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Overview........Lesson Plan Summary.........Sample Lessons.........Culminating Activity........Resources
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| Math Lesson 5: The Role of Television in Social Justice
Date: Week 3/Monday Students will discover the direct impact television coverage had on the African American Civil Rights Movement A pre-recorded compilation of four pertinent, ten minute film clips from Eyes on the Prize documentary film series - "Ain't Scared of Your Jails", "No Easy Walk, 1961-63", "Bridge to Freedom", "Fighting Back"; 30 copies of worksheet with questions relating to television coverage of the events witnessed in the film clips; 30 copies of evaluation sheet for exchange and critique of culminating project rough drafts. Prior to class period teacher needs to have chosen which students will exchange project rough drafts keeping in mind to pair students with different literacy levels and English skills, as well as learning styles. homework: Students will read and evaluate another student's culminating project rough draft. Students will make written comments on the evaluation sheet provided by the teacher with regard to relevance to topic of Media and Social Justice, grammar, style, creativity, format, etc, keeping rubric for the project in mind. Students will utilize writing resources from Hip Hop Circuit website at http://online.sfsu.edu/~jcooks/hiphopcircuit/frontup.html found in Resources section, such as thesaurus, dictionary, and encyclopedias to aid the editing process. Critique of rough draft is DUE TOMORROW. Teacher will evaluate worksheets, which are an important component of the interactive notebook that will be graded at the end of the unit. As well, during discussion the next day the teacher can ascertain the knowledge students obtained from film clips. Students will be graded on rough draft written critiques, which are worth 20 points of culminating project grade (culminating project worth 30% of overall grade). Students will employ listening, information processing, and critical thinking skills while watching the film clips and answering questions on worksheet. They will use critiquing, editing, reading, and writing skills as they critique each other's rough drafts. Some students may not bring a rough draft. Others may not take the critiquing process seriously enough to provide good feedback to their partner. Technical difficulties could arise with film clips that could potentially ruin the whole lesson so it is important to have a lecture prepared on the same material with photographs to accompany as a back up. |
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