Buch, Englisch, 352 Seiten, Paperback, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 228 mm, Gewicht: 481 g
Reihe: The Harvey Goldberg Series for Understanding and Teaching History
Buch, Englisch, 352 Seiten, Paperback, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 228 mm, Gewicht: 481 g
Reihe: The Harvey Goldberg Series for Understanding and Teaching History
ISBN: 978-0-299-32194-9
Verlag: University of Wisconsin Press
Books in the popular Harvey Goldberg Series provide high school and introductory college-level instructors with ample resources and strategies for better engaging students in critical, thought-provoking topics. By allowing for the implementation of a more nuanced curriculum, this is history instruction at its best. Understanding and Teaching the Civil Rights Movement will transform how the United States civil rights movement is taught.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- Preface xi
- Acknowledgments xv
- Introduction 3
- Hasan Kwame Jeffries
Part One. Dispatches from the Frontline: Reflections on Teaching the Civil Rights Movement
- Who Is Fannie Lou Hamer? A Movement Veteran Reflects on Teaching Civil Rights History 13
- Charles E. Cobb Jr.
- “They won’t just be reading about history—they’ll be living it”: The Anderson Monarchs Civil Rights Barnstorming Tour 22
- Steve Bandura
- Rosa Did More Than Sit and Martin Did More Than Dream: Pushing beyond the Master Narrative with High School Students 39
- Adam Sanchez
- “I had this black professor at UT”: Teaching Civil Rights and Black Power to White and Black College Students 47
- Leonard N. Moore
Part Two. “Bigger than a hamburger”: Reframing the Civil Rights Movement
- Obstacles to Freedom: Life in Jim Crow America 59
- Stephen A. Berrey
- Freedom Rights: Reconsidering the Movement’s Goals and Objectives 73
- Hasan Kwame Jeffries
- The Ballot and the Bullet: Rethinking the Violent/Nonviolent Dichotomy 83
- Christopher B. Strain
- Place Matters: The Indispensable Story of Civil Rights Activism beyond Dixie 95
- Patrick D. Jones
Part Three. “Now that he is safely dead, let us praise him”: Teaching Iconic Civil Rights People, Organizations, and Events
- Complicating Martin Luther King Jr.: Teaching the Life and Legacy of the Movement’s Most Iconic Figure 113
- Charles McKinney
- Not That Kind of Tired: Rosa Parks and Organizing the Montgomery Bus Boycott 131
- Emilye Crosby
- Freedom Is a Constant Struggle: Teaching the 1964 Mississippi Freedom Project 144
- Nicole A. Burrowes and La TaSha B. Levy
- Teaching Malcolm X beyond the Mythology—By Any Means Necessary 159
- Clarence Lang
- The Long Hot Summers of the 1960s: Teaching the Racial Disturbances of the Civil Rights Era 175
- Shawn Leigh Alexander, John Rury, and Clarence Lang
- Power to the People! A Curriculum for Teaching the Black Panther Party and the Transition from Civil Rights to Black Power 185
- Jakobi Williams
Part Four. “The essence of scholarship is truth”: Sources for Teaching the Civil Rights Movement
- Everybody Say Freedom: Using Oral History to Construct and Teach New Civil Rights Narratives 197
- J. Todd Moye
- Freedom Songs: Building a Civil Rights Playlist 209
- Charles L. Hughes
- Two Thumbs Up: Movies and Documentaries to Use (and Avoid) When Teaching Civil Rights 224
- Hasan Kwame Jeffries
- A Rich Record: Using Primary Sources to Explore the Civil Rights Movement 241
- John B. Gartrell
- The Revolution Was Not Televised but It Is Available Online: Using the SNCC Digital Gateway to Tell Civil Rights History from the Bottom Up 247
- Karlyn Forner
Part Five. “Strong people don’t need strong leaders”: Methods for Teaching the Civil Rights Movement
- Stay Woke: Teaching the Civil Rights Movement through Literature 261
- Julie Buckner Armstrong
- “Nonviolence is impossible”: Role-Playing in the Classroom 276
- Wesley Hogan
- California Democracy Schools: A Model for Teaching Civil Rights to Students of All Ages 291
- Michelle M. Herczog
- Walking in Their Shoes: Using #BlackLivesMatter to Teach the Civil Rights Movement 300
- Shannon King
- Contributors 313
- Index 319