African and African American Curriculum Guidebook DRAFT
African and African American Curriculum Guidebook DRAFT
African and African American Curriculum Guidebook DRAFT
Curriculum
Guide
for the
Infusion of
African and
African-American
History and
Culture
An Initiative of the Fort Worth
Independent School District and its
Stakeholders
(last updated June 2019)
STILL. (2018)
Vision
Preparing students for college, career and community leadership through learning about the
individual histories and cultures of people represented in the FWISD community. Going into the
future this curriculum supports:
● Leading innovative experiences that develop students understanding about history, race,
culture and identity;
● Empowering stakeholders to forge bridges between district and community about history,
race, culture and identity;
● Encouraging students to value unity in the midst of their diverse cultures and histories;
● Sparking life-long understanding about the ways history and culture can serve as a source of
individual pride, self-confidence, and respect for the dignity of people from all racial and
ethnic backgrounds;
● Empowering students to be centered in their own culture and authors of their personal
narrative;
● Creating conditions that afford students the opportunity to explore their own story with a
freedom to be their authentic selves.
Mission
This document lives to create equity within the curriculum by providing multiple historical and
cultural narratives that enhance students understanding of themselves and fostering authentic
relationships grounded in mutual understanding.
Table of Contents
1. Acknowledgements
2. Overview
3. Overarching Understandings and Overarching Questions
4. Guiding Themes of the African and African-American History Curriculum
5. Narrative Essay (under construction)
6. K-12 Implementation – Core course infusion with depth through electives
7. Content Maps by Grade Level
a. Kinder - 12
b. Elective courses
8. African and African-American History Resource List K-12
a. Titles in campus libraries
b. Local Resources
9. Learning Experience Opportunities Beyond the Classroom (Under construction)
a. Field Trips
b. Local and Regional Resources
c. FWISD Elementary History Fair
d. State and National History Day
10. Black History Month Ideas and Resources
Acknowledgements
With any undertaking of this scope and magnitude there is an indebtedness owed those sincere
and dedicated individuals whose support made it possible. Indeed, many people assisted in
preparing this curriculum guidebook. Their commitment, expertise, and passion in developing this
curriculum is greatly appreciated.
African and African and American History and Culture Curriculum Writing Team
Joseph Niedziela
Director of Social Studies
Xavier Pantoja
Core Curriculum & Innovation Coordinator –
High School
Overview
FWISD’s mission is to “Prepare ALL students for success in college, career, and community
leadership”. Being prepared for success means a FWISD graduate should independently be able
to articulate ideas and exhibit behaviors that cultivate teamwork, critical thought, and
communication skills needed to function in a culturally diverse workforce and global community.
The overlay curriculum sets the narrative, understandings and questions to guide the infusion of
African and African-American history and culture into the core curricula across grade level and
courses beyond what is defined in the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS). A living
document, this curriculum remains a work in progress. It will evolve in response to future TEKS
iterations and, until then, be improved upon to best serve the FWISD learning community.
What is an ‘Overlay’ curriculum?
An overlay curriculum serves as a support and guidance document for curriculum writers,
teachers, administrators and anyone else who is interested in knowing what FWISD students are
learning about African and African-American history and culture. It does not take the place of the
core district curriculum, nor is it a separate unit of instruction. Rather, the overlay curriculum
informs what’s written into the core curriculum just as grade/level course TEKS are used. See
Figure 1 for additional information.
Figure 1
An enduring understanding is a “big idea” that gets to the core of content. It’s what we want
students to remember after they have forgotten many of the details. An enduring understanding
provides the larger purpose for the learned content, having enduring value beyond the classroom.
It answers the question, “Why is this topic worth studying?” It goes beyond discreet facts and is
transferable to situations beyond the content.
An essential question is a “big idea” question that shapes the materials and activities that will guide
student thinking and inquiry into theme related content. Essential questions probe the deepest
issues confronting us, complex and baffling matters that elude simple answers, issues such as
courage, leadership, identity, relationships, justice, conflict, or prejudice. They are open-ended and
are framed to provoke and sustain student interest.
Overarching Components
Overarching understandings and questions organize the curriculum at a macro-level. They serve
an aspirational purpose as well as a guide for how the content themes are infused. They represent
conceptual takeaways students will have as a result of their K-12 social studies experience in
FWISD schools.
● the study of African and African-American ● Why study African and African-American
history and culture, and the heritage of others, history and culture?
can serve as a source of individual pride, self-
confidence, and respect for the dignity of people ● How can I remain authentic in my own cultural
from all racial and ethnic backgrounds; identity while I learn about cultures that are
different from my mine?
● since the dawn of civilization in Ancient Africa,
African and African-American contributions to ● How do I use my ability to critically think when
the world have been instrumental to furthering learning to understand cultures different from
my own?
human progress;
● the philosophies, principles, customs, and ● How is each of us connected to the past? How
beliefs that permeate the African and African- has history influenced who each of us is today?
American experience are rooted in Africa and
have been enormously influential in shaping ● How have the contributions of Africans and
societies of the African diaspora as a whole; African-Americans throughout history improved
the political, economic, and social development
● single narratives of history are incomplete and of humanity?
often lead to misconceptions. Challenging them
● Why has the history of African and African-
with accurate and well-substantiated claims can
American and their contributions to the world
be a powerful means of contributing to a been underrepresented in the mainstream
healthier democracy; narratives of world and U.S. history?
● the African diaspora represents a large part of ● What is the African and African-American
the human population and their activities add up experience in the world and why is it
to a large part of human history; significant?
● African history is world history; ● How will the narrative of African and African-
American history and culture change in the
● African-American history is American history; future?
Resources from the African and African-American History and Culture Learning Series
Broad topics:
African Explorers and the African Presence in the Americas before the Slave Trade
The Trans-Saharan Slave Trade
Mechanisms that Drove the Atlantic Slave Trade in Africa and in the Western Hemisphere
(e.g. the trade for guns, alcohol, textiles, sugar, rice, tobacco, indigo, as well as intertribal
warfare).
The Slavery in Africa vs. Race-based Slavery
Role of Europeans and Africans in the Slave Trade
The Middle Passage
Tribal National Conflict
Slavery in North America and South America
African prescience in the World
African Resistance to Slavery
Resources from the African and African-American History and Culture Learning Series
AAAHC Series – Theme 2 - Power Point Presentation
List of sources for further study and documents for infusion
Broad topics:
The Development of Race-Based Slavery
The African Presence in New Spain
The African Presence in New France
The African Presence in the English Colonies - origins of North American slavery, differences
of the African- American Experience in the Northern, Middle, and Southern Colonies
The Experience of Enslaved African Americans in the Antebellum United States.
The Significance and the Impact of Cotton
The Experience of Free African Americans and the Origins and Development of
African-American Institutions (churches, schools, civic and fraternal organizations)
The Experience of African Americans in the American Revolution
The Significance and the Impact of the Haitian Revolution
The Maroon Experience
● enslaved and free people of African descent ● How would the New France, New Spain, and
had a profound impact on the economic, English colonies have developed without the
political, and intellectual development of New contributions made by enslaved and free
France, New Spain and the English Colonies; people of African descent?
● the experience of slavery varied depending on ● How did adult slaves prepare their children for
time, location, crop, labor performed, size of the challenges of a life of slavery?
slaveholding and gender;
● How did the decline of indentured servitude
● Bacon’s Rebellion led to the reliance on contribute to the rise of black slavery in North
enslaved black laborers across North America; America?
● African-Americans fought in the American ● Why was Bacon’s Rebellion such an important
Revolution in support of both sides; turning point in the history of slavery in North
America?
● free African-Americans organized schools,
churches and other major institutions that ● What did the fight for American Independence
sought to define their identity and to establish a mean for African-Americans?
secure foundation for their communities;
● What steps did African Americans take to
● free African-Americans, along with allies, led assert their right to freedom during the
abolition and religious based efforts to reform revolutionary period?
American society during the colonial and
Antebellum periods; ● How was autonomy exercised through
community by antebellum African Americans?
● slavery was the central cause of the sectional
● How did enslaved African Americans construct
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Resources from the African and African-American History and Culture Learning Series
AAAHC Series – Theme 3 - Power Point Presentation
List of sources for further study and documents for infusion
Broad topics:
African Americans, the Civil War, and Emancipation
“Black Reconstruction”
The Development of African-American Institutions (churches, schools, businesses) and
Communities
The Participation of African Americans in World Wars I and II
The Emergence of Jim Crow Segregation and Political Disfranchisement
The Nadir of Race Relations (lynchings, race riots, and the defamation of African-American culture
and humanity)
The Two Great Migrations
● slavery was the central cause of the American ● How did a war to save the Union lead to the
Civil War; end of slavery in the United States?
● African Americans played a prominent role in the ● Did the Emancipation Proclamation make the
war that ended slavery in the United States; 13th Amendment inevitable?
● African American participation in government ● How did free blacks respond to the outbreak of
during Reconstruction helped to democratize the Civil War?
former Confederate states;
● What was the experience of black troops and
● successes and failures of Reconstruction have civilians during the Civil War?
played a pivotal role in shaping contemporary
● How did black Americans express themselves
race relations;
politically during Reconstruction?
● the post-Reconstruction period in the South, ● What was the Freedman’s Bureau and how
which witnessed the rise of Jim Crow, marked a
effective was it?
time when American race relations are thought to
have reached their nadir, with whites pursuing a ● Why are the post-Reconstruction years
counter revolution to reassert hegemony and considered the nadir of race relations in
deny African Americans the citizenship rights that American history? How did African Americans
they had gained through the 14th and 15th respond?
Amendments;
● Should African Americans have more strongly
● African Americans developed three essential resisted the government’s decision to abandon
responses and approaches to cope with the rising the drive for equality? (Booker T. Washington’s
tide of disfranchisement, lynchings, segregation “accommodation” v. W.E.B. Du Bois’s
and racial violence during the Jim Crow Era: “agitation” approaches)
* migration from the South to the West and ● What is the ongoing importance of the black
Northern cities and emigration to countries church to black community life?
throughout the African diaspora;
* development and expansion of their own ● How did racial relations at home affect the
communities that fostered successful businesses military experiences of African Americans
and African-American institutions; fighting overseas?
● while all Americans coped with the overwhelming ● Why did African Americans answer the call to
challenges that the 1930s and 40s economy serve the country despite inequalities at home
presented, African Americans faced an additional and in the military?
hardship, oppressive segregation;
● What were major achievements by African-
● African Americans made significant sacrifices by Americans who served in the military?
volunteering to fight for the United States in the
Spanish-American War, World War I, World War
II and the Korean War in spite of institutional
segregation and discrimination.
Resources from the African and African-American History and Culture Learning Series
AAAHC Series – Theme 4 - Power Point Presentation
List of sources for further study and documents for infusion
Broad topics:
Liberty, Equality, and the US Constitution
Resistance to Slavery
Colonial and Antebellum Slave Rebellions (Stono, Gabriel Prosser, Denmark Vesey and Nat Turner)
The Abolitionist Movement
The Civil Rights Movement
Supreme Court Cases from Dred Scott to Brown (the NAACP and the Courts)
Civil Disorders
The Black Power Movement
The Anticolonial Movement in Africa
● the struggle for freedom, justice and equality ● Does the civil rights movement begin with Brown v.
has been America’s longest movement; Board of Education (1954) and end in the Voting
Rights Act of 1965?
● the rise of liberty and equality as values in
America had been accompanied by the rise of
● How could a people found a nation based on a
slavery;
dedication to human liberty and dignity while at the
same time develop and maintain a government
● protections for slavery and discrimination were
and system of labor that denied human liberty and
embedded in the founding documents and
dignity to so many people?
reinforced at various points in United States
history by federal government and Supreme
● Why did the Founders find it necessary to provide
Court actions;
protections for slavery in the US Constitution?
● enslaved women and men organized
● How have Supreme Court rulings impacted the
resistance to and rebelled against the efforts of
African-American struggle for freedom, justice and
their enslavers in both revolutionary and
equality?
everyday ways;
● How did a system of segregation perpetuate
● the abolition of slavery initiated a continuing racism and discrimination?
struggle by African Americans for civil rights,
political participation, economic opportunity, ● How did slave revolts, the work of black
and social equality; abolitionists, and other acts of resistance shape
the debate over slavery prior to the Civil War?
● African Americans fought wars for democracy
● In a nation where “all men are created equal,” why
abroad and then returned having to engage in
do individuals and groups force segregation on
the ongoing struggle for rights of human
others?
equality and dignity at home;
● Do changes in laws change people’s attitudes?
● embodied by the courageous acts of ● Why did people risk their lives to participate in the
individuals working in community, African movement for freedom, justice, and equality?
Americans combatted racism and affirmed their
constitutional rights through political ● How have individuals and organizations furthered
organization, non-violent protest, and the the African American movement for freedom,
judicial process; justice and equality?
● the Black Power Movement grew out of ● How have ideas such as Black Power, Black
frustration with the slow pace of change and Nationalism and Pan Africanism influenced the
the ferocity of the backlash against civil rights movement for freedom, justice, and equality?
gains made between the 1940s and early ● How have people used strategies from the civil
1960s; rights movement, such as non-violent protest, as a
● sparked by growing unrest with economic and way to bring about change?
social disparities, civil disorders of the 1960s ● How is the struggle for rights in America related to
highlighted the need to improve living struggles for rights worldwide?
conditions in cities and coincided with the mass
movement of whites from urban centers to ● What work remains to be done in the effort to
surrounding suburbs; create a just and equitable society?
Resources from the African and African-American History and Culture Learning Series
AAAHC Series – Theme 5 - Power Point Presentation
List of sources for further study and documents for infusion
Broad topics:
The Impact of Reaganomics
The Emergence of Hip Hop
The Emergence of Afrocentricity
The Stop the Violence Movement
The War on Drugs
The Emergence of African-American Conservatives
White Backlash
Mass Incarceration
Black Identity in the 21st Century
despite major advances since the civil rights ● Has racial equality and harmony been achieved at
era of 1950s and 60s, black Americans the start of the twenty-first century?
proportionately still face greater economic
and professional obstacles than white ● How much progress have African Americans made
Americans; in closing social and economic gaps since the
1960s?
Black conservatives have proposed
alternative solutions to the struggle by African ● What is ‘Afrocentricity’ and how does it shape the
Americans for freedom, justice, and equality. way history is told?
the Afrocentric perspective is an alternative ● What role has race played in contemporary
to the Eurocentric viewpoint that has American politics?
dominated American life and culture;
● What solutions did African-American conservatives
much of the hip-hop culture has been
propose to end segregation and discrimination?
expressed through a constellation of
mediums which has served to inform and
inspire the public; ● How did rap music become part of international
popular culture?
the War on Drugs and Mass Incarceration
has had disproportionate impact on the ● Why did the ‘War on Drugs’ disproportionately
African American community; impact African Americans?
Black Lives Matter emerged from the long ● Why do white and black perceptions of police
history of police abuse and police brutality in brutality often differ?
the African-American community.
African-American voting rights have been ● What does it mean to be African American in the
under attack since the late 19th century’s poll 21st century?
taxes, white primaries, grandfather clauses,
Resources from the African and African-American History and Culture Learning Series
AAAHC Series – Theme 6 - Power Point Presentation
List of sources for further study and documents for infusion
Theme 7 - Impact of African Americans on the Arts, Culture, Business, Science, Technology
and Health
This theme focuses on the African-American contributions to all aspects of society and culture from
“slave songs” to popular music and dance and science and technology. It addresses Dr. W. E. B.
DuBois’s observation in 1903: “Would America be America without her Negro people?”
Broad topics:
Roots and Influence of African-American Culture
The Impact of “Slave Culture” on antebellum American society
The Contributions of African Americans to “American” cuisine, arts, music, literature, and popular
culture
Inventions by African Americans
The Harlem Renaissance
The Contributions of African Americans to American Sports
The Contributions of African Americans to business, science, health and technology
The Black Arts Movement of the 1960s
● peoples of Africa who were captured and ● What are the customs, traditions, values, and
enslaved brought to the Atlantic World their food beliefs of African-American culture and what are
ways, religious practices, agricultural techniques, there were they formed?
artistic and musical traditions, and added words
to the English language such as “goober,” “tote,” ● How African was colonial and antebellum
and “banjo.” culture?
● enslaved and free people of African descent
drew upon cultural tradition and interactions with ● What are the influences of African-American
their surroundings to forge a new African- culture on broader American culture?
American culture that continues to shape society International culture?
today;
● How did social, economic, and political conditions
● through the many artists, musicians and writers, stimulate the three Renaissances of the 20th
the Harlem and Chicago Renaissances were a century?
flowering of cultural creativity and expression;
● How did rap music become a part of international
● throughout history, African Americans have used popular culture?
public platforms for the benefit of their race;
● What has been the impact of the Black Power,
● despite the barricade of slavery and then racism, Black Nationalist and Pan African movements on
black Americans have established and black artistic expression?
maintained thriving businesses;
● What role can artistic expression play in a
● contributions of African Americans to American movement for social change?
sports have often been tied to political
movements; ● When a person has a public platform, what is
their responsibility to society?
● throughout history, African American writers,
● How has a modern black culture developed as a
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artists, musicians, filmmakers and designers form of popular expression in United States?
have played a greatly influential role in shaping
U.S. culture as wells as cultures around the ● How have African American contributions to
world; politics, academics, business, health, science,
innovation, sports and other areas impacted
● African Americans have achieved prominence in society over time?
every conceivable professional field of endeavor,
from politics, business, and sports, to health,
sciences and education.
Resources from the African and African-American History and Culture Learning Series
AAAHC Series – Theme 7 - Power Point Presentation
List of sources for further study and documents for infusion
Introductory Essay
Written by
W. MARVIN DULANEY, PhD.
Introductory Essay
Pre-Colonial Africa
Africans built civilizations throughout the continent of Africa. But most of the Africans who were the
ancestors of African Americans came from West Africa. Prior to the slave trade and the penetration
of Africa by Arabs and Europeans, three kingdoms dominated West Africa: Ghana (300-1076
a.c.e,) Mali (ca. 700-1450 a.c.e), and Songhay (1464-1700 a.c.e). These West African kingdoms
were highly sophisticated societies that were based on trade and hierarchal social systems.
Ghana, the earliest West African kingdom was ruled by the Sossi or Sosse people and it controlled
and dominated the gold and salt trades in the West African Sudan. The Ghanians traded gold,
ivory and salt with other Africans kingdoms and Arabs for weapons, enslaved people and other
goods. The kingdom’s most important ruler was King Tenkamenin (1062-1076) who was described
by Arab travelers to Ghana as a leader who held court for his people in order to resolve disputes
and to provide them justice.
As Ghana declined, the kingdom of Mali supplanted it as the most important kingdom in West
Africa. Mali’s first leader Sundiata Keita (1217-1255) conquered Ghana in 1240 and established
the Keita dynasty which ruled Mali for over 200 years. Under his leadership Mali expanded its
borders, assumed control of the gold trade, and joined with twelve other kingdoms to form an
empire. Sundiata’s successors continued to expand Mali’s borders and some of them converted to
Islam. Most notably, Mansa Kankan Musa (1280-1337) became the first ruler of Mali to make the
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Women were important in Africa because they controlled agricultural production, while men
hunted. Africans practiced polygamy and polyandry. Many African communities were matrilineal,
which highlighted the importance of women in traditional African communities. While many African
communities are called “tribes,” such a designation is a misnomer for some of the larger “ethnic”
groups such as the Ibos. Hausas, Fulani, Mandinke, Sisse, and Yoruba. Usually, these groups can
trace their lineage and heritage back to a single progenitor.
Students will understand the unique African cultural heritage of African Americans. They will
understand African communal practices such as rites of passage, matrilineal societies, the
importance of clans, and communal “modes of production.”
slave trade consisted of Ibos, Hausas, the Fulani, the Kongolese, the Bantus, the Matebele and
other groups primarily from the West and Southwest coasts of Africa.
The peoples of Africa who were captured and brought to the Americas influenced the cultural
development of every geographic area in which they were enslaved. They brought to the Americas
their foodways, religious practices, agricultural techniques, artistic and musical traditions, and
added words to the English language such as “goober,” “tote,” and “banjo.” More importantly, they
brought their labor for the gold and silver mines of Central and South America, and their
knowledge of the cultivation of staples such as sugar and rice that made the islands of the
Caribbean and the colonies of British North America profitable. As several historians have
concluded, the exploitation of African labor made European settlement in the Western Hemisphere
profitable and it spurred the development of a worldwide capitalist economy.
The transatlantic slave trade was one of the most profitable enterprises in human history. Slave
traders in the countries that participated in the trade typically made a profit of 30-300% on the
trade in human beings. As Eric Williams
has noted, the trade specifically funded
the development of capitalism in the
Atlantic World because it was not just an
enterprise carried out by individuals in
Europe, Africa, and the European
colonies in the Western Hemisphere; it
was also an international enterprise that
supported, banking, insurance,
shipbuilding, and iron works in places
such as Lisbon, Portugal, Liverpool and
Bristol, England and Newport, Rhode
Island.
The transatlantic slave trade also had
tragic and devastating human
consequences. It turned human beings
into commodities. It destroyed villages
and communities and depopulated large
areas in West and Southwest Africa. It
upset the peaceful coexistence among the
various ethnic and tribal groups in Africa.
As Walter Rodney has argued, the slave
trade began the process of underdeveloping Africa. Finally, the slave trade’s most devastated
impact was that it tied a person’s status as a human being to skin color and set in motion the
racism that justified both the slave trade and the enslavement of Africans over 500 years. In
addition, the racism spawned by the slave trade and slavery has influenced the treatment of
Africans and their descendants worldwide for the past 500 years.
It was also in the southern colonies that the seeds of African-American culture emerged. In the
areas of the Lowcountry of South Carolina and Georgia where African outnumbered whites, they
retained much of their African cultural heritage. They practiced polygamy and other African
traditions before they adopted the religion of Christianity. Even after their adoption of the Christian
religion, they practiced an “Africanized” version of the religion. Their religious practices reflected
the emotionalism and circle tradition practiced by Africans in West and Central Africa. The “ring
shout,” practiced by enslaved Africans in the Carolinas, was an example of how Africans melded
their African cultural heritage with Christian rituals. Similarly, Africans in the Carolinas developed
the Gullah language as a syncretic language that combined English and various African dialects.
Africans also played an important role in the American Revolution. They were a symbol of the
“enslavement” that American patriots claimed that they experienced under British colonial rule.
They were also a part of the large underclass that the American white planter and commercial elite
exploited and wanted to continue to exploit even after independence. Both the Americans and the
British appealed to enslaved Africans to support their cause. In 1775, the British Royal Governor of
Virginia Lord Dunmore issued the first appeal to enslaved Africans that he would grant them
freedom if they fought for the British Army. (See “Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation”) Approximately
500 Africans joined Lord Dunmore’s Ethiopian Regiment. Lord Dunmore’s appeal forced George
Washington to reverse his order prohibiting enslaved Africans from fighting for the Continental
Army formed by the American colonists. Nevertheless, more Africans became Loyalists and fought
for the British than for the Americans. Only 5,000 Africans fought with the Americans; while over
20,000 Africans fought with the British.
A number of Africans distinguished themselves in the struggle for American independence.
Ironically, the first person to die for the cause of independence was Crispus Attucks, a fugitive from
slavery from Framingham, Massachusetts. Attucks was one of the five persons killed while
attacking British soldiers on March 5, 1770 at what was called the “Boston Massacre.” Other
Africans such as Peter Salem, Salem Poor, Prince Whipple, Prince Hall and James Armstead,
fought for the American side and participated in battles such as Bunker Hill, Saratoga and Long
Island. African Americans were especially important in the “southern campaign” that the British
Army started in 1781. The strategy was to arm enslaved Africans in the South and to employ them
against their former owners in such a manner that it would terrorize the southern colonies and
cause them to pull out of the war. For a short period in 1780-1781, the strategy worked, and
1,000s of enslaved Africans ran away from plantations in the Carolinas and Georgia to join British
forces. Those who joined the British forces were listed in the “Book of Negroes” and at the end of
war, some 20,000 of them were evacuated from the American colonies to Nova Scotia and
eventually to the nation of Sierra Leone in Africa.
By 1790 and the first Census of the United States, approximately 750,000 Africans lived in the
thirteen states that made up the new nation. African Americans were approximately 19% of the
population of the United States, and all but 59,000 were enslaved. Most continued to live in the
southern states where they worked on tobacco, sugar, rice and eventually, cotton plantations.
Indeed, after some discussion of abolishing slavery at the constitutional convention in Philadelphia
in 1787, the Founding Fathers wrote a Constitution that recognized slavery and provided for its
protection. The United States Constitution addressed the enslavement of Africans in three sections.
Slavery and the U.S. Constitution
Article I, Section 2: Representatives and direct Taxes shall be apportioned among the several
States which may be included within the Union, according to their respective Numbers, which shall
be determined by adding to the whole Number of free Persons, including those bound to Service
for a Term of Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three-fifths of all other persons. (Three-fifths
clause or compromise))
Article I, Section 9: The migration or Importation of such persons as any of the States now existing
shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by the Congress prior to the Year one thousand
eight hundred and eight, but a Tax or duty may be imposed on such Importation, not exceeding ten
dollars. (End of the slave trade clause)
Article IV, Section 2: No Person held to service or Labour in one State, under Laws thereof,
escaping into another, shall in Consequence or Regulation therein, be discharged from such
service or labour, but shall be delivered up on Claim of the Party to whom such Service or Labour
may be due. (Fugitive slave clause)
Although the Constitution recognized and defended the enslavement of African Americans, as a
result of the American Revolution slavery became an institution that was primarily based in the
South. By 1800 the legislatures in all of the northern states had enacted laws to emancipate and
manumit enslaved African Americans immediately or over a set period of time or when they
became adults and capable of taking care of themselves.
Some African Americans living in the Revolutionary era were able to begin to live normal lives
without the threat of enslavement. The lives of Phyllis Wheatley, the first African-American poet;
Benjamin Banneker, the African-American mathematician and scientist who built a working
wooden clock and helped to design the layout of Washington, D.C.; and Jean Pointe Baptiste
DuSable, the African-American pioneer and entrepreneur who founded the settlement that became
the city of Chicago, exemplify the achievements of African Americans in this era.
Year # Enslaved #Free Blacks Total Black % Free Blacks Total US Pop. % Black
While the Black or Slave codes attempted to constrain African-American behavior and life in
antebellum America, an emerging and growing population of free African Americans developed
institutions and fought against slavery. As noted above, in 1790, only 59,000 free African
Americans in the United States were free. By 1860, the population had risen to 488,000. In the
antebellum period of American history free African Americans organized churches (AME and
AMEZ), built schools, and started social and fraternal associations (Prince Hall Masonic Lodge and
Eastern Star). Despite restrictions on their rights that limited where they could live and work, that
denied them the right to vote, and that criminalized them and punished for crimes with re-
enslavement, they sought to build healthy families and communities. Many of them participated in
the abolitionist movement and fought for full citizenship rights even after the 1857 Dred Scott
decision that declared that they were not American citizens and had “no rights that the white man
was bound to respect.” The antebellum movement of African Americans to defend their rights and
to establish their identity as free citizens helped to establish the foundation for the modern civil
rights movement.
While free African Americans in the antebellum era sought to establish families and institutions to
sustain themselves, those who were still enslaved faced one of the harshest and unforgiving slave
systems known to humankind.
Students will understand the lives of noted African-American abolitionists such as Frederick
Douglass and Francis E. W. Harper; and the diversity of the lives of free African Americans such
as William Leidesdorff, who served as a city councilman in San Francisco, and James Beckwourth,
the pioneer “mountain man” who discovered “Beckwourth’s Pass” in the Sierra Nevada Mountains
in California. Students will also learn about the lives of African-American inventor Norbert Rillieux
and sculptor Edmonia Lewis, whose lives contradicted the predominant viewpoint that people of
African descent could only be slaves. Rillieux invented a process to refine sugar and Lewis was
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
34
state judicial system; a state hospital; and a civil rights bill that guaranteed equal access for African
Americans to places of public entertainment. They also renovated many of the state’s public
buildings. Overall, they tried to change race relations in the state of Mississippi and to make it a
more open community for everyone.
But these efforts by the Mississippi state legislature were short-lived. Even though the state sent
three very prominent and progressive African Americans to the United States Congress who
represented the state with dignity, the very presence of African-American Senators Hiram Rhodes
Revels and Blanche K. Bruce and Congressman John Roy Lynch was an affront to the majority of
the state’s white citizens. To overthrow Republican rule, and more specifically “Negro rule,”
Mississippi Democrats began a campaign of terror in 1875 to end Reconstruction in the state and
to “redeem” it from the Republicans. Led by a terrorist group called the “Knights of the White
Camelia,” Democrats assassinated black and white Republican office holders, stuffed ballot boxes,
used economic intimidation, and literally stopped Republicans from voting in the election of 1875.
White Democrats regained control of the state legislature and proceeded to end Reconstruction.
During the presidential election of 1876, the extralegal and violent actions carried out in Mississippi
were repeated in the three southern states that still had Republican-controlled state governments:
South Carolina, Louisiana and Florida. Despite the violence and political turmoil during the
election, and unlike Mississippi in 1875, neither party could declare a clear victory. Two sets of the
presidential election returns were submitted by the three states to Congress. Both the Democrats
and the Republicans claimed that their presidential candidate had won the electoral votes for the
three states. After appointing a bipartisan commission consisting of five Democrats and six
Republicans, one of whom refused to vote to determine whether Republican Rutherford B. Hayes
or Democrat Samuel J. Tilden had won the election, the two parties decided on a compromise—
the infamous Compromise of 1877. The Democrats conceded the election to the Republicans and
allowed Hayes become president. For this concession, Hayes agreed to take three actions: 1.
appoint a Democrat to his cabinet; 2. support economic development in the South; and 3. remove
the remaining federal troops from the southern states that protected black and white Republican
voters.
The Republicans agreed to the Compromise of 1877 and conceded electoral politics in the South
to the Democrats. After Hayes was inaugurated as pres1dent, he removed the remaining federal
troops from the southern states and effectively ended Reconstruction.
African Americans and the Emergence of Segregation and Jim Crow (1877-1919)
With the end of Reconstruction and the Compromise of 1877, the removal of federal troops from
the South allowed white Democrats and former Confederates to regain power over all of the state
governments in the South. A violent counter revolution began that denied African Americans the
citizenship rights that they had gained through the 14 th and 15th Amendments. With the tacit
approval of white northerners and the federal government, white southerners carried out a
campaign of terror to disfranchise African Americans, to deny them equal opportunity in all aspects
of life and to make them literally, second class citizens. In a series of United States Supreme Court
decisions that culminated with the Plessy v Ferguson decision in 1896, the southern states
implemented racist, “separate but equal” laws that segregated African Americans from whites in all
aspects of life. The southern states also revised their state constitutions to create an apartheid
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
38
system that effectively segregated and disfranchised African Americans from the cradle to the
grave in housing, employment, public facilities, education, and in all areas of public life. In addition,
all of the southern states used their criminal justice systems to arrest and incarcerate African
Americans on questionable charges and then to hire them out to plantation owners and private
companies in a convict lease system that made money for the states. The sharecropping and
tenant farming systems also tied African Americans to farms and landowners in the South with
virtually no relief. A brutal peonage system emerged in the South to replace plantation slavery.
The implementation of segregation and Jim Crow laws in the late nineteenth century was
accompanied by a campaign of violence and terror. Any African American who challenged the
racial status quo in the South and virtually anywhere in the country was subjected to mob violence
and police brutality. Between 1880 and 1950, over 4,000 African Americans were lynched primarily
in the South, but also in northern states such as Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Race riots, which
consisted of violent and bloody pogroms, were carried out against the African-American
communities, North and South, when whites felt the need to punish all African Americans for the
criminal act of one member of the community, or when African Americans challenged whites for
jobs, neighborhoods, or political power. Whites carried out race riots in cities as diverse Chicago,
Atlanta, Springfield, Ohio, Wilmington, North Carolina, and Greenwood, Oklahoma.
Whites also attacked the culture and identity of African Americans by promoting lurid and
demeaning stereotypes about them. In books, newspaper articles, magazines, advertisements,
and in popular music and art, African Americans were portrayed as “coons,” “darkies,” “tragic
mulattoes,” and as other stereotypical figures. Historians, anthropologists, theologians and
sociologists maintained that people of African descent had no history, no souls and had never
created a civilization of any kind. Books such as The Negro Is a Beast by Charles Carroll and The
Klansman by Thomas Dixon (which was made into the film “The Birth of A Nation” by D. W. Griffith
in 1915) portrayed African Americans as irredeemable brutes and as persons who would destroy
western civilization if they were allowed free rein to integrate with white Americans. All of these
images, caricatures and stereotypes justified segregation, discrimination and the violent actions by
whites against African Americans.
Students will learn about this period in African-American history by examining the lives of Booker
T. Washington and Ida B. Wells, two African Americans who took two different approaches to the
disfranchisement, lynchings, race riots, and general terrorism that African Americans faced in this
period. While Booker T. Washington founded Tuskegee Institute in Alabama and encouraged
African Americans to “accommodate”
white racism and white supremacy,
Ida Wells fought against segregation,
white racism, and led the nation’s first
antilynching campaign. This part of the
curriculum will also cover the role of
the buffalo soldiers in the pacification
of the American West and the
outstanding careers of poet and writer
Paul Laurence Dunbar and inventors
Elijah McCoy (the “real McCoy) and
Jan Matzeliger. The outstanding
achievements of both men challenged
the late nineteenth century notion that
African Americans were intellectually
inferior and not capable of assimilating
into American society.
the development of their own communities that fostered businesses and other African-
American institutions.
Starting as early as 1879, African Americans migrated first to the urban areas of the South, then to
the West, and finally to northern cities such as Chicago, Philadelphia, New York City and Detroit.
The first major African-American migration occurred in 1879 when 20,000 African Americans,
called the “Exodusters,” migrated west to Oklahoma and Kansas. They founded all-black towns
such as Boley, Oklahoma, Nicodemus, Kansas, and Kendleton, Texas. Subsequently, more
African Americans moved west to found towns such as Allensworth, California, named for Colonel
Allen Allensworth of the 10th Calvary of the “buffalo soldiers.” The biggest migration of African
Americans occurred during World War I when approximately 1,000,000 African Americans left the
South because of the racial violence, lack of opportunity, and the negative economic impact of the
boll weevil to settle in northern cities such as Detroit, Chicago and New York City. They were also
encouraged by the Chicago Defender newspaper, founded in 1905 by Robert S. Abbott, to migrate
to find better-paying jobs in the stockyards of Chicago, the auto factories of Detroit, and the
defense industries in other northern American cities during World War I.
This first migration began the gradual urbanization of African Americans. It also led to the creation
of distinct African-American communities such as Chicago’s Southside; East Cleveland, Ohio; the
Hill District in Pittsburgh; the American Addition in Columbus, Ohio; and eventually, Harlem in New
York City. Concurrently, African-American businesses developed to serve the specific needs of
African-American migrants that segregation denied them. African Americans also developed
business districts in cities such as Durham, North Carolina and the Greenwood section of Tulsa,
Oklahoma. These districts provided a variety of services such as grocery stores, funeral services,
dry cleaning, accident and life insurance, and barber and beauty shops Two African Americans
started banks: Maggie Lena Walker, the first African-American bank president, organized the
Consolidated Bank and Trust Company in Richmond and Jesse Binga founded Binga State Bank
in Chicago.
While African Americans migrated to northern and western cities during World War I in search of
better opportunities for jobs and living conditions, they did not find many opportunities in the
American military. When the United States entered the war it was forced to expand its military in
order to increase the troop strength needed to assist its allies. From 1866 to 1917, African
Americans were allowed to serve in only four segregated, army regiments, the 24 th and 25th
Infantry regiments and the 9 th and 10th Calvary regiments. These were the historic, highly
acclaimed “Buffalo Soldier” regiments. When the United States military drafted African Americans
to serve in World War I, four new, segregated units were created—the 368th , 369th, 371st and 372nd
Army units. All of the units were assigned white officers. When they were deployed to Europe to
fight, they usually fought with soldiers from the French and British armies. African American
soldiers fought with valor and served their country well. The 369 th (called the “Harlem Hellfighters”)
and three individual African Americans, Lieutenant Colonel Otis Duncan, Sergeant Henry Johnson,
and Private Needham Roberts earned the French Croix de Guerre, France’s highest military honor
for their distinguished service.
The French recognition of the valor of African-American soldiers reflected the French decision to
treat them as equals and fairly based on their performance. This treatment caused concern among
the American military command because it did not consider African Americans to be equal to or as
good as white soldiers and treated them accordingly by assigning them to labor details and to
other duties that disrespected them as soldiers. In fact, in May 1919 W. E. B. DuBois published a
“Secret Memo” from United States State Department urging French army officials not to treat
African-American soldiers as equals because it would disturb race relations in the United States if
they returned with ideas that they were equal to whites. The memo also encouraged the French
government not to allow the soldiers to have too much contact and familiarity with French
citizens—especially French women.
The fears of the United States government officials were justified when the war ended. African
American and white soldiers fought each other in the streets of French cities when black and white
regiments encountered each other in social gatherings. The frequency of such racial clashes
forced the United State military to withdraw all African-American army regiments from France
earlier than the rest of the AEF and to send them home. But not before dispatching Robert R.
Moton, the principal Tuskegee Institute, to speak to the soldiers that when they returned home,
they would have to continue to accept segregation and second class citizenship. But the soldiers
who had fought “to save the world for democracy” in France and Germany did not accept Moton’s
pleas. They adopted the stance of “we return fighting” and they no longer accepted the idea that
African Americans had to accept a position of inferiority in American society. The “Red Summer of
1919” was the result and there were racial disturbances and riots in thirty American cities. At least
thirteen African-American veterans were among the seventy-seven people who were lynched by
whites in 1919.
Students will learn about this period in several ways. They will learn about the nascent civil rights
movement through the lives of Ida B. Wells, W. E. B. DuBois, and James Weldon Johnson, who
were some of the founders and early leaders of the Niagara Movement (1905) and the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). They will learn about how the
NAACP began efforts to win citizenship rights for African Americans through courts cases such as
Guinn v. U.S. (1915) and Buchanan v. Warley (1917), and by urging the United States Congress to
pass the Dyer Antilynching bill. They will examine the emergence of African-American artists and
musicians in this period such as Henry O. Tanner, Scott Joplin, and James P. Johnson. They will
also learn about the contributions of African-American athletes and pioneers, such as cyclist Major
Taylor, jockey Isaac Murphy, boxer Jack Johnson, scientist Lewis Latimer (who developed the
filament for the light bulb), and Matthew Henson, who discovered the North Pole. All of these
individuals made major contributions to American society in spite of the racism and discrimination
that they faced during this period of American history.
view images and listen to the audio and video recordings which will help them understand how
African Americans emerged as the leaders in the development of the major genres of American
music such as jazz, blues, gospel and modern rhythm and blues.
husband. She not only spoke out against racism and discrimination against African Americans, she
also made it possible for soloist Marian Anderson to hold a concert at the Lincoln Memorial in
Washington, D.C., after Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), a group of women who
traced their heritage to men and women who fought in the American Revolution, had denied her
access to singing in Constitution Hall. Mrs. Roosevelt resigned from the DAR in protest.
While the nation was in the throes of the Great Depression in the 1930s, Charles Hamilton
Houston, Thurgood Marshall, and the NAACP developed a strategy to challenge the segregated
schools for African Americans in the South and to improve them. The three-pronged strategy that
Houston and Marshall implemented in the South sought buses for African-American children who
had to travel long distances to their county schools, the equalization of salaries for African-
American teachers in the South, and access to and the integration of graduate professional
schools for African-American students in the South. Houston, and later Marshall, won a series of
graduate and professional cases in Maryland, Oklahoma, Missouri and Texas that established the
precedent for the victory in Brown in 1954.
Students will also learn about writers and musicians of the “Chicago Renaissance” such as
Richard Wright, Margaret Walker, Charlie Parker and Count Basie who began their prolific careers
during this interwar period.
African Americans, World War Two and the Great Migration (1941-1950)
After the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 by Japan, the United States entered World
War Two against Japan, Germany and Italy. During the war African-American civil rights leaders
and organizations adopted the strategy of “fighting on two fronts:” fighting against the enemies of
democracy and freedom abroad, as well as the enemies of democracy and freedom on the “home
front,” particularly in the American South. Although initially the ongoing racial segregation and
discrimination in American society prevented African Americans from obtaining jobs in the defense
industries and serving on an equal basis in the military, the overwhelming demand for workers to
support the American war effort forced the United States government to end segregation and
discrimination in the defense industries and to provide African Americans new opportunities in the
military.
World War II was also a watershed
for African-American economic
development. Just as during World
War I, African Americans left the
South in record numbers and
moved to northern and western
cities wo work in the jobs in the
defense industries. This second
“Great Migration” further
established the political power of
African Americans in northern cities
such as Chicago, New York,
Detroit, Milwaukee, Philadelphia,
and Los Angeles. An additional
economic impact was as one woman claimed in the Pittsburgh Courier, “It was Hitler who got us
out of white folks’ kitchens.” African-American women moved from being predominantly employed
in domestic service work (80% in 1940!) to jobs in the defense industries as well in other non-
service areas.
Students will learn about this period in African American history by studying the lives of several
African Americans who played major roles in desegregating the defense industries and the military.
They will learn about A. Philip Randolph, who planned the first “march on Washington” in 1941 in
order to protest racial discrimination in the defense industries and the military, and Thurgood
Marshall, who filed legal cases to ban segregation in the defense industries and to protect the
rights of African Americans in the military. They will also learn about General Benjamin O. Davis,
Sr. and General Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. During World War Two, General Davis, Sr. became the
nation’s first African-American Brigadier General, while his son, Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., became
one of the commanding officers of the Ninety-ninth Pursuit Squadron or the Tuskegee Airmen.
The Struggle for Civil Rights – Second Phase: The Road to Black Power (1960-1975)
Students will learn about the civil rights movement in the following areas: they will learn about the
four students in Greensboro, North Carolina—Joseph McNeil, Franklin McCain, David Richmond
and Ezell Blair, Jr,--who started the sit-in movement at a Woolworth lunch counter on December 1,
1960; Stokely Carmichael and SNCC; the assassination of Medgar Evers in Mississippi; the role of
Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam in the civil rights movement; the emergence of Angela Davis as
a supporter of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense and advocate for prisoners’ rights; the
protest of Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Olympics; and the leadership of Dr. Martin
Luther King in the civil rights movement from 1955 to his assassination in 1968.
2Impact of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (Registered African American voters in 1960 and 1965)
African owned by Cotton Mather. When a smallpox epidemic occurred in Boston in 1721,
Onesimus explained how in his homeland medicine men would inject a small amount of the
disease into a person in order to make him or her immune from it. Mather investigated Onesimus
claim, tried it and it worked to stem the small pox outbreak in Boston.
Other examples: Dr, Daniel Hale Williams performed the first open heart surgery in the United
States at Provident hospital in Chicago in 1893. During World War II, Dr. Charles Drew developed
a method for preserving blood plasma that saved many lives during and after the war. In 1987, Dr.
Ben Carson performed a successful surgery to separate craniopagus twins.
Vocabulary Words to Learn
vernacular “slave songs” blues jazz entrepreneur
Grades K-3 learning experiences develop students’ understanding of themselves and the world.
Specific to AAAHC, the primary focus is on the students learning the foundational beliefs, customs,
and traditions of African and African-Americans, the geography of the African continent, as well as
the contributions and achievements of African and African-Americans to science, mathematics,
technology, the arts, literature and justice since ancient times.
Grades 4-5 further grows students’ understanding of the African experience while having them
apply it to an introductory exploration of Texas history and United States history. Connections
between the early African experience and the experience of African-Americans in Texas and the
United States are explored. Of particular emphasis in Grades 4 and 5 are the contributions and
achievements of African-Americans to science, mathematics, technology, the arts, literature and
justice.
Grades 6-8 focus in on a deeper exploration of Africa’s geography, history and culture. World
regions of the African diaspora, including the Americas, are also studied to understand the global
connections of the African and African American experiences. The contributions and achievements
of African and African-Americans to science, mathematics, technology, the arts, literature and
justice - globally (Grade 6); in Texas (Grade 7); and the United States to 1877 (Grade 8) are
emphasized. Students will learn how historical narratives form and why multiple perspectives, and
counter-narratives, are necessary to uncover an accurate story about the past.
Grades 9-12 all AAAHC themes are addressed through the disciplinary lens’ of geography, world
history, United States history from 1877 to present, economics and government. In addition,
students further develop their understanding about the origins of and motivations behind dominant
narratives. A focus of learning experiences at high school prepares students to transfer their
understanding in ways that connect the history and culture of African and African-Americans with
the Contemporary African-American experience and, more broadly, the human experience.
Elective Courses focus on the exploration of content in greater depth and complexity.
Elementary School
Levels: K-3 and 4-5
STILL. (2018)
1 Customs and Students will learn about different cultures in the Kindergarten
Traditions of United States by comparing family customs and
People Around the traditions. Students will recognize that African-
World Americans celebrate Kwanzaa to celebrate their
heritage and culture.
1 What is MA’AT? Students learn the foundations and beliefs of Grade 1/Unit 2
MA’AT and how it promotes values that
emphasize nature and society working together in
harmony and the ways it plays out in everyday life.
Source:
http://www.bu.edu/africa/outreach/curriculum/curri
culum-guide/
1, 3, 5, 7 Everybody Cooks Students explore how food can be a source of Grade 1/Unit 4
Rice unity for people from different cultural groups.
They learn that rice is a common staple in African
and African-American culinary traditions and
compare it with how rice is used in the culinary
practices of many cultures around the world.
1 Egyptian Symbols This lesson introduces students to the writing, art, Grade 1/Unit 4?
and Figures: and religious beliefs of ancient Egypt through Or Unit 5?
Hieroglyphs hieroglyphs, one of the oldest writing systems in
the world, and through tomb paintings.
Hieroglyphs consist of pictures of familiar objects
that represent sounds. They were used in ancient
Egypt from about 3100 BCE to 400 CE.
1 One Country, One Students learn how culture is all around us in this Grade 1/Unit 5
Family, Many learning experience. They explore cultures from
Cultures around the world and cultures and identify
traditions, like the idea of family and celebrations,
all cultures share. Included the learning
experience, is learning about African and African-
American families and the celebration of Kwanza.
4, 5, 7 Parade of Good Students will compare the lives and activities of Grade 1/Unit 1
Citizens historical figures that characterize three ideals and
principles of a good citizenship – honor, honesty,
and courage. Examples include: Jane Addams,
W.E.B. DuBois, Helen Keller, Martin Luther King
Jr., Caesar Chavez and Harriet Tubman.
5 Rosa Parks: Students will understand the heroic actions that Grade 1/Unit 6
American Hero Rosa Parks took to demand her rights under the
United States system of laws. They will also learn
how laws in the United States are made.
7 EHF Ideas - Students explore the careers of prominent African Grade 1/Unit 3
Research Africans Americans in science, mathematics, and
and African- technology.
Americans in
Science, Math, and Source:
Technology http://sciencenetlinks.com/lessons/african-
americans-in-science/
7 African and As they explore the concept of time, students learn Grade 1/Unit 5
African-American about various African-American inventors and their
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
60
1 “Lift Every Voice Students learn about James Weldon Johnson’s Grade 2/Unit 1
and Sing” as a “Lift Every Voice and Sing” as an example of an
National Symbol American national symbol.
1 Egyptian Symbols Students create a pictorial alphabet using the Grade 2/Unit 2
and Figures: Scroll symbols of the Egyptian hieroglyphic alphabet.
Paintings Then, students identify and represent in their own
drawings figures from the Book of the Dead, a
funereal text written on papyrus and carved on the
walls of tombs to help guide the deceased through
the afterlife.
Source:
http://www.bu.edu/africa/outreach/curriculum/curri
culum-guide/
1, 2 Rice and the Students explore rice and how it connects people Grade 2/Unit 3
African Origins of around the world. The learning experience helps
Its Cultivation in the students discover the history and science behind
Americas rice production including the expertise Africans
brought with them to cultivate it in the Americas.
2 African Explorers Students learn about how early Africans explored Grade 2/Unit 5
the world, traded and settle with indigenous
peoples.
4, 5, 7 American Stories- Students learn about W.E.B. DuBois and George Grade 2/Unit 5
DuBois and Washington Carver and the ways their
Carver- African- accomplishments shaped the and United States
Americans Who and the World.
Shaped the
Community, State
and Nation
4, 5, 7 Frederick Douglass Students explore Frederick Douglass and Ida B. Grade 2/Unit 5
and Ida B. Wells: Wells as heroes who significantly influenced the
history of the United States.
American Heroes
7 EHF Ideas - Students explore the careers of prominent African Grade 2/Unit 3
Research Africans Americans in science, mathematics, and
and African-
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
61
Americans in technology.
Science, Math, and
Technology Source:
http://sciencenetlinks.com/lessons/african-
americans-in-science/
1 MA’AT: Harmony in Students learn that people all over the world come Grade 3/Unit 1
Community together to form communities. In this learning
experience, students explore model African
communities and the ways the principles of MA’AT
are a guide to civic engagement and reinforce
community values.
1 Egypt’s Pyramids: Students play the role archaeologists as they Grade 3/Unit 9
Monuments with a explore the wondrous structures built by the great
Message dynasties of ancient Egypt. In their exploration,
students consider what pyramids say about the
ancient Egyptians contributions to the world.
1 African Art, Culture Students will be able to identify Africa on a map of Grade 3/
& Symmetry the world, as well as identify geographical features
of Africa. Students will also be able to identify
characteristics of African artwork, including
symmetrical patterns.
4, 7 Symbols of In this lesson students will be introduced to the Grade 3/under
Freedom Constitution of the United States of America. development
Students will be introduced historical significance
of the document and discuss the document as a
symbol of freedom for some, while being viewed
as a document that did not protect the civil liberties
for African Americans during the documents
conception. Students will also have an opportunity
to discuss the significance of key terms such as:
symbols, equity, freedom and citizenship.
2, 3, 4 Africans as a In grade 2, students learned about how early Grade 3/Unit 3
Community of Africans explored and settled in different areas of
Nation Builders the Atlantic World. The focus of this learning
experience has students exploring how, through
trade and various areas of expertise, early
Africans contributed building civilizations and
nations around the world.
4, 7 “I, Too” by In this lesson students will become introduced to Grade 3/Unit 9
Langston Hughes the poem, “I Too Sing America” by Langston
Hughes. Students will both listen to and read the
poem for content analysis. Students will have an
opportunity to discuss the significant meanings of
liberty, citizenship and patriotism for African
Americans in the historical context of the early
twentieth century.
7 EHF Ideas - Students explore the careers of prominent African Grade 3/Unit 4
Research Africans Americans in science, mathematics, and
and African- technology.
Americans in
Science, Math, and Source:
Technology http://sciencenetlinks.com/lessons/african-
americans-in-science/
Recommended Resources
Grade Theme Title & Author
3-5 1 Africa Is Not a Country by Margie Burns Knight & Anne Sibley O’Brien
3-5 1 Ashanti to Zulu by Margaret W Musgrove
K-3 1 Beatrice’s Goat by Paige McBrier
K-3 1 Jambo Means Hello: Swahili Alphabet Book by Muriel Feelings
K-3 1 Mama Panya’s Pancakes by Mary & Rich Chamberlin
K-3 1 Moja Means One: Swahili Counting Book by Muriel Feelings
K-3 1 We All Went on Safari: English & Swahili Edition by Laurie Crebs
3-7 2 A Voice of Her Own: The Story of Phyllis Wheatley, Slave Poet by Katheryn Laskey
3-5 2 Amistad: The Story of a Slave Ship by Patricia McKissack
2-4 2 Crispus Attucks: A Hero of the American Revolution by Charlotte Taylor
1-4 2 Phyllis Sings Out Freedom: The Story of George Washington and Phyllis Wheatley by
Ann Malaspina
2-3 3 All Different Now: Juneteenth, the First Day of Freedom by Angela Johnson & E.B.
Lewis
3-6 3 Eijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis
4 3 Freedom in Congo Square by Carole Boston Weatherford
4-6 3 Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life by Ashley
Bryan
2-5 3 Henry’s Freedom Box by Ellen Levine
1-4 3 Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom by Carole Boston
Weatherford
1-4 3 The Patchwork Path: A Quilt Map to Freedom by Bettye Stroud
K-8 3 The People Could Fly: American Black Folktales by Virginia Hamilton & Leo Dillon
3-5 1 Africa Is Not a Country by Margie Burns Knight & Anne Sibley O’Brien
3-5 1 Ashanti to Zulu by Margaret W Musgrove
K-3 1 Beatrice’s Goat by Paige McBrier
K-3 1 Jambo Means Hello: Swahili Alphabet Book by Muriel Feelings
K-3 1 Mama Panya’s Pancakes by Mary & Rich Chamberlin
K-3 1 Moja Means One: Swahili Counting Book by Muriel Feelings
K-3 1 We All Went on Safari: English & Swahili Edition by Laurie Crebs
3, 7 Esteban and the In this learning experience students will be introduced to the Grade 4/Texas
Colonization of historical figure of Esteban and his significance to the History/Unit
Texas founding of Texas. This lesson most importantly introduces 5/Under
the early African presence in the Americas. Esteban’s development
journey as an African who was enslaved by the Spanish
represents the early cross-migratory and cross-cultural
infusions that contribute to the earlies identities of Texas.
This learning experience also gives students an opportunity
to trace the journey of Esteban between two continents, and
at minimum three ethnic identities (African, Arab, and
Spanish) in his personal, ethnic, cultural and geographic
development as the earliest understandings of the United
States are beginning to unfold.
3, 5 Texas and the In this learning experience students will be introduced to the Grade 4/Texas
Underground concepts of freedom and resistance in the context of the History/Under
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
65
Railroad American slave society. This lesson will provide students development
with the concepts of an “Underground Railroad” versus that
of a literal “railroad” and why the former was necessary for
African Americans who sought freedom. Students will also
learn that the Underground Railroad was one of many forms
of resistance that enslaved Africans practiced to achieve
freedom. This lesson will also provide students with an
opportunity to trace the clandestine migrations of African-
Americans to various Northern regions that include:
Oklahoma, California, and the country of Canada. This
lesson will primarily focus on the state of Texas.
4, 6, 7 Texas’ Black Students learn about the historical Black Cowboys of Texas Grade 4/Texas
Cowboys during this learning experience. This lesson will allow History/Under
students to learn of the range cattle work in Texas that development
enslaved African Americans engaged in versus the
plantation work enslaved African Americans were subjected
to in other states. This section will give students an
opportunity to learn of the cultural influences that Black
Cowboys have contributed the general cultural and
understandings of cowboys in general. Students will learn of
the relationships between the enslaved Africans and specific
farm labor necessary to create the identity of a cowboy. This
lesson provides a number of examples of Black Cowboys to
include Nat Love and Bill Cody and why telling their
narratives are vital in presenting the early history of Texas
and the contributions made by African Americans in that
development.
4, 7 African- Students will examine how African Americans contributed to Grade 4/Texas
Americans World War I and 1920s society at home while faced with History/Unit 10
Contributions to prejudice and racism. Students will also research the
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
66
Texas and the contributions of African American Texans to World War II.
United States in Included are the study of Scott Joplin, Julius Lorenzo Cobb
the 1920s Bledsoe, and Bessie Coleman.
4 African- Students will explore the contributions of African Americans Grade 4/Texas
American in local, state, and national government positions. Included History/Unit 10
Texans in Local, is the study of historical figures such as Barbara Jordan and
State, and Wallace Jefferson and contemporary leaders.
National
Government
4, 6 African- In this lesson students will be informed of a significant local Grade 4/Texas
Americans in African American history in Ft.Worth, TX. This section History/Under
Fort Worth, TX explicates the development of local African American development
community in the context of Texas political, economic and
social progressions. This lesson will inform students of how
the local community developments initiated by African
Americans were unique to Texas (railroad lines, purchase of
acreage, etc) while having comparable aspects to
community development which African Americans shared in
other parts of the country. This lesson will give students a
local practical example that teachers & students can
investigate through basic primary resources, local interviews
of current & former residents and also gaining information
from local libraries which have captured the local history of
the Stop Six Fort Worth, Texas community.
5 Hard Times At Students will investigate how the Civil Rights Act of 1964 Grade 4/Texas
Home and affected the lives of African Americans. History/Unit 10
Abroad
6 The Importance In this lesson students will be informed of the photo Grade 4/Texas
of Story Telling journal/magazine Sepia, a forerunner to such contemporary History/Under
and the Sepia media outlets such as: Ebony Magazine, Jet Magazine, development
Photo Journal - Black Enterprise, Essence Magazine and Vibe Magazine.
Fort Worth, This lesson will inform students of the importance of
Texas providing information to their community from their own
cultural, political, economic perspectives. This lesson
(potential in class exercise) provides students with
opportunities to both create their own stories and compare
potential examples of stories told about them from other
students claiming to know them. This lesson also gives
teachers and students an opportunity to engage in
questions around storytelling and the power to tell your own
story/truth.
7 EHF Ideas - Students explore the careers of prominent African Grade 4/Texas
Research Americans in science, mathematics, and technology. History/Unit 4
Africans and
African- Source: http://sciencenetlinks.com/lessons/african-
Americans in americans-in-science/
Science, Math,
and Technology
1, 2 MAAFA In this lesson students will be introduced to the concept, Grade 5/US
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
67
3 African- Students will research colonial slavery including the daily life Grade 5/US
American Life in of enslaved Africans including ways they resisted slavery. History/Unit 3
the Colonies
3 Bacon’s In this lesson students will be introduced to the concept(s) of Grade 5/US
Rebellion slavery from a variety of historical, cultural and continental History/Under
perspectives. Students will have an opportunity to engage development
the concepts of: enslavement, slavery, indentured servitude,
and race based practices of slavery versus practices based
on warfare and regional practices of the African continent.
Students will be introduced to how indentured servitude
practices in America were altered based on the historical
moment of Bacon’s Rebellion. Students will also compare
and contrast the practices of indentured servitude from the
African continent to America both pre and post Bacon’s
Rebellion as a benchmark for the changes and progression
of slavery in America.
3, 4, 5 Marronage In this lesson students will be introduced to the term Grade 5/US
“Maroon” and the concept of “Maroonage” to learn about an History/Under
early form of diversity and resistance to human injustice. development
Students will learn about slavery insurrections and the
constant struggle of enslaved Africans to manumit
themselves from the bondage of slavery. Students will learn
about the cooperative relationships that were developed by
Africans, First Nation Tribes and Indigenous persons to
forge alliances, living communities and spaces of refuge.
Students will become familiarized with the survival
mechanisms and tactics developed by the formerly enslaved
Africans that became essential in their survival along with
Native Americans who also resisted the persecution of
slavery and colonial genocide.
3 African- Students will investigate the contributions and actions of Grade 5/US
Americans and African Americans during the American Revolution. History/Unit 4
the American
Revolution
3, 4, 5 Black Education In this lesson students will be introduced to the earliest Grade 5/US
in America forms of Black education in America. Students will learn History/Under
about “clandestine schools” and the motivations behind development
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
68
4 The Rise of In this lesson students will be introduced to the concepts of Grade 5/US
Black the Black community through some early examples of early History/Under
Communities towns, African-American migration out of the South and the development
After the Civil beginnings of Black participation in the Industrial Revolution
War as a motivating factor for waves migrating “Exodusters”.
Students will learn about the various African American
enterprises developed by Black people after the Civil War.
Students will become familiarized with how Black people
gained financially for a brief historical moment and the
factors that contributed to the social, economic and political
decline of these independent Black towns which were
established after the Civil War.
4 Leaders in the Students will research the effects of Jim Crow laws and the Grade 5/US
Fight for Justice Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) ruling on the civil rights of African History/Unit 12
Americans. Students will investigate African Americans
leaders and their fight for societal changes.
4 Jazz Age and Students will explore how the African American culture Grade 5/US
the Harlem flourished during the Jazz Age and the Harlem History/Unit 13
Renaissance Renaissance.
Students will summarize the reasons for the Great Migration
and the experiences of African Americans that moved North.
4 African- Students will examine how African Americans contributed to Grade 5/US
Americans World War II while faced with prejudice and racism. History/Unit 14
Fighting in
World War II
5 Acts of Courage Students will identify the policy decisions that affected Grade 5/US
African American civil rights and explain the reasons that History/Unit 16
individuals took risks to participate in civil rights protests.
Leaders of the 1950s and 60s civil rights movement are
explored while investigating such events as the
desegregation of schools, athletics, the military, public
transportation and public places.
6 Americans Students will explore the significance of the election of Grade 5/US
Today and the President Barack Obama. History/Unit 17
Election of
Barack Obama
7 EHF Ideas - Students explore the careers of prominent African Grade 5/US
Research Americans in science, mathematics, and technology. History/Unit 7
Africans and
African- Source: http://sciencenetlinks.com/lessons/african-
Americans in americans-in-science/
Science, Math,
and Technology
Recommended Resources
Grade Theme Title & Author
3-5 1 Africa Is Not a Country by Margie Burns Knight & Anne Sibley O’Brien
4 & up 1 "Africa's Great Civilizations with Henry Louis Gates Jr" PBS Documenatary
3-5 1 Ashanti to Zulu by Margaret W Musgrove
5-9 1 Facing the Lion: Growing Up Maasai on the African Savanna by Joseph Lemasolai
5 1 Lekuton &Library
Heritage Herman Viola
of the African Peoples West Africa Series, Rosen Publishing Group
5 & up 1 Journey of the Songhai People by Calvin Robinson et al
5 1 "Lost Kingdoms of Africa" BBC Documentary
5 & up 1 "Rise of the Black Pharaohs" PBS Documentary
K-3 1 We All Went on Safari: English & Swahili Edition by Laurie Crebs
4 & up 1 "Wonders of the African World with Henry Louis Gates Jr." PBS Documentary
5 2 “Africans in America” PBS Documentary Teacher’s Guide
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/home.html - video
3-7 2 A Voice of Her Own: The Story of Phyllis Wheatley, Slave Poet by Katheryn Laskey
3-5 2 Amistad: The Story of a Slave Ship by Patricia McKissack
2-4 2 Crispus Attucks: A Hero of the American Revolution by Charlotte Taylor
5 2 Crispus Attucks: Hero of the Boston Massacre by Anne Beier
5 2 "Egalite for All: Toussaint Louverture and the Hatian Revolution" PBS Documentary
5 2 Olaudah Equiano: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part1/1p276.html
1-4 2 Phyllis Sings Out Freedom: The Story of George Washington and Phyllis Wheatley
5 2 by Ann Wheatley:
Phyllis MalaspinaYoung Revolutionary Poet by Katherine Kilby Boreland
5 & up 2 The Came Before Columbus: The African Presence in Ancient America by Ivan Van
5 2 Sertima
The Middle Passage by Tom Feelings
5-8 3 America's Black Founders: Revolutionary Heroes and Early Leaders by Nancy I.
3-6 3 Sanders
Eijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis
4 3 Freedom in Congo Square by Carole Boston Weatherford
4-6 3 Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life by
2-5 3 Henry’s Freedom Box by Ellen Levine
Ashley Bryan
1-4 3 Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom by Carole Boston
4 & up 3 Weatherford
"The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross" PBS Documentary
1-4 3 The Patchwork Path: A Quilt Map to Freedom by Bettye Stroud
K-8 3 The People Could Fly: American Black Folktales by Virginia Hamilton & Leo Dillon
3-5 1 Africa Is Not a Country by Margie Burns Knight & Anne Sibley O’Brien
4 & up 1 "Africa's Great Civilizations with Henry Louis Gates Jr" PBS Documenatary
3-5 1 Ashanti to Zulu by Margaret W Musgrove
5-9 1 Facing the Lion: Growing Up Maasai on the African Savanna by Joseph Lemasolai
5 1 Lekuton &Library
Heritage Herman Viola
of the African Peoples West Africa Series, Rosen Publishing Group
5 & up 1 Journey of the Songhai People by Calvin Robinson et al
5 1 "Lost Kingdoms of Africa" BBC Documentary
5 & up 1 "Rise of the Black Pharaohs" PBS Documentary
Middle School
Levels: 6 - 8
STILL. (2018)
1 Kingdoms of Students will learn about the kingdoms of West Africa Grade 6/ World
Western Africa (Ghana, Mali, and Songhay) by creating ‘artifacts’ from Cultures/
the kingdoms and making inferences about the finished Under development
products.
1 Ancient Africa Students will examine the development of early Grade 6/World
civilizations and trade routes in Africa. Cultures/Under
development
1 Bantu Students will examine the migration of Bantu peoples Grade 6/World
Migrations across the continent of Africa. Cultures
1 Africa's Students will examine the borders and cultures on the Grade 6/World
1 African Music Students will examine the contribution and influence of Grade 6/World
Goes Global African cultures to music across the globe. Cultures
1 Exploring Students will examine the various traditional cultures of Grade 6/World
Traditional Africa. Cultures
Cultures
1, 2, 3 Africa Before Students will learn ways in which the spatial Grade 6/World
Colonization organization of a society changes over time the Cultures
environmental consequences of people changing the
physical environment in various world locations; use
mental maps to organize information about people,
places, and environments; identify cause and effect
relationships in text.
1,2, 3, 4 The African Students will examine the origins of the African Diaspora Grade 6/World
Diaspora and its impact on regions of contact today. Cultures
2 Exploration of Students will examine the African Explorer, Estevanico Grade 7/Texas
Texas and the African presence in Texas and the Americas History/Unit 2
prior to the European Slave Trade.
3 Seeds of Students will evaluate the reasons U.S. immigrants Grade 7/ Texas
Rebellion in brought their slaves to Mexican Texas, and how History/Unit 4
Mexican Texas conflicting beliefs about slavery led immigrants to rebel
against Mexico’s anti-slavery laws.
3 The Texas Students will investigate the perspectives and actions of Grade 7/Texas
Revolution African Americans during the Texas Revolution. History/Unit 5
3 Republic to Students will examine the growth of slavery in the Grade 7/Texas
Statehood Republic of Texas, and why U.S. abolitionists opposed History /Unit 6
Texas statehood. Students will also evaluate how war
and slavery changed the geographic borders of Texas
when it became the 28th state.
3 Pre-Civil War Students will explore the relationship between the Grade 7/Texas
to Civil War demand for cotton and the expansion of slavery in History. Unit 7
Texas. Students will also examine how the fight over
slavery from 1850 to 1860 led to Texas’ secession from
the Union.
4 Emancipation Students will investigate the reasons for the delay in Grade 7/Texas
and freeing slaves in Texas once the Civil War ended. History/Unit 8
Reconstruction Students will also research the political, economic, and
social effects of Reconstruction on Texas freedmen.
4 The Texas Students will research the role and actions of the Buffalo Grade 7/Texas
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
74
4 Depression Students will explore the effects of the Great Depression Grade 7/Texas
and War: 1929- and Dust Bowl on African American families in Texas. History/Unit 13
1950 Students will also research the contributions of African
American Texans in World War II while challenging
racial attitudes and segregation.
4 Growth and Students will investigate the contributions of African Grade 7/Texas
Change: Americans that led to the passage of the Civil Rights Act History/Unit 14
1950s-1969 of 1964 and the other
legislative milestones.
3 Development Students will explore life in Africa before slavery, the Grade 8/US History
of the 13 arrival of the first enslaved Africans in North America, to 1877/Unit 1
Original and economics of colonial slavery.
Colonies
3 The Students will investigate the contributions and actions Grade 8/US History
Revolutionary of African Americans during the American Revolution. to 1877/Unit 2
Era
3 Constitutional Students will evaluate the 3/5 Compromise and the Grade 8/US History
Convention of government power it gave Southerners to expand to 1877/Unit 4
1787 slavery.
3 The Students will explore the historical context and meaning Grade 8/US History
Constitution of the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments. to 1877/Unit 5
3 Washington to Students will examine how the Haitian Revolution Grade 8/US History
Monroe influenced France to sell their Louisiana Territory to the to 1877/Unit 6
U.S.
3 The Industrial Students will investigate the relationship between the Grade 8/US History
Revolution cotton gin, Northern textile factories, and the expansion to 1877/Unit 8
of slavery.
4 Reform Students will research Abolitionist leaders and their Grade 8/US History
Movements actions including free African Americans working for the to 1877/Unit 10
freedom of Southern slaves.
4 Pre-Civil War Students will examine the sectional conflicts and Grade 8/US History
Events compromises that arose from 1850 to 1860 leading to to 1877/Unit 11
the secession of the South.
4 The Civil War Students will investigate the perspectives and actions of Grade 8/US History
African Americans during the Civil War. to 1877/Unit 12
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
75
4 Reconstruction Students will evaluate the political, economic, and social Grade 8/US History
effects of Reconstruction on freedmen. to 1877/Unit 13
Recommended Resources
Achieve 3000 Lessons Related to African and African-American History and Culture
7, 8 7 A Man of Courage
Richard Theodore Greener was an African-American man who was
a university professor in the South shortly after the Civil War.
7, 8 3, 5 Turner's Rebellion
In 1831, American slave Nat Turner led a rebellion that instilled fear
throughout the South.
6, 7, 8 7 Uncovering History
A group is attempting to locate the final resting places of significant
African Americans among the unmarked graves of a historical
cemetery.
High School
Levels: 9 - 12
STILL. (2018)
7 Women in Students will learn about the role of women in traditional Grade 9/World
Traditional African village life; understand the contextual nature of Geography/
African artwork within traditional African village life; become Under development
Societies familiar with women writers of postcolonial Africa;
examine how the traditions of village life influence
postcolonial arts and culture.
1 Nubia: Land of Students will learn the cultural, religious, political, and Grade 9/World
the Bow technological development of Nubian civilization; assess Geography/
the cultural, commercial, and political links between Under development
Egypt and Nubia.
1, 5 Why do people Students will examine how political, economic, social, Grade 9/World
migrate? and environmental push and pull factors and physical Geography/
geography affect the routes and flows of human Unit 1
migration? Students will research examples of forced
migration examples such as the European Slave Trade
and Hurricane Katrina.
1 North Africa and During this learning experience students will differentiate World Geography/
Sub-Saharan the characteristics that distinctively define North Africa Unit 5
from Africa South of the Sahara by creating a thematic
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
78
1 Regional Students will define sub-Saharan Africa as formal region World Geography/
Geography – during this learning experience. As part of the learning, Unit 6
What makes students will review the concepts of types of regions -
sub-Saharan formal, functional and perceptual – as well as identify
Africa a region? geographic characteristics that differentiate sub-Saharan
Africa from the north. Students will make predictions and
develop understanding of how geography influenced
culture and perceptions of the African Experience.
1 Human Students will evaluate the relationships between past World Geography/
Geography - events and current conditions in the region by analyzing Unit 6
Analyzing the various sources of information and completing a graphic
Impact of organizer that explains how the European colonization of
Africa’s Past on Africa’s has contributed to its present political, economic,
its Present social and cultural conditions.
Conditions
1 Physical Students will explore how physical processes shape World Geography/
Geography - Africa’s Great Rift Valley and make predictions for how Unit 6
Eastern Africa’s the land will look in the future. The natural wonder of the
Great Rift Great Rift Valley stretches from Syria to Mozambique.
Valley: Physical The deep valley was formed out of a system of fractures
processes in the Earth's surface, volcanic eruptions, and
shaping its earthquakes the Great Rift Valley. In East Africa the
origins and its Great Rift Valley is formed by volcanic mountains and
future deep lakes. Students will analyze how the effects of the
Great Rift Valley impact the Africa Experience through
the preservation of fossil, access to fresh water, and
human response to climate and elevation.
1, 6 Africa’s rapid Students will explain how Africa’s rapid rate of World Geography/
urbanization and urbanization has caused changes in settlement patterns Unit 6
1, 7 N. Africa, SW North Africa and sub-Saharan Africa are widely World Geography/
and Central Asia considered two distinct regions as a result due to their Unit 6
at a differing physical geography as well as their cultural and
“Crossroads” demographic make-up. This learning experience places
North Africa in a region with SW Asia (the Middle East)
and Central Asia with an emphasis on its shared physical
characteristics. Often referred to as the “crossroads” the
region joins Europe, Asia and Africa. Each sub-region
shares a mostly arid climate; a lack of sufficient
freshwater. Students will learn how the region shares
many cultural and political characteristics.
2 Maroon Students will research and understand the culture, World Geography/
Population in customs, and languages of the Maroons in Suriname, Under development
the Caribbean Puerto Rico, and Jamaica, and analyze historical records
tracing development of a Western civilization.
2, 3, 4, 5 Human This learning experience builds on previous learning from World Geography/
Geography – the unit to compare and contrast the cultural identities of Unit 2
Applying the the United States and Canada. Given their colonial roots
African- and long history of immigration, the United States and
American Canada share a rich identity of cultural diversity. Each
Experience country, however, has approached the task unifying
Through An these cultures differently. The United States has longed
Exploration of viewed itself as a “melting pot” while Canada sees itself
Identity and as creating “cultural mosaic”. Students will evaluate if
Diversity in the the melting pot metaphor reflects the African American
US and Canada experience. Students’ exploration of these ideas aligns
with the study of the historical treatment of immigrant
groups – assimilation - in the grade 11 US History
standards.
5 The Nation of Students will understand the political and economic World Geography/
Haiti status of Haiti within the Caribbean Basin region; identify Under development
the impact of the Haitian Revolution on Haiti’s political,
economic and cultural development; identify the push-
and-pull factors that influence Haitian migration and
immigration patterns; compare and contrast economic
and social indicators for five Caribbean countries and the
United States.
6 Como This learning experience identifies the physical and World Geography/
Neighborhood: geographic features that create borders and the types of Unit 1
Exploring regions geographers use to better understand the earth’s
Boundaries and spatial relationships. Students will then apply their
Regions understanding of the concepts to an area of Fort Worth,
including using Census data to analyze predominantly
African American Neighborhoods in Fort Worth, and
make predictions of condition leading to the
concentration.
1 Comparing Students will work in groups to research and report on World History/
Early early civilizations, including the African civilization of Unit 1
Civilizations Egypt. Students will compare cultures and analyze the
characteristics of civilizations.
1 The Historical Students will use a graphic organizer to research and World History/
Origins of the compare major world religions. Students will also Unit 2
World’s Major examine early Egyptian religions that predate Judaism,
Religions Islam, and Christianity. After researching, students will
evaluate how each religion compares and contrast with
each other.
1 Rise and Students will examine the impact of Islam on Europe, World History/
Spread of Islam Asia and Africa during the 7th through 14th centuries, at Unit 5
approximately the same time that Christianity was
exerting its influence in on most of Europe. Students will
also learn of the development of the Islamic Caliphates
and the important ideas in math, science and technology
that originated in Muslim culture during the time of the
Caliphates.
1 Medieval Africa Students will examine the importance of the African trade World History/
– Ghana, Mali routes, along with the role that these trade routes played Unit 5
and Songhai in spreading ideas, including the Islamic religion and
Muslim influence in Africa. Students will also learn of the
geography and culture of African Society and of the great
Medieval Kingdoms, such as Ghana, Mali and Songhai.
1 The Ottoman, In this lesson, students will identify major causes and World History/
Safavid, and describe the major effects of the rise of the Ottoman Unit 6
Mogul Empires Empire and the continued expansion of the Muslim
World.
2 Impact of Students will analyze the European slave trade by World History/
Exploration viewing videos about the Middle Passage, discussing Unit 6
concepts and reflecting through a writing prompt.
2 The European Students will learn about the European Slave Trade World History/
Slave Trade through the use of graphic organizers such as a KWL Unit 8
chart, video clips such as Crash Course: European Slave
Trade and Amistad and small and large group
discussion.
5 Independence Students learn about apartheid, Nelson Mandela and World History/
Movements in African independence movements, using PPT's, primary Unit 12
the Late 20th and secondary sources and short video clips.
Century
5 Life During the Students complete a mini-dbq on political resistance, World History/
Cold War and including Nelson Mandela and complete written response Unit 12
Resistance to to quotes by Martin Luther King Jr.
Political
Oppression
2 The African Students will analyze maps, videos and primary and World History/
Continent and secondary sources to research and discover the reach Unit 10
the Reach of and the impact of European Imperialism on Africa.
Imperialism
4 The Failure of Students will analyze a set primary source documents US History/
Reconstruction that relate to Reconstruction’s failure to protect the rights Unit 1
of newly freed slaves as part of a mini DBQ entitled, The
Failure of Reconstruction. Documents in the DBQ
include the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments in addition
to a political cartoon and letter. Students will use the
approach document analysis in the preview to examine
each document carefully and answer the question or
questions that follow.
4, 5 Jim Crow Laws Students analyze documents and photographs from the US History/
and the Early Library of Congress related to Jim Crow Laws. Students Unit 2
Civil Rights will compare quotes from early Civil Rights leaders
Movement W.E.B. Dubois, Booker T. Washington and Ida B. Wells.
Students will write a letter to the editor of a 19th century
newspaper responding to Jim Crow Laws.
4, 5 Social Reform in In this lesson, students will learn about efforts to promote US History/
the Progressive both social and moral welfare. These efforts, fueled by Unit 3
Era and the passionate reform groups and journalists known as
Role of the muckrakers, brought about change in the food and drug
NAACP industry, land conservation and alcohol consumption.
Students will examine the history of the NAACP and its
role in trying to improve race relations.
4, 7 Intro to the Overview of the 1920's, including rise of nativism and US History/
Roaring racism, in particular the KKK. Students read text and Unit 5
Twenties complete graphic organizer related to these and other
issues.
4, 5 Race Relations Among the issues explored are race relations and US History/
and Other Eugenics. Students view a video on Post-War Unit 5
Social Issues of Intolerance and research a website on Eugenics, while
the 1920's filling out a task sheet that includes these issues, among
others.
4 The Double ‘V’ For this lesson students will learn about the role and US History/
Campaign struggle of democratic practice in America and around Under development
the world. This lesson will inform students about the
factors that led to African Americans participating in
World War II and the fight against the fascism Nazi
Germany while simultaneously combatting the injustices
of racial, economic and political discrimination in the
United States. The determined resistance to all forms of
tyranny and oppression for African Americans became
known as the Double Victory campaign or “Double V”.
Thus, what gains did African Americans achieve in their
quest for Double V? Students will learn about identifying
about multiple forms of discrimination, both domestically
and transnationally.
5 Civil Rights and Analysis of landmark Supreme Court cases related to the US History/
the Courts advancement of Civil Rights. Students will read source Unit 10
documents and use graphic organizer and discussion to
aid in the analysis. Process activity will be the creation of
a timeline describing the key Civil Rights cases and their
impact on justice and equality.
5 Integration “with While the landmark 1954 ruling on Brown v. Board of US History/
all deliberate Education declared the segregation of schools Unit 10
speed”, Brown II unconstitutional, schools did not integrate overnight. The
and the Struggle courts ordered schools to integrate only “with all
to Disrupt the deliberate speed”. This learning experience examines
Status Quo reactions by some to push-back on the Brown v. Board
ruling in attempt to maintain the status quo. Students
explore biographies and school integration timelines
spanning several decades in order to better understand
the barriers that existed and the strategies employed to
fulfill Brown’s mandate.
5, 7 Martin Luther The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is widely US History/
King Jr. regarded to be one of the most important figures in the Unit 10
history of the Civil Rights movement in America. In this
learning experience, students will examine his legacy
primarily through his two seminal works, the “Letter from
Birmingham Jail” and the “I Have a Dream” speech.
Activities include anticipation guide, jigsaw readings and
a virtual tour of the MLK Memorial.
5, 7 Malcolm X Malcolm X’s approach to the struggle for equal rights US History/
differed from Dr. King’s message of non-violence, but Unit 10
many consider his contributions to be just as important.
In this learning experience, students will examine and
compare the points of view of these great leaders.
Activities will include viewing and discussing short video
clips on Malcolm X and the Black Power movement and
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
84
6 Post World War Students will examine the housing issues, economics, US History/
II America and and racism that fueled African Americans from the south Unit 8
the Second moving to the north during the 2nd Great Migration.
Great Migration
6, 7 Art and Culture The 1950’s saw an explosion of popular culture. In this US History/
in the 50’s learning experience, students will investigate the impact Unit 8
of such cultural phenomena as television, films, radio,
Beat poetry and Rock and Roll on the lives of Americans,
especially teenagers. Influence of RB and Jazz on
popular music
Recommended Resources
Achieve 3000 Lessons Related to African and African-American History and Culture
9 - 10 2 A Terrible Price
In this lesson, students read about the European slave trade.
They’ll learn about trading Africans for goods and a slave's
experience on a slave ship and also read an excerpt of an essay
by Thomas Clarkson.
11 4, 5, 6 An American Hero
Jefferson Thomas was one of nine African-American students
AAAH Overlay Curriculum Guidebook - DRAFT – last updated June 2019
85
9 - 12 4, 5, 7 Hidden No More
The movie Hidden Figures tells the story of women whose work
was essential to the U.S. space program years ago.
Author Title
Alex Haley The Autobiography of Malcolm X: As told to Alex Haley
Booker T. Washington Up From Slavery
Dr. Carter G. Woodson The Miseducation of The Negro
Dr. Cheik Anta Diop The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality
John Henrik Clarke Cheikh Anta Diop And the New Light on African History
Selection of Websites Dedicated to African and African American History and Culture
http://www.blackpast.org/ A very complete data base for African American History and culture to be
used for research.
http://guides.lib.washington.edu/con A research guide to primary and secondary sources for African American
tent.php?pid=78827&sid=583725 history.
http://www.blackinventor.com/ Welcome to the Black Inventor Online Museum ™, a look at the great
and often unrecognized leaders in the field of invention and innovation
ommaterials/primarysourcesets/civil
-rights/
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physi NOVA – Video – “Forgotten Genius” – the story of Percy Julian one of
cs/forgotten-genius.html the great African-American Scientists of the 20th Century
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~ug01/hug The Black Arts Movement (BAM) began in the mid-1960s to provide a
hes/blackart.html new vision of African Americans. This site provides images galleries a
theoretical essay, timeline, and links to other online art sources.
Working List of
African and African-American American History and Culture Titles
for Elementary Grades (PreK-5)
Compiled using the following sources:
1. African and African-American Resource list from Chicago Public Schools
2. Scholastic - http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/how-choose-best-multicultural-
books
3. 50 Multicultural Books Every Student Should Read. List originally compiled by the
Cooperative Children's Book Center, School of Education, University of Wisconsin-
Madison -http://www.nea.org/grants/50-multicultural-books.html
Elementary (Grades 4 - 5)
Working List of
African and African-American American History and Culture Titles
for Secondary Grades (6-12)
Compiled using the following sources:
1. African and African-American Resource list from Chicago Public Schools
Middle School (Grades 6-8)
Baba Kwasi is the co-founder of the Ayubu Kamau Kings and Queens African Drum and Dance
School, founded in 1996 A unique interactive presentation that conveys the importance of African
art forms (and art in general) and the role it plays in education, lessons from history, social and
economic relations and ethnic identity. Baba Kwasi is the co-founder of the Ayubu Kamau Kings
and Queens, a performing arts and youth empowerment organization focused in the education and
preservation of African centered performing arts, world history, the Diaspora of African culture and
its contributions to the world.
Fort Worth Capoiera - http://ftwcapoeira.com/
Learn about the history of Africans and their descendants in Brazil and the Americas, especially
through the lens of Capoeira, a Martial Art. Presentations involve working together to create some
percussive rhythms on traditional instruments while learning a few movements of capoeira to look
at non-verbal ways of thinking about communication.
Black History Month hall /door, and classroom decorations. Students can decorate the halls
with Black History Month signs which they will make. The theme will be available soon and they
can use the theme. Perhaps posters will be accessible (I donated about 50 posters to Dunbar to
use for Black History Month display)
National Negro Anthem Project. Learn all three verses to The National Negro Anthem “Lift Ev’ry
Voice”. While students may not need to sing the song…they should know all the words. A project
can be assigned in class where students must study the words in this song, be able to “recite” the
words as well as write a reflection on what they believe each verse means
Black History Month Fashion Show- There are a number of young black clothing designers in
the DFW area. The students can host a fashion show and participate as models, wearing the
clothes of the local designers (or inviting them to come and model their own clothes) Students,
faculty, staff and administrators can also model traditional African styled clothing
Black History Month Presentations – Students can partner with UTA students who are African
American Studies Minors, and invite them to come and do a couple of presentations on various
topics related to Black Studies. Additionally, students can do their own presentations as well as
include community based presenters who would like to VOLUNTEER to participate. (Topics should
be of INTEREST to students)
Black History Month School Choir Concert – This would involve inviting members of the school
choir to do a short concert composing of songs popularized by African Americans (gospel, negro
spirituals, R & B
Black History Kwanzaa in February- Traditionally, the African American cultural holiday of
Kwanzaa is celebrated Dec 26-Jan 1. This program can either be done over a span of 7 days or all
in one day simply to introduce the principals of Kwanzaa and demonstrate how Kwanzaa is
celebrated.(including African drummers and dancers)…Students can prepare for and conduct the
entire program
Black History Month Program – This program perhaps should be held in the MIDDLE of the
month rather than at the end. Since prayers might not be allowed, it can begin in the African
tradition of a libation. It should include the singing of the National Negro Anthem, a selection from
the choir, an art form selection (dance, song, poetry) and a speaker. Students can do the
speaking or invite someone else to do so.