Recent Workshops

Contact Aleah HERE to book one of these workshops or to request a new one designed for your specific organization. Aleah is dedicated to providing education around compassion, self love/acceptance, advocacy, and inclusion to all communities, especially for minority students or children faced with hardship or oppression. If you are a school, community, or organization that would really benefit from a workshop but has limited resources, please contact Aleah about their sliding scale.


  • Queerness in the Classroom: LGBTQ inclusivity and education in our schools
    A celebratory, Waldorf Inspired LGBTQ workshop for educators to learn how to love, support, and teach queer students, as well as how to create compassionate classroom environments for their most vulnerable students; designed for Mountain Sage Community School faculty, appropriate for all who work with children and teens

  • The Full Spectrum: An introductory student workshop on LGBTQ identities
    A workshop on terminology, self love/acceptance, radical allyship—this curriculum is a tool to help students learn kind and correct terminology, become self advocates, cease to be bystanders, and feel empowered to change the culture of their classrooms and communities; designed for Mountain Sage Community School students, appropriate for students 5th grade and up

  • A Word or A Weapon: A workshop for young people about identities, slurs, labels, and community
    This workshop directly addresses bullying in the classroom by starting student conversations about the root of bullying. We look at what slurs are and how they came to be, versus words that are helpful identity terms being used like a weapon. This workshop helps build compassion, communication, and resiliency among peers; designed for Mountain Sage Community School, appropriate for 3rd-12th grade (especially helpful in early middle school)

  • Making a Space that Doesn’t Exist: Queer theater as action and interrogation
    Theater grants us the ability to image and make worlds that do not yet exist. This workshop that makes a space for LGBTQ teens to create and devise performances that ask questions like “what would the world look like if I was able to be authentic?” The workshop is focused on art that builds community and directly addresses the hopes, needs, and dreams of young queer and trans people; designed for the Philadelphia Trans Wellness Conference 2018, appropriate for teens in the LGBTQ family