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K–12 teaching and learning · from the UNC School of Education

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  • Freedom songs of the civil rights movement: Students will listen to freedom songs recorded during the civil rights movement, 1960–1965. Students will write about personal reactions to the music and lyrics. Through reading and pictures, students will briefly explore historical events where these songs were sung. Listening again, students will analyze and describe — musically — particular song(s).
  • A living timeline of civil rights: This fifth grade lesson plan is one piece of a civil rights unit. This particular lesson is an opportunity for students to demonstrate knowledge of a specific person or event that occurred during the civil rights movement. The students will share their research with others as they take on the role of a museum artifact.
  • Civil rights wax museum project: In this lesson plan, students will choose African Americans prominent in the Civil Rights Movement and research aspects of their lives. They will create timelines of their subjects' lives and a speech about their subjects, emphasizing why they are remembered today.

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Learning outcomes

Objectives:

  1. The students will interview people who witnessed the civil rights movement firsthand and summarize their discussion.
  2. The students will participate in a simulation to experience the thoughts and emotions of the era.
  3. The students will create a persona of a person who is affected by the Civil Rights Movement, either for or against, and will use information from research, class discussions, and their interviews to help build their character’s personality.
  4. The students will write reflective summaries of their experiences.

Teacher planning

Time required for lesson

1 week

Materials/resources

Gottheimer, Josh. Ripples of Hope: Great American Civil Rights Speeches. BasicCivitas Books., 2003. (Collection of speeches on Civil Rights, useful but not mandatory)

Technology resources

  1. Computer with Internet access
  2. Tape recorder and tape
  3. Video recorder and video tape
  4. CD player

Pre-activities

  1. Students need to identify key people and their roles in the Civil Rights Movement by completing the Major Leaders of the Civil Rights Movement chart.
  2. Students will practice for their interview by interviewing a classmate and a teacher that they do not know. (In smaller schools, it can be a teacher or an administrator that they do know.)

Activities

  1. Students will draw slips of paper from a hat that has the name, contact information, and age of someone from the community who has agreed to be interviewed for this project. Contacts have been previously obtained via volunteer surveys that teacher can send out to the community at the beginning of year and through family resources. Interviewees should have been alive during the Civil Rights Movement and should have specific memories of this time.
  2. Students will have one week to interview their person and to submit a transcript of the interview to the teacher. Interviews can either be done by the students on their own or students can arrange to meet people at the school, either before or after hours. The transcript should include all pertinent information, answers to the standard interview questions and any other questions and answers that were given.
  3. Students will use their interviews to help develop a character that lived during the Civil Rights era. Students should use the Character Development sheet to help with this task.
  4. Students will read two primary sources, either speeches or other documents, about one of the following major events that occurred during the Civil Rights Movement:
    1. Major Topics:
      • Brown v. Board of Education
      • Montgomery Bus Boycott
      • Murder of Medgar Evers
      • Little Rock Central High Integration
      • Martin Luther King, Jr.
      • Black Panther Party
      • Mississippi Sovereignty Commission
    2. Afterward, students will write a summary detailing, comparing, and contrasting the events that occurred. They will also include how their character would react to these events.
  5. Once research and development is complete, students will participate in a roundtable discussion, as their characters, and will interact and answer questions about the events.
    • Teacher will act as moderator for the roundtable. Establish groundrules for discussion (e.g. what will and will not be considered appropriate). “Role-play” will be defined so students will understand the difference between a character and real person in terms of thoughts/feelings/actions. Maturity will be stressed.
    • Students will give an “introduction” to their characters the day before the roundtable, and will then have the opportunity to write 3 questions for any of the other characters. Questions can be divided in any way feasible.
    • Day of Roundtable: Moderator should have all students introduce their characters/personas and then have one person begin asking questions. Once all questions have been asked/answered or discussion has concluded, the moderator should facilitate a summary or processing of the activity. Allow students to express their thoughts and feelings about what they just did,etc.
  6. Students will conclude the activity by writing a letter to a friend overseas that describes the events they lived through and how it has changed the way people live today.

Assessment

  1. Rubrics for primary source paper, roundtable, and summative paper
  2. Participation in roundtable
  3. Summative quiz

North Carolina curriculum alignment

Social Studies (2003)

Grade 11–12 — African American History

  • Goal 8: The learner will analyze the successes and failures of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States.
    • Objective 8.01: Explain how legal victories prior to 1954 gave impetus to the Civil Rights Movement.
    • Objective 8.02: Describe the impact of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas and evaluate the resistance and reaction to it.
    • Objective 8.03: Define various methods used to obtain civil rights.
    • Objective 8.04: Identify various organizations and their role in the Civil Rights Movement.
    • Objective 8.05: Assess the extent to which the Civil Rights Movement transformed American politics and society.

Grade 11–12 — United States History

  • Goal 11: Recovery, Prosperity, and Turmoil (1945-1980) - The learner will trace economic, political, and social developments and assess their significance for the lives of Americans during this time period.
    • Objective 11.02: Trace major events of the Civil Rights Movement and evaluate its impact.

  • Common Core State Standards
    • English Language Arts (2010)
      • Speaking & Listening

        • Grade 11-12
          • 11-12.SL.1 Initiate and participate effectively in a range of collaborative discussions (one-on-one, in groups, and teacher-led) with diverse partners on grades 11–12 topics, texts, and issues, building on others’ ideas and expressing their own clearly...
          • 11-12.SL.4 Present information, findings, and supporting evidence, conveying a clear and distinct perspective, such that listeners can follow the line of reasoning, alternative or opposing perspectives are addressed, and the organization, development, substance,...

  • North Carolina Essential Standards
    • Social Studies (2010)
      • Twentieth Century Civil Liberties and Civil Rights

        • 12.H.1 Apply historical inquiry and methods to understand the American struggle for freedom and equality. 12.H.1.1 Evaluate historical interpretations and narratives on freedom and equality in terms of perspective, logic, use of evidence, and possible bias....
        • 12.H.2 Analyze political attempts to resolve the conflict between the United States' founding democratic ideals of freedom and equality. 12.H.2.1 Analyze the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution to determine the meaning of freedom...
        • 12.H.3 Understand the influences, development and protests of various 20th Century civil rights groups on behalf of greater freedom and equality. 12.H.3.1 Explain the influence of late 19th and early 20th century reformers, such as Populists, Progressives...
      • United States History II

        • USH.H.1 Apply the four interconnected dimensions of historical thinking to the United States History Essential Standards in order to understand the creation and development of the United States over time. USH.H.1.1 Use Chronological thinking to: Identify the...