『Black Massacres: Untold American History-Why?』のカバーアート

Black Massacres: Untold American History-Why?

Black Massacres: Untold American History-Why?

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

"“Avoiding Black massacres fuels campus fragility, deepens division, and blocks the honest dialogue required for real unity and justice, making a mockery of the college mission, vision, and anti‑racism page in courses dealing with race, psychology, education, social work, and other social studies.” Mr. Lucky

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Short Lesson Plan: Truth, Fragility, and Historical Accountability

Lesson Focus:

How “colorblindness,” fragility, and historical denial prevent unity — using Black Massacres = Today’s Unity as the anchor text.

Learning Objective 1

Students will analyze how claims of “colorblindness” function as a form of fragility rather than unity. Example: A student explains how ignoring race on campus erases lived Black experiences and protects the comfort of those who avoid discussing racism.

Learning Objective 2

Students will evaluate why confronting historical events such as Black massacres is essential for genuine unity. Example: A student connects a specific massacre (e.g., Tulsa 1921) to modern conversations about racial justice and community healing.

Learning Outcome 1

Students will be able to explain why “truth is not divisive” using evidence from historical events. Example: A student states, “Discussing the Colfax Massacre doesn’t divide us — it exposes the roots of inequality so we can address it together.”

Learning Outcome 2

Students will compare the ‘stop talking about racism’ mindset to the cancer analogy and articulate why silence is harmful. Example: A student writes, “Ignoring racism is like ignoring cancer — silence allows it to spread.”

Discussion‑Based Assessment

Prompt: In small groups, discuss the following: “How does acknowledging painful historical truths create more unity than pretending we are colorblind?” Students must reference:

  • one massacre from the map,
  • the fragility/colorblindness concept, and
  • the cancer analogy.

The assessment is complete when each student contributes a spoken or written response demonstrating understanding of the lesson’s objectives and outcomes.

To be a guest on this podcast email: radiotalklr@gmail.com

Mr. Lucky — Social Studies Teacher, currently completing my second master’s degree in Urban Education

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