topic three: civil rights change strategies establishing foundational knowledge:

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Topic Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational Knowledge: Interactive Slide Lecture

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Topic Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational Knowledge: Interactive Slide Lecture. Establishing Foundational Knowledge Interactive Slide Lecture Topic: The Civil Rights Movement Central Question : What actions were civil rights activists justified - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Topic Three:Civil Rights Change Strategies

Establishing Foundational Knowledge:

Interactive Slide Lecture

Page 2: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Establishing Foundational KnowledgeInteractive Slide Lecture

Topic: The Civil Rights Movement

Central Question: What actions were civil rights activists justified in using to achieve social justice in the 1960s?

Page 3: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

1957

Page 4: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Asking Questions of Witnesses

• Study the image closely for details. What do you see?

• Select 3 people in this picture. What questions would you want to ask these people?

• Speculate on how you think those individuals would answer your questions.

Page 5: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:
Page 6: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Foundational Knowledge:Brown v. Board of Education, 1954

Page 7: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Integration in Little Rock • 9/3/1957 Governor Faubus orders National Guard to block the entrance

of 9 black students to Central High School

• 9/20/1957 Faubus ordered by federal court to remove National Guard

• 9/23/1957 Black students admitted to Central HS but withdrawn after riots

• 9/25/1957 Pres. Eisenhower sends federal troops to enforce the desegregation order

and escort students to classes

• 8/18/1958 Federal judge grants 2 ½ year postponement of integration. U.S. Court of appeals overrules integration postponement

• 9/27/1958 Little Rock votes against integration. All public schools are closed for the year

• 8/12/1959 Little Rock public high schools re-open. Four black students attend Central High

Page 8: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Strategies for Social Change

• What strategy for bringing about social change does Little Rock exemplify?

Page 9: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:
Page 10: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Historical Perspective Taking

• Study the image carefully. What do you see?• Step into the slide and assume the role of one

of the figures• Answer questions posed by a news reporter as

you think that person would

Page 11: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:
Page 12: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Sit-In Campaign• February 1, 1960 Sit-ins begin in Greensboro, NC

• February 13, 1960 Largest sit-ins begin in Nashville, TN

• March 15, 1960 Sit-ins at 10 locations in Atlanta, GA

• May 10, 1960 Six Nashville lunch counters begin serving blacks

• July 25, 1960 Greensboro lunch counters begin serving blacks

• Feb-Dec 1960 Over 70,000 activists have participated in sit-ins throughout South and in some northern cities

• September, 1961 Atlanta lunch counters begin serving blacks

Page 13: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Strategies for Change

• What strategy for bringing about social change does the Sit-In movement exemplify?

Page 14: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:
Page 15: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Document Analysis: Interpreting the Message of a Staged Photograph

• Study the image carefully. What do you see?• What are the crucial elements included in this

photograph?• Why do you think the various items are

included in the photograph? What impressions do those items make with you?

Page 16: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:
Page 17: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Document Analysis: Interpreting the Message of a Staged Photograph

• Who do you think is the audience for this photograph?

• Taken as a whole, what message does this photograph convey to its audience?

Page 18: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Black Panther Party• October 1966: Black Panther Party for Self-Defense founded in Oakland, CA

• Advocated self-determination in black communities

– Community programs to assist black citizens and spread BPP ideology

– Armed Panthers monitor police activity in black neighborhoods

• May 1967: Protest at California legislature

• BPP chapters form in 25 cities across country

• Confrontations with police increase; FBI infiltrates

Page 19: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Strategies for Change

• What strategy for bringing about social change does the Black Panther movement exemplify?

Page 20: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

Strategies for Change

• What actions were civil rights activists justified in using to achieve social justice in the 1960s?Working through the Legal SystemNon-violent Civil DisobedienceBlack Power

Page 21: Topic  Three: Civil Rights Change Strategies Establishing Foundational  Knowledge:

PIH Curriculum Design Principles

1. Scaffolded Instruction

2. Authenticity

3. Multiple Intelligences

4. Effective Collaboration