|
For Teachers:
Activities and Lesson Plans:
Standing Together
Grade Level – 7-12
Ideal as is for Middle School; can be modified for secondary setting
with additional reflective writing activity.
Standards
5.2.6.A; 5.2.9.A; 5.2.12.A; 5.2.6.B; 5.2.9.B; 5.2.12.B
PA Academic Standards for Civics and Government
(PDF)
8.2.6.D;8.2.9.D;8.2.12.D; 8.3.6.D;8.3.9.D;8.3.12.D
PA Academic Standards for History
(PDF)
Context and Content
Knowledge
At critical points in history, Americans have the opportunity to prove
what they’re made of. The American Revolution. The Underground
Railroad. World Wars I and II. The Civil Rights marches of the 1960s.
And now the fight against terrorism. None of us will ever forget the
human and physical destruction of September 11, 2001. But we will
also never forget the image that emerged the morning after – a group
of New York City
firefighters hoisting an American flag above the rubble.
Do you believe the
power to unite is stronger than the power to divide?
Warmup Activity:
Start with all of
your students on the right side of the classroom. Then read a dozen
or so statements, beginning with those that differentiate the members
of the group and ending on two or three common traits that bind them
together:
If you like rap
music, move to my left.
Country’s your thing? Stand on the right.
Are you a vegetarian? Over to the right.
If you take the bus to school, go left.
Do you like to swim? Then move to the right.
If your last name begins with a letter from A to G, move to the left.
Do you like reading mystery books? Stand on my right.
Is ice cream your favorite dessert? Go right.
If your family is Italian, stand to my right.
Are you an African American? Move to the left.
Can’t live without headphones? Go to the left.
Your best friend dropped by but you’d rather do homework? On the
right.
If you’ve ever argued with your brother or sister, go to my left.
If you go to (name of school), stand on my left.
Are you glad you live in a free country? Stand on my left.
Discussion:
Living in a free
society means sometimes overlooking our differences for the greater
good. Read what
Professor Jim Horton has to say about standing together.
Do you know the
Greek translation of the word “democracy?” Pittsburgh
Attorney
John Burt explains.
Our democracy also
guarantees a free press, even when the press touts opinions you don’t
necessarily like. Examine two different newspaper accounts of
Frederick
Douglass’s visit to Erie on April 24, 1858 and his speech
entitled, “Unity of the Human Race.” Research the origins of both
newspapers. What do these newspapers tell us about anti-slavery
sentiment in the North?
For a humorous but
telling story about local politics before the Civil War, read
“The Bonny
Brown Mare: or the Way an Abolitionist was ‘Done Brown,” published
in The Erie Observer on September 26, 1857.
Resources:
Safe Harbor
documentary, DVD and web site
History
of Erie County
Vol. I. Chicago: Warner & Beers & Co. 1884.
The Erie
Story
magazine. Erie, Pennsylvania. August 1983
Microfilm collections from the Erie County History Center and Erie
County Library |