From Jim Crow To Linda Brown: A Retrospective of the African-American Experience from 1897 to 1953
Comments
- Sep 3 2010 11:29 AM
Bob Benoit
This resource was matched by a member of the Brokers of Expertise Standards Matching Team.Includes a simulation - complex but interesting.
Contributed By
- Original Source:EDSITEment
Conditions of Use:None Specified
Description
This Library of Congress mini-unit allows students to explore to what extent the African American experience during the first half of the 20th century was "separate but equal." After completing a study of Plessy v. Ferguson (1897), students will simulate the Afro-American Council Meeting in 1898. This will be followed by an exploration of resources in American Memory and other classroom materials. The unit culminating activity is the creation of a similar meeting of the Afro-American Council prior to the Brown case in 1954. Less
Learning Registry Activity
Bookmarks
Topics and Grades
Grade: 9 to 12
Topics: History-Social Science, American Democracy, Electives, United States History
Standards
Matched Standards
HSS.11.USHGCCTC.11.10.2 Examine and analyze the key events, policies, and court cases in the evolution o...
Resource Pedagogy
Resource Type/Classification:
- Teacher Materials
Tool for: Parents, Administrators, Teachers
Tags/Keywords
Instructional Strategy
Grouping: Large Group Instruction
Teaching Method: Discussions; Cooperative Learning