Teachers Across the Country Use Donald Trump's Victory as a 'Teachable Moment'

Trump's rhetoric has left some teachers wondering how to address the election.

Many teachers have been tasked with discussing the election and the particularly contentious campaign season with their students, from toddlers to college students.

This rhetoric used by the real estate developer turned reality TV star turned President-elect has left some teachers wondering how, if at all, to address the election in their classrooms.

Josh Prager, a social studies teacher at East-West School of International Studies in New York City, said he knew he had to use this election as a "teachable moment." Prager, who teaches mostly middle schoolers, said a majority of his students live below the poverty level and are immigrants or children of immigrants.

Other teachers expressed their concerns on social media and shared how they planned to address the controversial election. Dominic Dorsey, associate director of Adaptive Educational Services at Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis, said he is organizing "a safe space to talk and discuss within the office for my students today."

"I’ve spoken to four students, all inconsolable," Dorsey wrote on his Facebook. "Sometimes it’s okay not to have a stiff upper lip. If it quivers, let it. If you want to sob, that’s okay too. Bottling emotions never helped anyone."

Elizabeth Walker, an English as a second language (ESL) teacher at Cleveland Metropolitan School District in Ohio, also felt students need a safe place to discuss the election, despite her personal disappointment in the outcome.

"I didn’t want to face the reality, but I pulled it together and made it here," Walker wrote on her Facebook. "I wanted to be strong for my students who needed a space to discuss what they witnessed last night (this morning). They talked about their fears and the reality that’s facing us. They did so with respect and curiosity. This is why I teach."

Jason Noble, a wind ensemble conductor at Columbia University in New York City, said he stopped rehearsal to ask his students whether they wanted to discuss the election with two caveats.

"I told the students 1) ‘I love you all no matter what. We’re a band family, and the music we make is bigger and better than any political differences,’ and 2) ‘No, I will not tell you who I voted for – nor will I ever make you feel badly for who you or your parents supported. That’s not how this works. Why would I want to instantly make some of you feel uncomfortable?’" Noble wrote on his Facebook. "We wound up having a really frank and uplifting discussion. Some students who supported Trump said they can understand the concerns Clinton supporters have with Trump’s plans for America. Some Clinton supporters said they understood the frustration Trump voters have with the status quo and the improving but not robust U.S. economy. It was an entirely civil debate."

And after the debate, Noble said his students began rehearsing again.

"Not surprisingly, today was the most musical and emotional my students have played this year," he wrote.

ABC News' Suein Oh and Lindsey Jacobson contributed to this report.