Learning to Give, Curriculum Division of The LEAGUE

The LEAGUE

Taking a Stand for the Good of Others: King Day (12th)
Lesson 1:
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Lesson
Handouts
Academic Standards
Philanthropy Framework

Focus Question(s):

What is a world citizen's responsibility to promote and advocate for justice and kindness?

NOTE: Prior to this lesson, use the Blue Sky Activity in which students envision a better world.  If you already have a Blue Sky display, revisit it before beginning this lesson.

LEAGUE Coaches: After teaching this lesson, please complete a short evaluation.
LEAGUE Learning Link(s)
Post Service Reflection

Purpose:

The purpose of this lesson is to help the learners see that each individual can make a significant contribution to the common good. Students read about Rosa Parks and an example of a philanthropic act that promotes the welfare of individuals and community through inaction in the form of protesting unjust/unfair situations. Students analyze violent situations and propose nonviolent solutions.

Duration:

One 50 minute class period

Objectives:

 The learner will:

  • identify and describe the contribution Rosa Parks made during the civil rights movement.
  • propose nonviolent solutions to difficult situations from history.
  • identify how an act of resistance can be a form of philanthropy.
  • brainstorm ways that an "average citizen" can work to promote justice and kindness in the school/community.

Materials:

 

Handout 1
Five Scenarios
Handout 2
Questions for Discussion

Instructional Procedure(s):

Teacher Note: Before students arrive, write the following quote on the display board: "I'm just an average citizen. Many black people before me were arrested for defying bus laws. They prepared the way." --Rosa Parks

Anticipatory Set:
As the learners enter the classroom, have a picture of Rosa Parks on display. Ask the learners to identify the person in the picture and share what they know of her and the impact her life had on American history.

  • If the students don't have background information about Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, display or pass out copies of the following article found in the Alabama Department of Archives and History at http://www.alabamamoments.state.al.us/sec55det.html. Have the learners scan the article and highlight key events in the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Ask students to briefly recall the order of events for the whole class.
  • Display on the overhead projector a primary source historical document by Martin Luther King, Jr. from the Alabama Department of Archives and History. http://www.archives.state.al.us/teacher/rights/lesson1/doc7.html This typed list tells blacks how to act in a nonviolent manner as they sit down on the bus after the bus boycott is over and the law says they can sit anywhere on the bus.
  • Then divide the class into five groups. Give each group a scenario showing the tension on the buses and trains before the Montgomery bus boycott. (See Attachment One: Five Scenarios.) Ask each group to read their scenario and analyze (using Attachment Two: Questions for Discussion) how the scene could have been diffused nonviolently. 
  • After ten minutes, have a member from each group read their group’s scenario aloud to the class and then share the information on their worksheet. Each presentation should be no more than two or three minutes in length.
  • Have the learners share how what they have read and heard relates to the Rosa Parks quote on the display board.
  • Write the word philanthropy on the display board and encourage the learners to share what they know about the meaning of this word. Summarize their contributions by defining philanthropy as "giving time, talent, or treasure for the sake of another or for the common good."
  • Lead a class discussion focused on the question, "'Why do you think history considers Rosa Parks' action an act of philanthropy?"
  • Brainstorm ideas about how students can promote justice and kindness in a nonviolent way and through inaction. Discuss possible projects for the  King Day Event. How can they as "average citizens" help promote the common good?

 

Assessment:

The assessment focuses lesson focuses on the learner's involvement in whole and small group discussions.

LEAGUE Learning Link(s): (click to view)

School/Home Connection:

Students interview the older members of their family or extended family about their memories and understanding of the significance of Rosa Parks' refusal to give up her seat on the bus in Montgomery, Alabama. Students write an essay about the bus incident and boycott from the perspective of the person they interview.

Extension:

Post Service Reflection: (click to view)

Bibliographical References:

Lesson Developed and Piloted by:

Lydia Alvarez
University High
Newark, NJ 77108

Dennis VanHaitsma
Curriculum Consultant
Learning to Give

Handouts:

Handout 1Print Handout 1

Five Scenarios

Scenario #1: A black soldier stepped onto the bus, leaned back, and tossed his cigarette butt out the door. When the bus driver closed the door on the soldier’s extended hand, the soldier thought it was deliberate. He accused the bus driver of racism, and soon the two men were fighting. The fight escalated to a point where the bus driver hit the soldier on the head with a gun. The soldier then reached into his pocket. Fearing the man had a gun, the bus driver threatened to kill him. The soldier left the bus.

Scenario #2: A sixteen-year-old black girl waited for the city bus to take her home around 8:00 pm. As she stepped inside the bus, the driver informed her that there was no more room for “colored” passengers. The young girl threw her money at the driver, cursed, and spit on him. She attempted to push her way past him, but he knocked her out of the bus, threw her to the ground, and held her there until the police arrived.

Scenario #3: A white woman and a black woman boarded a bus on a rainy day. The black woman allegedly pushed the white woman out of the way in her hurry to get out of the rain. The two drenched women fought each other with their umbrellas as they moved down the aisle of the bus. A man who had watched this fight approached the now-seated black woman and hit her with his umbrella. She grabbed his umbrella, and it broke in her hand. She hit the man with the handle from his own umbrella. The bus driver separated them, and there was no more trouble.

Scenario #4: As was her usual custom, a white woman boarded the bus and started complaining loudly about blacks. As the bus approached a stop, she vowed that this morning she was not going to let them move the color boards up (giving blacks more room). She moved to the back of the white section to make her point. After a while the angry woman asked the bus driver to make the blacks stop laughing at her. When he said he couldn’t do anything about it, she cursed and complained loudly. When a black young woman commented, the woman started hitting her. The bus driver separated them. The bus driver claimed that this woman causes trouble every morning.

Scenario #5: When a conductor asked a black man to stop cursing on the train, a fight started. The two men shoved each other angrily. The black man pushed the driver into his seat and pulled out a knife. A motorman came to help. He hit the man over the head with a gun and knocked him down. Another black passenger offered to take the first black man off the train. They got off, and the train made a loop. When the train came back, the black man got back on the train, threatening the conductor with his knife. They fought, and the conductor shot the man. 

Scenarios adapted from

Kelley, Robin D. G. Race Rebels: Culture, Politics, and the Black Working Class. New York: Free Press, Distributed by Simon & Schuster, 1996. ISBN 0-684-82639-9

 

Handout 2Print Handout 2

Questions for Discussion

Name: ________________________________ Hour: ____________

Directions: Within your group, read the provided scenario and answer the following:

1. Identify the conflict (fight, argument, shooting, etc.), where it occurred and who was involved.


2. Who instigated the conflict and why did it occur?
 

3. With the members in your group, discuss any other alternatives that could have resolved the conflict.


4. In the end did those involved gain anything from the incident? Why or why not?

 

Philanthropy Framework:

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Unit Contents:

Overview:Taking a Stand for the Good of Others: King Day (12) Summary

Lessons:

1.
Taking a Stand for the Good of Others: King Day (12th)

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