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teach-in

NOUN
  1. an extended session (as on a college campus) for lectures and discussion on an important and usually controversial issue

How To Use teach-in In A Sentence

  • Their website offers educational material for teach-ins.
  • Think of all the events, teach-ins, conferences, discussions, ‘debates,’ that have been held.
  • The "corporatization" of Western universities has led to an increased focus on efficiency at the expense of social justice because education is approached as an enterprise, history professor Russell Rickford said at Thursday's teach-in. TheDartmouth.com | America's Oldest College Newspaper. Founded 1799.
  • But what may have been most interesting about the teach-in was what the speakers persistently ignored.
  • In Seattle itself the week of the meeting was paralleled by literally hundreds of lectures, workshops, teach-ins, seminars and debates about the WTO.
  • The endless demos, petitions, teach-ins, sit-ins, and conferences meld together into one prototypical news story, complete with oversized photos.
  • Throughout the week, the education workers plan to set up a tent at the Education Ministry and to conduct teach-ins to inform the public about their plight.
  • Forty years ago, Earth Day began in the United States as a "teach-in" –a day to educate people about the environmental challenges facing our planet.
  • These coalitions should organise discussion groups, teach-ins and debates in every school, college and workplace.
  • The caravanistas teamed up with local organizers to host panel discussions, town hail meetings, workshops, teach-ins, street theatre, speak outs, media conferences, rallies, marches and puppet making.
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