Curriculum StandardsClose

W.E.B. Du Bois and the 1900 Paris Exposition

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

The students will:

  • 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 constitution a reality.
  • Understand the significance of fundamental values and principles for the individual and society.
  • Know some of the efforts that have been put forth to reduce discrepancies between ideals and the reality of American public life.
  • Know how various individual actions, social actions, and political actions and help to reduce discrepancies between reality and the ideals of American Constitutional democracy.
  • Know historical and contemporary efforts to reduce discrepancies between ideals and reality in American public life.
  • Understand significant influences on the civil rights movement.
  • Know different types of primary and secondary sources and the motives, interests, and bias expressed in them.
  • Evaluate the validity and credibility of different historical interpretations.
  • Use a variety of 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.
  • Uses a variety of criteria to evaluate the clarity and accuracy of information.
  • Identifies abstract relationships between seemingly unrelated items.
  • Identifies abstract patterns of similarities and differences between information on the same topic but from different sources.
  • Identifies the abstract relationships that form the basis for analogies.
  • Understands how factors of time and place influence visual, spatial, or temporal characteristics that give meaning or function to a work of art.
  • Understands what makes different art media, techniques, and processes effective (or ineffective) in communicating various ideas.
  • Knows how the qualities and characteristics of art media, techniques, and processes can be used to enhance communication of experiences and ideas.
  • Knows how characteristics of the arts vary within a particular historical period or style and how these characteristics relate to ideas, issues, or themes in other disciplines.
  • Understands the use of stereotypes and biases in visual media.
  • Reflects on what has been learned after reading and formulates ideas, opinions, and personal responses to texts.
  • Uses reading skills and strategies to understand a variety of informational texts.
  • Draws conclusions and makes inferences based on explicit and implicit information in texts.
  • Uses discussions with peers as a way of understanding information.