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Walker, Irenea – Research Issues in Contemporary Education, 2021
African American high school students' erudition of Black history, including the events and individuals who afforded them freedoms, enhances their informed decision making and impacts them as citizens. The purpose of this article is to detail how African American high school students engage in critical discourse regarding how historical events…
Descriptors: High School Students, African American Students, African American History, History Instruction
Barabino, Gilda A. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2020
America is undergoing a reckoning as the pain, suffering and setbacks caused by years of systemic racism is coming into full view. This heightened awareness around racism, sparked by death and injustice, must result in the development of real pathways to eliminate systemic racism, or it will be a lost opportunity for our generation to do our part…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Social Justice, Racial Discrimination, Student Diversity
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Jay, Lightning Peter – Social Education, 2020
Octavius Catto was one of the only Black members of Philadelphia's premier scientific organization, the Franklin Institute; principal of the city's foremost school for African Americans, the Institute for Colored Youth; and founder of the Pythians, the baseball team that went undefeated in the Negro league and ultimately crossed "the color…
Descriptors: African American History, United States History, Civil Rights, Racial Discrimination
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Landa, Melissa Hare – Multicultural Perspectives, 2012
Every February, schools celebrate Black History Month and teachers teach the grand narrative of famous African Americans such as Martin Luther King, Jr. While the stories communicate bravery, they are also about racism and violence. Here, through narrative inquiry, a teacher deconstructs Black History Month, inviting student responses to stories…
Descriptors: African American History, African American Students, Males, Personal Narratives
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Brown, Elizabeth S. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2013
In preparation for her school's celebration of Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday, Elizabeth Brown developed an integrated language arts and social studies one-week unit of study on the civil rights movement, where she reinforced reading, writing, and speaking skills. The overarching goals for the five-day lesson on Dr. King's "I Have a…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Social Studies, Integrated Activities, Units of Study
Jones, William P.; Euchner, Charles; Hill, Norman; Hill, Velma Murphy – American Educator, 2013
One of the most historical events in American history, the non-violent protest "March on Washington," August 28, 1963, is detailed in an article of remembrance by William P. Jones. His article is crowned by highlights from the "I Have a Dream" speech by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., but also highlights the lessor known role…
Descriptors: Unions, Civil Rights, Employment, United States History
Wilson, William Julius – American Educator, 2011
Through the second half of the 1990s and into the early years of the 21st century, public attention to the plight of poor black Americans seemed to wane. There was scant media attention to the problem of concentrated urban poverty (neighborhoods in which a high percentage of the residents fall beneath the federally designated poverty line), little…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Poverty, Economically Disadvantaged, Ghettos
Helicher, Karl – Library Journal, 2007
The mid-1960s saw civil rights victories in Congress during Lyndon B. Johnson's presidency. In "Going Down Jericho Road," Michael Honey wrote how Martin Luther King Jr.'s final focus showed that the struggle for black and working class parity continued. The 1968 Memphis sanitation workers strike was a gritty struggle won in the streets by a host…
Descriptors: Strikes, Civil Rights, Social Action, Books
Today's Education, 1979
Suggestions for teaching students of various academic levels about Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., are given. (LH)
Descriptors: Blacks, Equal Education, Racial Discrimination
Today's Education, 1979
Excerpts from speeches by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., are reprinted. Topics discussed include discrimination, the South, education, nonviolent resistance, poverty, economic opportunity, and world peace. (LH)
Descriptors: Blacks, Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights, Equal Education
Lewis, John – Teaching Tolerance, 2008
Americans have come a great distance since the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The African-American middle class has grown. African Americans, women, and other minorities are in positions of leadership today that they could never have aspired to 40 years ago. In the 2008 election season, an African-American man is a serious contender…
Descriptors: African Americans, Social Change, Democracy, Racial Discrimination
Cassuto, Leonard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Richard Wright's literary career begins with a lynching and ends with a serial murderer. "Big Boy Leaves Home," the 1936 story that leads off Wright's first book, "Uncle Tom's Children" (1938), renders the vicious mob-execution of a young black man falsely accused of rape. "A Father's Law," Wright's last novel, left unfinished at his unexpected…
Descriptors: United States History, United States Literature, Social Attitudes, Authors
Cassells, Linda; And Others – Learning, 1993
Presents activities for teaching elementary students about Dr. Martin Luther King's life, the civil rights movement, and King's accomplishments. Suggestions include shoebox dioramas, acronym games, oral histories, multicultural awareness activities, pledge cards, community service projects, special commemorative ceremonies, and a book of dreams.…
Descriptors: Black Studies, Civil Rights, Class Activities, Consciousness Raising
Lum, Lydia – Black Issues in Higher Education, 2005
This document is an analysis of the authors' experience of her private tour of the Dexter Parsonage Museum, the former residence of Dr. Martin Luther King, in Montgomery, Alabama. The author then goes on to discuss civil rights and importance of the continued need for Black History Month.
Descriptors: African American History, Civil Rights, African Americans, Racial Bias
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Zorn, Jeff – Journal of Education, 1992
The writings of Martin Luther King Jr. deserve to be read in undergraduate humanities classes but not in the spirit advocated by former Secretary of Education William Bennett. It is argued that Bennett downplays the struggles against racial discrimination and chooses the most conservative King pieces for the literary canon. (SLD)
Descriptors: Authors, Black Leadership, Black Literature, Civil Rights
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