts for their classroom.
Speakers
WG

Wendy Gilliard

6th grade teacher, Sault Area Public Schools
Wendy Gilliard is a veteran teacher with 28 years of experience in various grade levels at the elementary and middle school level. She has been teaching middle school language arts at the Sault Area Public Schools for the past eight years. Wendy is currently teaching sixth grade ELA... Read More →
avatar for Sydnie Dumas

Sydnie Dumas

7th Grade ELA Teacher, Sault Area Middle School
Sydnie Dumas is a recent graduate of Central Michigan University with a B.S. in Secondary Education with a focus on English Language and History. She is currently teaching 7th grade English Language Arts at The Sault Area Middle School in the rural community of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan... Read More →
KM

Kendall Moser

Sault Area Middle School
Kendall Moser is a first year teacher at Sault Area Middle School, recently graduated Suma Cum Laude from Lake Superior State University with a B.S. in Secondary Education with a focus on English Language Arts. She is currently teaching 7th grade English Language Arts. Kendall is... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Room 3

1:45pm EDT

Teaching Difficult Histories: Inquiry and Museum-Based Learning at The Zekelman Holocaust Center
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
As part of the Wayne County Teaching Diverse Histories Summit, this session will explore how The Zekelman Holocaust Center serves as a powerful site for historical inquiry and disciplinary literacy. Educators will examine how museum assets—artifacts, survivor testimonies, and exhibits—can support student inquiry and deepen engagement with complex histories. Through culturally responsive, inquiry-based, and place-based pedagogical approaches, participants will develop strategies to integrate museum-based learning into their classrooms. This session will equip teachers with the tools to help students critically analyze historical evidence, explore the experiences of marginalized communities, and make meaningful connections between the past and present. By the end of the session, educators will have a framework for using The HC’s resources to enrich their teaching and foster inclusive, inquiry-driven historical learning.
Speakers
RD

Renea Di Bella

Zekelman Holocaust Center
Renea Di Bella is the Education Specialist at The HC. She has an M.A. in Education from Eastern Michigan University, with a concentration in curriculum and instruction for diverse learning groups. Renea taught 8th grade Social Studies at Scarlett Middle School in Ann Arbor, MI for... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Room 4

1:45pm EDT

The Backbeat Rewritten: Detroit’s Musical History and the Black American Musical Lineage
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
The backbeat is one of the foundational rhythmic elements of Black American music. In this session, participants will learn a pedagogical approach for teaching this rhythm through the lens of three key genres: jazz, techno, and hip-hop. Concurrent with this history of the backbeat, this session will also analyze the preservation and erasure of the musical history of Detroit, giving educators a set of tools to help students make meaningful, deep connections with the musical history of Detroit.

Student-centered inquiry and historical investigation will be at the heart of this presentation. First, a bit of scaffolding knowledge of music theory and music history will be provided to the attendees. Educators in this session will get a hands-on, kinesthetic approach to teaching the music theory behind the backbeat (read: there will be stomping and clapping) that can easily be applied to students in a classroom setting. This analysis of the backbeat will serve as a springboard into music history, viewing how the backbeat is used in songs both inside and outside the Black American musical lineage and/or the music of Detroit. Specific listening examples will be given to show how elements of the backbeat (and all of the histories wrapped up inside of it) have been preserved, rewritten, and/or erased. Ultimately, these activities can be used by educators to help drive students into inquiry-based learning and make meaningful, deep connections between the modern popular music they listen to and the genres in the Black American musical lineage (How does the music I listen to connect to Detroit musical history? How is this history preserved or erased in the pop music of today?).
Speakers
AJ

Andy Jarema

Music Educator and Composer
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Room 1

1:45pm EDT

The Scent of Fear: Impacts of the Lavender Scare on the Federal Workforce
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
The "Lavender Scare" was a period of persecution and discrimination against LGBTQ+ individuals in the federal government, coinciding with (and arguably outlasting) the Red Scare and McCarthyism, where homosexuality was equated with communist subversion and led to the firing and forced resignation of thousands of federal employees. In this session, participants will interact with a lesson plan and resources from the Levin Center for Oversight and Democracy. The focus of this lesson will be to use congressional investigations and hearings to deepen student understanding of the reality of the “Lavender Scare”. Students will be tasked with examining a time when government policy both implicitly and explicitly sought to marginalize LGBTQ+ Americans and analyze the issues of equity, power, and justice created when society gives in to fear and paranoia.
Speakers
LJ

Lauren Jasinski

Levin Center, Wayne State University
Wednesday August 13, 2025 1:45pm - 2:45pm EDT
Room 6

3:00pm EDT

Connecting National History and DBQs to Local Stories Through Place-Based Inquiry
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Learn from the success story of The DBQ Project and Wayne RESA’s professional development at River Raisin Battlefield National Park, where place-based inquiry connected national history to local events. This session offers practical steps and dedicated time to help you apply inquiry-driven learning to your own community’s history.
Speakers
JF

John Farris

Wayne RESA
John Farris is the K-12 Social Studies Consultant for the Wayne County Regional Educational Service Agency (Wayne RESA). John joined Wayne RESA after three years as a Social Studies Training and Support Coordinator for the Detroit Public Schools Community District. Before DPSCD, John... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Room 2

3:00pm EDT

Everything You Needed to Know about Asian Pacific Americans
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Asian Americans have been an important part of America’s growth and development since the mid-1800s. This course will explore the immigration history of Asian countries into America. Through a closer investigation, we will learn how America shaped these newcomers as well as how the nation was in turn shaped by these immigrants from Asia. While many students are familiar with the Chinese railroad workers and Japanese American internment during WWII, the story of Asians in America offers a deeper introspective into America’s social, political, and economic development. Since the 1965 Immigration Act, immigration from Asia has seen tremendous growth. This increase in immigration has raised new opportunities as well as new challenges for American society. No where is this more evident than in the Metro Detroit area. According to the latest census estimates, the Asian American population is approximately 221,000 which is a 106% increase since the 2000 census. This significant number necessitates a deeper understanding of the Asian American story for both Asian and non-Asian alike. As immigration from Asia continues to expand, we will explore the themes of culture, identity, and other pertinent issues to what it means to be an American.
Speakers
RM

Richard Mui

Plymouth-Canton Community Schools
Richard attended the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor where he received his B.A. in History. Richard continued his education at Wayne State University where he earned a Masters of Arts in Teaching degree. Since college, Richard has worked with numerous community organizations in... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Room 4

3:00pm EDT

Facing Histories (Part 2) featuring Dr. Hasan Kwame Jefferies
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Speakers
HK

Hasan Kwame Jefferies

The Ohio State University
A Brooklyn, New York native, Dr. Jeffries earned his undergraduate degree from Morehouse College, where he was initiated into the Pi Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. He went on to earn a Ph.D. in American history, specializing in African American history, from Duke University.Dr... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Auditorium

3:00pm EDT

Leveraging Public Media Resources to Support Digital Storytelling
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
In this session, we will explore resources available to Michigan teachers through the Michigan Learning Channel and local PBS stations. PBS has tutorials, lesson plans, and curricula to support media-rich learning and digital storytelling across grade levels and in every possible subject area. The Michigan Learning Channel provides statewide access to local resources and opportunities for publication and celebration, inaddition to coaching and in-person support for teachers who are new to digital content creation with students. We will share what we do and offer some hands-on exploration tiem where attendees can play with equipment and co-design learning experiences with the goal of uplifting student voice and telling local community stories.
Speakers
MH

Matt Hamilton

Michigan Learning Channel
Matt is the Program Director for the Michigan Learning Channel, a statewide PBS station partnership that brings educational media and resources to schools, homes, and communities across Michigan.
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Room 1

3:00pm EDT

Mapping Equity, Amplifying Voices: Exploring Redlining in Detroit
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
In this session, teachers will explore a place-based inquiry designed to connect the historical impact of redlining in Detroit with its lasting effects today. Through mapping and data analysis, participants will examine how geography shapes access, opportunity, and civic voice. Educators will gain strategies to adapt this lesson for their classrooms, fostering critical discussions on equity, history, and community impact.  This session focuses on an inquiry developed using the C3 framework and supports students application of Disciplinary Literacy Essentials, equipping teachers to create their own culturally-responsive inquiries center in the power of place.
Speakers
JE

Jasmine Easterly

Central Michigan University / Michigan Geographic Alliance
avatar for Gabrielle Likavec

Gabrielle Likavec

Co-Cooridinator, Central Michigan University / Michigan Geographic Alliance
I am a newly converted environmental educator who is passionate about creating science and socially conscious students!
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Room 6

3:00pm EDT

Our Language Is in the Stars and in Our Bones
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
One of Michigan's indigenous languages, Ojibwe, offers a unique perspective on this place, its beauty, and our connections to the world and one another. Language shapes identity and teaches us our place in the world. This session will explore the challenges of Ojibwe language disruption and endangerment while highlighting efforts in resistance, revitalization, and survivance.
Speakers
SS

Stacie Sheldon Chitwaadewegekwe

Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians
Stacie Sheldon is an enrolled member of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians. She is passionate about revitalizing the Ojibwe language and leads a language nest and women’s drum group, Asiginaak-Negamojig. She is a co-founder and manager of Ojibwe.net, an independently... Read More →
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Room 3

3:00pm EDT

We Are Our Own Heroes: How the Fight For Freedom Became the Foundation for Detroit's African American Community
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT

African Americans have been living in Detroit since the French arrived in 1701. Black people have never accepted slavery, and by the 1800s, the leadership and foundation of the abolitionist movement - the fight against slavery - were Black men and women in Detroit. These men and women formed alliances, founded churches and organizations that not only helped to obtain freedom for thousands of freedom seekers, but also built the foundations of the Black community to this day. The Black leaders of Detroit's abolitionist movement in the 1800s are the foundation for Detroit's African American community in the present-day. They built the foundation for faith institutions, businesses, music, recreation and civic life.

Rich place-based learning experiences that allow youth to see themselves directly as an interdependent part of a local community with important histories. And, using available technologies for storytelling, including recording, preserving, archiving, and/or sharing local stories to share with public audiences (i.e.., oral history projects, databases, podcasts, video field trips).
Speakers
JJ

Jamon Jordan

Official Historian, City of Detroit
Wednesday August 13, 2025 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Room 5
 
Wayne County Teaching Diverse History Summit
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