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Weekly E, 04/16/2025

In this Weekly E - ORDER MAM MERCH Forensics at State Cardio Party Sign-Up is LIVE! MPS/City of Milwaukee Lead Info & Resources RETURN JAGUAR SPORTS JERSEYS NOW!! Order yearbooks and save before May 5 Bike/Walk to School - Volunteers needed Transition Night is 5/7...

Weekly E, 04/10/2025

In this Weekly E NEW MAM MERCH SITE!! MPS lead hazard update link & MPS virtual townhall invitation 4/10 RETURN FALL & WINTER JERSEYS ASAP Bike & Walk to School Day is coming  - volunteers needed! PLANT SALE 4/11 MPS MAC Meeting - Cancelled for April MPS...

Weekly E, 04/02/2025

In this Weekly E - Montessori Morning & MAM Memo Family Meal grades 4-8 LAST CALL Family SEL Night grades K5-3 LAST CALL  MPS lead hazard update link & virtual town hall invitation PLANT SALE dates updated 4/4 & 4/11 MPS MAC Meeting MPS Spelling Bees...

Early E, 03/31/2025

In this Early E - Tuesday, April 1 is an Election Day in WI Family Meal grades 4-8 rsvp below Family SEL Night grades K5-3 rsp below MPS Lead Hazard update link PLANT SALE dates updated 4/4 & 4/11 MPS Spelling Bees Sports Spot Springfest tickets go LIVE 4/1 (no...

MAM Memo #3 by Ms. Robbins, AP

2024-2025 MAM Memo #3  Outcomes By Caroline Robbins, Assistant Principal This month, our students in 3rd- 8th grades are participating in the Wisconsin Forward exam.  While we emphasize a well-rounded education in our Montessori setting and do not teach to the test,...

Support First Nations on Orange Shirt Day this Thursday, September 28

September 26, 2023 | News

Support First Nations on Orange Shirt Day this Thursday, September 28

Support First Nations on Thursday, September 28, by wearing orange Orange Shirt Day will be observed in Milwaukee Public Schools on Thursday, September 28, to recognize the lasting traumatic impact of Indian boarding schools. On Thursday, all MPS students, staff, and families are encouraged to show support of First Nations by wearing orange.

First Nations Studies at MPS notes that the day is observed “to honor Indian boarding school survivors and those who did not come home.”

The boarding schools operated mainly from 1819 to 1969 as a means to erase Native American cultures and replace them with mainstream culture. That included renaming children, taking away their tribal clothing, cutting their hair, and forbidding the expression of Native languages and religions.

Indigenous children were removed from their families to be placed in the schools, causing trauma and permanently damaging Indigenous cultures. While at the schools, many children were abused or neglected.

The U.S. Interior Department, in a 2022 report issued after an investigation of the system, estimated that as many as tens of thousands of Native children died at the schools. The report also acknowledges that the U.S. established the schools “as part of a broader objective to dispossess Indian Tribes, Alaska Native Villages and the Native Hawaiian Community of their territories to support the expansion of the United States.”

The orange shirt is a symbol of reconciliation and of hope for — and commitment to — a better future, according to the Orange Shirt Society.