WH Black Initiative Lunch & Learn and the Future of Learning
Education has shaped so many parts of my life, from teaching abroad to studying public health and working across communities. I pay attention to learning spaces because they show us what a society hopes to become.
That is what brought me to WH Black Initiative Lunch & Learn in Virtual / Washington, DC. Even before the program began, I was thinking about how this experience fit into the larger stories I keep returning to on DG Speaks.
Black Education Deserves Attention
WH Black Initiative Lunch & Learn connected learning to Black education, equity, White House initiative. The event reminded me that education is strongest when it is tied to access, equity, and real-world possibility.
Equity Is Built Through Policy and Practice
What I appreciated most was the way the event created room for connection. Whether people came to learn, network, taste, listen, watch, or simply be present, the gathering offered a reminder that shared spaces still matter.
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Students Need More Than Access
The event also reminded me that the best stories rarely sit on the surface. They live in the side conversations, the details, the questions people ask, and the small moments that make a room feel alive.
What the Lunch and Learn Raised
I left encouraged by the people still asking hard questions about schools, students, opportunity, and the future of learning.
