Curriculum StandardsClose

Reconstruction to Plessy v. Ferguson: A "Newscast" Activity

The following standards have been taken from the Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning (McRel) standards.

Students will work in groups to:

  • Understand the importance of equality of opportunity and equal protection of the law as a characteristic of American society.
  • Understand the important factors that have helped shape American society.
  • Know ways in which Americans have attempted to make the values and principles of the U.S. Constitution a reality.
  • Understand the significance of fundamental values and principles for the individual and society.
  • Know the historical and contemporary efforts put forth to reduce discrepancies between ideals and the reality of American public life.
  • Know how various individual, social, and political actions have helped to reduce discrepancies between reality and the ideals of American constitutional democracy.
  • Understand significant influences on the Civil Rights Movement (e.g., the social and constitutional issues involved in Plessy v. Ferguson [1896] and Brown v. Board of Education [1954] court cases; the connection between legislative acts, Supreme Court decisions, and the Civil Rights Movement; the role of women in the Civil Rights Movement and in shaping the struggle for civil rights).
  • Know different types of primary and secondary sources and the motives, interests, and biases they express.
  • Analyze the values held by specific people who influence history and the role their values played in influencing history.
  • Evaluate the validity and credibility of different historical interpretations.
  • Use a variety of resource materials, including various primary sources, to gather information for research topics.
  • Use a variety of criteria to evaluate the validity and reliability of primary and secondary source information.
  • Synthesize information from multiple research studies to draw conclusions that go beyond those found in any of the individual studies.
  • Make oral presentations to the class.
  • Use criteria to evaluate own and others' effectiveness in group discussions and formal presentations and evaluate the clarity and accuracy of information.
  • Adjust message wording and delivery to particular audiences and for particular purposes.
  • Play a variety of roles in group discussions.
  • Convey a clear main point when speaking to others and stay on the topic being discussed.
  • Understand elements of persuasion and appeal in spoken texts.
  • Understand the use of stereotypes and biases in visual media.
  • Evaluate strategies used by speakers in oral presentations.
  • Make multimedia presentations using text, images, and sound.
  • Use standard format in written compositions (e.g., includes footnotes; italics for works of art, foreign words, and phrases; and bold or underlined headings).
  • Construct imaginative scripts that convey the story and meaning to an audience.