One Bexley Resources

Educational Videos Yasmine Robles Educational Videos Yasmine Robles

How the Word is Passed – Clint Smith

In this Washington Post Live video, Clint Smith discusses his travels to nine sites—from Monticello in Virginia to the Whitney Plantation in Louisiana—to explore how slavery is remembered. Drawing from his book How the Word Is Passed, he reflects on “those telling the truth, those running from it, and those doing something in between” and shares the lessons he learned about confronting America’s history of slavery.

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Educational Videos Yasmine Robles Educational Videos Yasmine Robles

Why Are Cities Still So Segregated? – Popular Sociology

This TED-Ed explains that U.S. cities remain racially divided because past discriminatory housing policies—like racial covenants that barred people of color from buying or renting in many neighborhoods and redlining that cut off investment to Black communities—created deeply entrenched patterns of segregation and unequal access to wealth and opportunity. Even after legal bans like the Fair Housing Act, the legacy of these practices continues to shape where people live and how resources are distributed.

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Educational Videos Yasmine Robles Educational Videos Yasmine Robles

Jim Crow of the North – Center for Culturally Responsive Teaching

Roots of racial disparities are seen through a new lens in this PBS film that explores the origins of housing segregation in the Minneapolis area. But the story also illustrates how African-American families and leaders resisted this insidious practice, and how Black people built community within and despite the red lines that these restrictive covenants created.

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Educational Videos Yasmine Robles Educational Videos Yasmine Robles

Redlining - Income and Housing Inequality - US History – Extra History

Extra History dives into how redlining systematically denied mortgages and investment to Black and minority neighborhoods, shaping patterns of segregation and economic inequality in the U.S. It breaks down the historical roots of these practices, shows how they helped build wealth disparities that persist today, and explains why the legacy of redlining still matters for communities and housing policy.

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Educational Videos Yasmine Robles Educational Videos Yasmine Robles

The Disturbing History of the Suburbs  – Adam Ruins Everything

Adam Ruins Everything explains how suburban development in the U.S. was shaped by racist housing policies like redlining, which systematically denied mortgage loans and investment to neighborhoods with Black residents. It shows how these discriminatory practices, backed by government programs and lenders, helped build and preserve segregated suburbs and contributed to long‑term inequality in access to wealth and opportunity.

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Educational Videos Yasmine Robles Educational Videos Yasmine Robles

The Danger of a Single Story – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

In her powerful TED Talk, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie shares how she discovered her authentic cultural voice and the importance of embracing multiple perspectives. She warns that if we rely on a single story about a person, community, or country, we risk misunderstanding and stereotyping. This talk encourages reflection on the richness of diverse experiences and the stories that shape our understanding of the world..

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Educational Videos Yasmine Robles Educational Videos Yasmine Robles

How redlining prevented Black and Brown families from becoming home owners  – Khalil Gibran Muhammad

Redlining was a discriminatory banking practice that denied Black and Brown Americans access to home loans and investment, deeming their neighborhoods “undesirable.” Although outlawed by the Fair Housing Act, its impacts persist today. In this video, Khalil Gibran Muhammad of Harvard Kennedy School explains the history and lasting legacy of redlining.

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