Standing Up by Sitting Down: Early Bus Riders for Civil Rights
Comments
- Aug 14 2010 12:47 PM
Kathyleen Bishop
This resource was matched by a member of the Brokers of Expertise Standards Matching Team.
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- Original Source:Xpeditions
Conditions of Use:None Specified
Description
More than ten years before Rosa Parks sat down on a Birmingham, Alabama, bus and refused to get up, and 15 years before Freedom Rides on segregated buses throughout the southern United States became a hallmark of the civil rights movement, a small group of black and white men boarded a bus for a very long ride. Read about their journey in this National Geographic News article.
Learning Registry Activity
Bookmarks
Topics and Grades
Grade: 3 to 12
Topics: United States History, History-Social Science, American Democracy
Standards
Matched Standards
HSS.11.USHGCCTC.11.10.2 Examine and analyze the key events, policies, and court cases in the evolution o...
HSS.11.USHGCCTC.11.10.3 Describe the collaboration on legal strategy between African American and white ...
HSS.11.USHGCCTC.11.10.4 Examine the roles of civil rights advocates (e.g., A. Philip Randolph, Martin Lu...
HSS.11.USHGCCTC.11.10.6 Analyze the passage and effects of civil rights and voting rights legislation (e...
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