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Lesson Plans for Teaching About Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. |
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Written by Robert A. Southworth Jr.
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Saturday, 20 January 2007 |
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The Martin Luther King, Jr., research and Education Institute at
Stanford University has some wonderful lesson plans. Click on the link to read more and see a sample from this most informative site (http://www.stanford.edu/group/King/).
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Grades: 9-12 |
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CA State Standards: 11.1, 11.10, 11.11 |
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The
essential question and sub questions are designed to guide the teacher
and students through each segment of the lesson. These questions may be
used as assessment at the end of the unit or as discussion prompts
along the way. Teachers are encouraged to teach the entire unit or to
choose the parts which fit their curricular needs. All activities are
offered as an online experience or in print format.
Essential Question:
Did the nonviolent direct action, which King describes in his “Letter
from a Birmingham Jail,” successfully transform Birmingham, Alabama
from a segregated to a just society in 1963?
Sub Questions:
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How do we, as a society, define an unjust law, and what kinds of
strategies and tactics have proven most effective in changing such
laws? If we are able to abolish legal injustice will it necessarily
result in social justice?
- What was the social, political and economic situation in Birmingham, AL before the spring of 1963?
- What were the goals of Project C and how were these goals to be accomplished?
- In “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” how does King explain the purpose and effectiveness of nonviolent direct action?
- As
Project C began to unfold in Birmingham in the spring and summer of
1963, how were these events reported to the nation and world?
- Was it the adults or the children of Birmingham that lead the strategy to fill the jails through civil disobedience?
- Have the people of Birmingham reached a point of reconciliation after the experiences of injustice, violence and nonviolent direct action?
Unit Parts
- Introduction to Birmingham
- Project C Strategy Committee Role Play
- Letter from a Birmingham Jail
- The Children Shall Lead
- The Big Three: Should They Take the Offer?
- Transformation? Reconciliation? Does nonviolence work?
Assessment/Culminating Project
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