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Multicultural group of middle school students sharing project based learning

Celebrating Students and Schools with EDUImages

AdLit is committed to showcasing images of students that reflect the diversity we see in classrooms across the U.S. We use stock photography from a variety of sources. We’re especially proud to feature photography from EDUImages, a free library of photos celebrating students and the educators who teach them, from the Alliance for Excellent Education.

The library was created with intentionality: to be authentic and to highlight “students and educators from seven schools that serve predominantly students of color, students from low-income families, and other historically underserved groups.” 

All photographs © Allison Shelley/The Verbatim Agency for EDUimages.

From EDUImages mission statement:

American education is evolving. Our classrooms look different. Our students are more diverse. Our teachers engage students in new and creative activities that allow them to apply their learning to the world around them. But the photos we see in the media and online often don’t reflect these changes. Instead of showing the diverse faces of real students who fill the nation’s classrooms, many stock photos showcase models who are more likely to appear in a catalogue than a public school. Typical stock photos also focus on outdated classroom models where students sit passively in rows of desks listening to a lecture. They rarely show today’s innovative instructional approaches that leverage technology and encourage students to collaborate on projects with real-world applications.

Journalists, designers, nonprofits, and education advocates need access to photos of real students and educators that show how our schools and K–12 population have changed. With this in mind, All4Ed created EDUimages in partnership with the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. The collection includes more than 700 original print-quality photos of real preK–12 students and educators from seven schools that serve predominantly students of color, students from low-income families, and other historically underserved groups. 


Sample EDUImages used on AdLit

Latina high school student talking with classmate
Black middle school girl holding notebooks in front of display of Black history icons
Diverse middle school students working on laptops with Black teacher
Latina middle school student holding up her poster on biodiversity
Mixed race high school student writing and listening in class
3 Latino middle grade students talking about text