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Dream Under Development Lesson PlanDream Under Development Lesson Plan
Publisher
Albert Shanker Institute
Resource Details
Curator Rating
Educator Rating
Not yet Rated
Grade
9th - 12th
Subjects
English Language Arts
5 more...
Resource Type
Lesson Plans
Audiences
For Teacher Use
1 more...
Duration
2 days
Instructional Strategies
Collaborative Learning
3 more...
Technology
Video
Projection
Internet Access
Usage Permissions
Fine Print: Educational Use
Lesson Plan

Dream Under Development

Curated and Reviewed by Lesson Planet
This Dream Under Development lesson plan also includes:
  • History Channel's Montgomery Bus Boycott
  • Ain't I a Woman?
  • Using the Jigsaw Cooperative Learning Technique
  • Brainstorming and Reviewing Using the Carousel Strategy
  • March on Washington Lesson Plans
  • Activity
  • Join to access all included materials

As part of their study of the 1963 March on Washington, class members do a side-by-side comparison of the original text of Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream Speech" with a transcript of the speech he delivered. The take away from the lesson is that great preparation permits speakers to be in the moment and adjust their presentation to fit the needs of the situation.

17 Views 9 Downloads
CCSS: Designed

Concepts

rhetoric, rhetorical devices, i have a dream speech, civil rights, civil rights leaders, the civil rights act of 1964, the civil rights movement, martin luther king jr., primary source analysis, primary sources, reading comprehension, reading comprehension strategies, sojourner truth, barack obama

Additional Tags

social studies

Instructional Ideas

  • Ask class members to share stories of when they or someone they know changed a plan based on what they observed at the moment

Classroom Considerations

  • The link to the side by side comparison of the speech King wrote and the speech he delivered does not work; instructors must purchase Drew D. Hansen's The Dream: Martin Luther King, Jr and the Speech That Inspired a Nation
  • Pupils should have prior knowledge of rhetorical devices as well as the Civil Rights Movement

Pros

  • The plan offers a variety of options for conducting the activity

Cons

  • None

Common Core

RI.11-12.6 RI.11-12.7 RI.11-12.8

View 45,552 other resources for 9th - 12th Grade English Language Arts

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