Black History Month Classroom Ideas
Celebrating Black History
Month should be a priority in every American school during February. Black
History Month 2009 will be even more significant due to the election of Barack
Obama to the Presidency. The 2009 theme for February should be “From Slavery
and Struggle to Freedom and Leadership.” There are many ways individual classes
and schools as a
community can vitalize this
theme.
From Classroom to Community
In History classrooms,
teachers can assign a “poster project” in conjunction with Black History Month.
To avoid duplication, each participating class can be given separate areas of
American history to draw from”
Colonial Period
Pre-Civil War South
Reconstruction
“Separate But Equal”
Brown v. Board of Education
Civil Rights Movement
Post Civil Rights Movement
Students should create
posters specific to the assigned period of history. For continuity, require a
specific size poster. As a caveat, limit the number of computer generated pictures students may use. Establish as criteria
a very specific focus or message to be contained in each poster and encourage
creativity.
Allow students to present
their posters in an oral presentation in which they share with the class why
they chose the topic and how it relates to Black History Month. After all students
have presented, allow them to display the posters as a narrative, chronological
collage in the common areas of the school (assuming the teacher has
administrative authority to do this). This activity should take place the last
week of January or the first week of February to ensure maximum impact.
Contact community leaders and
arrange for them to judge the collages. Reward the winning class with a special
privilege or a pizza party. These kinds of rewards, if part of the initial
instruction, go far in providing the kind of incentive students often need to
surpass expectations. Through parent-school communications (newsletters, web
pages) invite parents to visit the school and “tour the gallery.”
Using the Public Address
System
Each morning in February,
have a student read one significant achievement of African Americans in
American History over the school’s PA system. Preparing these factoids can be
turned into a January assignment or function as extra credit. Allow students to
submit facts from their own research and then select those that conform to a
pre-assignment criterion.
Other Black History Month
Suggestions
There are many creative ways
to emphasize the contributions of African Americans in our history. These
include:
Facilitating a school-wide
assembly program
Inviting guest speakers from
the local community
Hanging banners throughout
the school
Preparing classroom bulletin
boards with a Black History theme
Overall Student Emphasis
Celebrating African American achievements
should never end once February turns to March. Black History Month, like Native
American History Month (November) and Woman’s History Month (March), is a
unique opportunity to highlight the role played by African Americans in our
national history. As a people “out of many,” African American achievements were
too often glossed over or forgotten in history books and classroom lesson
plans. From Crispus Attucks to
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