The unit is designed to teach fourth and fifth grade accelerated and gifted students in Richmond, Virginia the
struggle that African Americans endured to gain equality. I plan to teach this unit over the course of the year with
the intent of having students invest in their own learning, allowing them to understand how truly fortunate they are
to be the recipients of a free public education. It is essential that the students can connect to the material covered
and not as distant spectators. This is why I have decided to start with a case close to home, Davis v. Prince Edward
County Board of Education; one of the five cases consolidated in the Supreme Court's Brown verdict of 1954. The
students will investigate what led to the student protest at Robert Russa Moton High School and the decision the
Prince Edward Board of Supervisors made in response to the Brown verdict vowing to close the schools rather than
integrate them, from 1959-1964.
The students will study the laws and major Supreme Court decisions that emerged from the Reconstruction Era through
the 1960's. Students will use the constructivist approach to learning by using cognitive terminology such as
analyze, predict, classify, reflect, synthesize. Differentiated instruction will provide avenues for the visual,
auditory, and kinesthetic learners thus engaging all students in meaningful hands-on activities. The unit could
certainly be modified and adapted for use in the upper grades.
(Developed for Gifted and Talented, grades 4-5; recommended for Virginia Studies, grade 4, Language Arts, grades
4-6, and U.S. History, grades 6-7)
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