Tag: coalition building

  • Mia Mottley Just Made History Again. Your Students Should Know Her Name.

    Mia Mottley Just Made History Again. Your Students Should Know Her Name.

    On February 11, Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley won a historic third consecutive term, her party sweeping all 30 seats for the third time. She is the longest-serving female head of state in the world. And most students have never heard of her.

    Three days ago, the people of Barbados gave Mia Amor Mottley a mandate that no other Caribbean leader of her generation has received. The Barbados Labour Party captured every seat in the House of Assembly for the third consecutive election. No opposition member holds a single seat. The margin is not close. The margin is total.

    Mottley stood before her country and said what she has said since 2018: “We did not come simply to hold office. We have come to make Barbados better, and to make your lives better.”

    That sentence carries weight because Mottley has spent the years between elections proving she means it. She led Barbados from a constitutional monarchy to a republic. She stood at COP26 in Glasgow and told world leaders that two degrees of warming was a death sentence for island nations. She launched the Bridgetown Initiative, a plan to restructure how wealthy nations loan money to countries hit by climate disasters. She did not beg. She proposed mechanisms. She built coalitions with nations across Africa, the Pacific, and Latin America.

    And now her name is circulating as a leading candidate to become the next Secretary-General of the United Nations.

    Why This Matters for Your Classroom

    Women’s History Month is two weeks away. Teachers across the country are planning lessons right now. Most of those lessons will cover the same names they covered last year and the year before. Harriet Tubman. Rosa Parks. Susan B. Anthony. Important women. But a curriculum that only teaches students about leaders from the past teaches them that leadership is something that already happened.

    Mia Mottley is making history in real time. She is not in a textbook. She is in the news this week. When students learn about Mottley, they encounter a living leader who shows them that small nations produce world-changing voices, that coalition-building is a practical skill, and that placing truth on record is both an act of courage and a strategy.

    The connection to the Pan-African tradition runs deep. Barbados is the same soil that produced Shirley Chisholm, whose mother came from the island, whose grandmother taught her she was somebody. Chisholm carried Barbados in her voice. Mottley carries it in her strategy. The line runs unbroken.

    A Lesson Ready to Teach

    We built the Mia Mottley lesson for exactly this kind of moment. “Building Bridges From Survival to Structure” gives students a focused biography, vocabulary tied to climate finance and international leadership, evidence-based comprehension questions, 10 SEL reflection prompts, a graphic organizer, and a systems-thinking extension activity that moves students from biography to understanding how power actually works.

    The lesson connects to CASEL SEL Competencies in Social Awareness and Responsible Decision-Making. It aligns with Common Core ELA standards for citing evidence, determining central ideas, and writing routinely for reflection. It works for whole-group instruction, small-group work, independent study, or emergency sub plans. Everything is in the packet. No prep required.

    Mia Mottley: Building Bridges From Survival to Structure

    A complete SEL + Women’s History Month lesson for grades 6–8. Teacher guide, student biography, vocabulary, comprehension questions, SEL reflections, graphic organizer, quiz with answer key, and extension activity.

    Get This Lesson — $4.75: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Mia-Mottley-Womens-History-Month-SEL-Lesson-Grades-68-15367954

    The Full Collection

    Mia Mottley is one voice in a larger tradition. Our Women’s History Month Bundle includes eight complete lesson packets covering Ella Baker, Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, Ida B. Wells, Fannie Lou Hamer, Septima Clark, Shirley Chisholm, and Miriam Makeba. Each lesson follows the same structure: biography, vocabulary, comprehension questions, SEL reflection, graphic organizer, and quiz. Together, they give students a month-long look at women who built movements, not monuments.

    Add the Mia Mottley lesson to the bundle, and your students will meet nine women across two centuries of leadership. From the Underground Railroad to the United Nations stage. From speaking truth with nothing to speaking truth with a nation behind you.

    Women’s History Month Bundle: 8 SEL Lessons

    Eight complete lesson packets. Grades 6–8. Print and digital. $35.99 (save 25%).

    Get the Bundle — $35.99: https://thegarveyclassroom.com/womens-history-month-curriculum/

    Mottley said it plainly in her victory speech: “Our mission first and foremost is to stop poor people from being poor and to remove injustice wherever it exists to create opportunities for people.” That sentence could spark a class discussion that lasts the entire period. It could anchor a writing prompt. It could change how a student thinks about what leadership looks like.

    She won three days ago. Women’s History Month starts in two weeks. The timing is yours.

    FAQ

    Who is Mia Mottley?

    Mia Amor Mottley is the first female Prime Minister of Barbados, first elected in 2018. She won a historic third consecutive term on February 11, 2026, with her Barbados Labour Party sweeping all 30 parliamentary seats. She is the longest-serving female head of state in the world and a leading global voice for climate justice and debt reform for vulnerable nations.

    Why should I teach Mia Mottley during Women’s History Month?

    Mia Mottley is a living leader making history in real time. She gives students a model of Caribbean women in global leadership, coalition-building as a practical skill, and truth-telling as strategy. Her story connects to Shirley Chisholm’s Barbadian heritage, climate justice, and responsible decision-making, all aligned to CASEL SEL competencies and Common Core ELA standards for grades 6 through 8.

    What is included in the Mia Mottley lesson plan?

    The lesson includes a teacher guide with pacing and differentiation strategies, a student biography written at 6th-grade reading level, five vocabulary terms tied to climate finance and international leadership, ten comprehension questions, ten SEL reflection prompts, a graphic organizer, a multiple-choice quiz with answer key, and a systems-thinking extension activity. It works for whole-group instruction, small groups, independent study, or emergency sub plans. No prep required.