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PBS LearningMedia Resources on Substance Abuse

Educators and families are encourage to utilize the learning materials below to help contextualize the public health crisis presented by the overdose epidemic. Materials include classroom-ready resources and collections featuring videos and interactive lessons on PBS LearningMedia. See search results for opioids.

PBS LearningMedia The Healthy Kid Project: Substance Misuse

Grades 6-12

Substance Abuse and Drugs: The Healthy Kids Project encourages a younger audience to make positive choices for their mental and physical health with videos and support materials for teachers and students. An interactive lesson and support materials aimed at high school students examines how different types of drugs alter their brains. 

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NOVA: Addiction | PBS LearningMedia Collection

Grades 6-12
The opioid epidemic continues to devastate communities across the United States. This collection of videos, including three from the NOVA documentary, Addiction, can be used to engage students with media, encourage science practices, and prompt discussions in the classroom. Through a series of video clips, a viewing guide for the video clips, and a community screening guide for the documentary, the collection will help students better understand opioids and the disease of addiction.

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Understanding the Opioid Epidemic | PBS LearningMedia Collection

Grades 6-12
Understanding the Opioid Epidemic, a one-hour documentary from WNED, traces the causes behind the unprecedented growth in the use of prescription opioids and the devastating impact these drugs are having in every part of America. This accompanying collection of classroom resources is based on the documentary as well as important themes such as misperception of opioid safety, community awareness, brain science, stigma, and the struggles associated with treatment and recovery.

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How Should Schools Educate Teens about Drugs? | Above the Noise

Grades 6-12
D.A.R.E. stands for drug abuse resistance education and is a program that was implemented in schools since the 80’s to prevent youth from doing drugs. The program was widely accepted by schools all over the country, but scientists found it wasn’t really effective. Fast forward to present day and D.A.R.E is still around… sort of. Myles investigates how D.A.R.E. has changed their curriculum and other ways that drug education is being taught in schools. Join him in answering the question: How should schools educate teens about drugs?

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The War on Drugs: The New Face of Heroin | Retro Report

Grades 9-12
This 14-minute video provides students with historical context that explains how the United States committed to a multi-decade war on drugs that resulted in mass incarceration and racially unequal outcomes in the criminal justice system. State and federal governments responded to a heroin epidemic in the late 1960s with a punitive response to drug addiction that disproportionately affected racial minorities. That approach has grown increasingly unpopular as more white Americans have become addicted to opioids. Useful for lessons focused on racial equality and criminal justice reform in recent history, the video sets up an engaging class discussion on how historical context affects our perceptions of race and crime.

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Inside Opioid Addiction | Interactive Lesson

Grades 9-12
Learn about the nationwide opioid crisis, its devastating impact on communities and families, and how agencies and individuals are pulling together to respond to this overwhelming public health crisis. In this interactive lesson, students will gather information through reading, activities, and video excerpts from KET’s opioid initiative to write a final essay about what the opioid epidemic is, what caused it, and what’s being done about it.

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Sesame Street in Communities:

Sesame Street in Communities provides hundreds of bilingual multi-media tools to help kids and families enrich and expand their knowledge during the early years of birth through six, a critical window for brain development. Sesame Street’s resources engage kids and adults in everyday moments and daily routines—from teaching early math and literacy concepts, to encouraging families to eat nutritious foods, to serious topics such as grief and food insecurity. Through ongoing collaboration, training experiences, and local partnerships, the Sesame Street in Communities initiative evolves and helps make a difference.  Resources are online and available at no cost to families and caregivers.

Mom and two children reading a book in a park setting with Abbey Cadabbey muppet from Sesame Street

Sesame Street in Communities provides different topics, each with resources that help kids (and parents!) with what matters most in young lives: health and wellness, social-emotional skills, and school readiness. All are critical to children’s healthy development and together they build the foundation for a happy, healthy life. All of the following topics are available on the Sesame Street in Communities website or via clicking on the individual topics below: Topic videos are additionally available in English & Spanish on the Sesame Street In Communities YouTube channel

  • Difficult Times & Tough Talks — Community Violence, Coping with Incarceration, Dealing with Divorce, Family Caregiving, Family Homelessness, Foster Care, Handling Emergencies, Helping Kids Grieve, Offering Comfort, Resilience, Parental Addiction, Veterans and Changes, Displacement and Resettlement, Racial Injustice, Traumatic Experiences
  • Healthy Bodies, Healthy Minds — Caring & Sharing, Caring for Kids, Eating Well, Explaining Autism, Exploring Emotions, Family Bonding, Handling Tantrums, Learning Through Play, Learning Through Routines, Managing Asthma, Milestones, Moving Our Bodies, Staying Healthy, You Matter Most
  • ABCs’s & 123’s — Building Language Skills, Developing Math Skills, Financial Education, Reading & Writing, School Readiness, Science

Learn More:

About Sesame Street in Communities

Independent Lens: Love in the Time of Fentanyl

Airs Monday, February 13 at 10 p.m. on WXXI-TV

As deaths in Vancouver, Canada reach an all-time high, the Overdose Prevention Society opens its doors—a renegade supervised drug consumption site that employs active and former drug users. Its staff and volunteers do whatever it takes to save lives and give hope to a marginalized community in this intimate documentary that looks beyond the stigma of people who use fentanyl and other drugs. Independent Lens: Love in a Time of Fentanyl premieres Monday, February 13, 2023 at 10 p.m. on WXXI-TV.

This broadcast is part of New York State Public Media Overdose Epidemic, an initiative funded by the New York State Education Department that has called on NYS public media organizations to create a multi-platform project to help address mental health and addiction throughout the state. Additional programming will air in WXXI-TV the week of February 13-19,2023.

Making Black America: Through the Grapevine

 Hosted by Henry Louis Gates, Jr., this four-part series chronicles the vast social networks and organizations created by and for Black people—beyond the reach of the “White gaze.” Professor Gates sits with noted scholars, politicians, cultural leaders, and old friends to discuss this world behind the color line and what it looks like today. Making Black America: Through the Grapevine airs Fridays, February 3 and February 10 at 9 p.m. on WXXI-TV.

Screening: Free Chol Soo Lee

Chol Soo Lee: A Korean immigrant wrongfully convicted of murder who inspired a movement to free him

Free Chol Soo Lee

Join WXXI for a special screening and discussion of Free Chol Soo Lee on Monday, March 27, 2023 at 6:30-8:30pm at The Little Theatre. The rollercoaster life story of Chol Soo Lee, a Korean immigrant wrongfully convicted of murder. Sentenced to life for a 1973 San Francisco murder, Korean immigrant Chol Soo Lee was set free after a pan-Asian solidarity movement, which included Korean, Japanese, and Chinese Americans, helped to overturn his conviction. After 10 years of fighting for his life inside California state prisons, Lee found himself in a new fight to rise to the expectations of the people who believed in him.

https://youtu.be/VdZW3O2RA8o
Watch the Trailer
A Report About the Documentary

Film Description: Sentenced to death for a 1973 San Francisco murder, Korean immigrant Chol Soo Lee was set free after a pan-Asian solidarity movement of Korean, Japanese, and Chinese Americans helped to overturn his conviction. After 10 years of fighting for his life inside San Quentin, Lee found himself in a new fight to rise to the expectations of the people who believed in him. On his journey from an inspiring icon to a swing-shift janitor struggling with drug addiction, Chol Soo Lee personifies the ravages of America’s prison industrial complex Learn More About the Film https://www.pbs.org/independentlens/documentaries/free-chol-soo-lee/

Indie Lens Pop-Up is all about the group viewing experience and the conversations that this experience enables. By bringing together Independent Lens content, people who can connect that content to local issues, and members of the community, Indie Lens Pop-Up exemplifies the Independent Lens purpose of sparking conversations.

Love in the Time of Fentanyl Screening

Love in the Time of Fentanyl
Love in the Age of Fentanyl

Screening: Love in the Time of Fentanyl

January 30, 2023 at 6:30pm-8:30pm. You are invited to a free screening talkback event at The Little Theatre. A discussion or panel will follow the screening event to discuss the film.

This screening and talkback event is part of the a focus on the Overdose Epidemic. Additional programming will air in WXXI-TV the week of February 13-19,2023.

Film Description: As the number of overdose deaths in Vancouver, Canada reaches an all-time high, employees and volunteers at the Overdose Prevention Society take matters into their own hands. Learn More About the Film https://itvs.org/films/love-in-the-time-of-fentanyl

Indie Lens Pop-Up is all about the group viewing experience and the conversations that this experience enables. By bringing together Independent Lens content, people who can connect that content to local issues, and members of the community, Indie Lens Pop-Up exemplifies the Independent Lens purpose of sparking conversations.

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Independent Lens: Love in the Time of Fentanyl

02/13/2023 12:00 am

WXXI TV

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