Category Archives: Social Sciences

You’ll find domain-specific material designed to meet Common Core Standards in social studies, along with adapted and differentiated materials that deal with a broad array of conceptual knowledge in the social sciences. See the Taxonomies page for more about this category.

Cultural Literacy: Colin Powell

Here is a Cultural Literacy worksheet on Colin Powell. This is a half-page document with a reading of three sentences and three comprehension worksheets. Once again, the authors and editors of The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy (Hirsch, E.D., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil, New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2002) have come through with a short, punchy reading that includes the high points of this distinguished American’s career.

If you find typos in this document, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

Bernard Coard on Low Expectations

“When the Teacher Does Not Expect Much From the Child: Most teachers absorb the brainwashing that everybody else in the society has absorbed—that Black people are inferior, are less intelligent, etcetera, than white people. Therefore the Black child is expected to do less well in school. The IQ tests which are given to the Black child, with all their cultural bias, give him a low score only too often. The teachers judge the likely ability of the child on the basis of this IQ test. The teacher has, in the form of the IQ test results, what she considers to be ‘objective’ confirmation of what everybody else in the society is thinking and sometimes saying: that the Black children on average have lower IQ than the white children, and must consequently be expected to do less well in class. Alderman Doulton of the Education Committee in the Borough of Haringey has expressed this view, and it is probably fair to say that the banding of children in Haringey for supposedly achieving equal groups of ability in all the schools was really clever plot to disperse the Black children in the borough throughout the school system. The notorious Professor Jensen, the Enoch Powell of the academic world, has added credence to the myth of Black inferiority by openly declaring that Black people are inherently less intelligent than whites, and therefore Black children should be taught separately.”

Excerpted from: Coard, Bernard. How the West Indian Child Is Made Educationally Sub-Normal in the British School System: 50th Anniversary Expanded Fifth Edition. Kingston, Jamaica: McDermott Publishing, 2021.

The Weekly Text, 9 February 2024, Black History Month 2024, Week II: Alex Wheatle Lesson 3

For this, the second week of Black History Month 2024, here is the third lesson of five on the life, times, and art of British Young Adult novelist Alex Wheatle. This lesson deals with the infamous New Cross House Fire on 18 January 1981. It was a fraught and seminal moment for Britain’s black community, and it is dealt with in the film that attends this unit, Alex Wheatle. The film dramatizes the events at New Cross on that night with a photomontage that is underpinned by Linton Kwesi Johnson, in particularly mellifluous voice, reading his poem about the event, “New Crass Massakah.”

If you open the link under Mr. Johnson’s name above, you will find the Wikipedia article on him that observes that in “2002 he became the second living poet, and the only black one, to be published in the Penguin Modern Classics series.” For some reason, finding that book proved very difficult, and I ended up with what would appear to be an American subsidiary edition published by Copper Canyon Press in Port Townshend, Washington. I assembled a large assortment of documents for this lesson.

Let’s start with this fine introduction to the the collection of Linton Kwesi Johnson poems, Mi Revalueshanary Fren (Port Townshend, Washington: Copper Canyon Press, 2006) I secured. The well-regarded American poet and novelist Russell Banks wrote it, and it is a doozy. I haven’t used it in both the instances I taught this unit, but I wanted to have it around so that I can use it to help students understand the importance of Mr. Johnson’s work. It seems that I have some future plans for this document, because I took the time to prepare a second version with a lexicon appended.

I open this lesson with this context clues worksheet on the adjective crass. The reading for this lesson, unsurprisingly, is the poem “New Crass Massakah.” I prepared this second version with each stanza numbered if you need something a bit more supportive and supported. Should you need to use the numbered version, you’ll probably need to do some editing on the comprehension and analysis worksheet that attends the poem.

Finally, here is the list of the New Cross dead. Nota bene, please, that the oldest of them was 22–and most were teenagers.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

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Places in Black History: 70 Fifth Avenue, Greenwich Village, New York, New York

70 Fifth Avenue Plague

W.E.B. Du Bois on the Problem of the Twentieth Century

“The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color-line—the relation of the darker to the lighter races in Asia and Africa, in America and the islands of the sea.”

W.E.B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk ch. 2 (1903)

Excerpted from: Schapiro, Fred, ed. The Yale Book of Quotations. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006.

Cultural Literacy: Ghana

Should you need it, here is a Cultural Literacy worksheet on Ghana. This is a full-page worksheet with a reading of three sentences and seven comprehension questions. The worksheet is heavy on geographic information about the greater region of West Africa, so it may well be appropriate for independent practice.

If you find typos in this document, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

Modern Jazz Quartet

“Modern Jazz Quartet: U.S. jazz ensemble founded by pianist John Lewis, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, drummer Kenny Clarke, and bassist Ray Brown in 1951. They originally worked together as the rhythm section for Dizzy Gillespie’s big band in 1946. The quartet established a reserved and subtle approach to the modern jazz innovations of the mid-1940s, incorporating elements of classical chamber music with original compositions and jazz standards. Percy Heath replaced Brown in 1952, and Connie Kay replaced Clarke in 1955; upon Kay’s death in 1994, Percy’s brother Albert ‘Tootie’ Heath joined the group.”

Excerpted/Adapted from: Stevens, Mark A., Ed. Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Encyclopedia. Springfield, Massachusetts: Merriam-Webster, 2000.

Cultural Literacy: Kwame Nkrumah

Here is a Cultural Literacy worksheet on Kwame Nkrumah. This is a half-page document with a reading of two sentences and three comprehension questions. It’s a concise biography of this anti-colonialist statesman–but little more.

If you find typos in this document, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.

Carter Woodson Anticipates Paolo Freire

And even in the certitude of science or mathematics it has been unfortunate that the approach to the Negro has been borrowed from a ‘foreign’ method. For example, the teaching of arithmetic in the fifth grade in a backward county in Mississippi should mean one thing in the Negro school and a decidedly different thing in the White school. The Negro children, as a rule, come from the homes of tenants and peons who have to migrate annually from plantation to plantation, looking for light which they have never seen. The children from the homes of white planters and merchants live permanently in the midst of calculations, family budgets, and the like, which enable them sometimes to learn more by contact than the Negro can acquire in school. Instead of teaching such Negro children less arithmetic, they should be taught much more of it than the white children, for the latter attended a graded school consolidated by free transportation when the Negroes go to one-room rented hovels to be taught without equipment and by incompetent teachers educated scarcely beyond the eighth grade.

In schools of theology, Negroes are taught the interpretation of the Bible worked out by those who have justified segregation and winked at the economic debasement of the Negro sometimes almost to the point of starvation. Deriving their sense of right from this teaching, graduates of such schools can have no message to grip the people whom they have been ill trained to serve. Most of such mis-educated ministers, therefore, preach to benches while illiterate Negro preachers do the best they can in supplying the spiritual needs of the masses.

In the schools of business administration Negroes are trained exclusively in the psychology and economics of Wall Street and are, therefore, made to despise the opportunities to run ice wagons, push banana carts, and sell peanuts among their own people. Foreigners, who have not studied economics but have studied Negroes, take up this business and grow rich.

In school of journalism Negroes are being taught how to edit such metropolitan dailies as the Chicago Tribune and the New York Times, which would hardly hire a Negro as a janitor; and when these graduates come to the Negro weeklies for employment they are not prepared to function in such establishments, which, to be successful, must be built upon accurate knowledge of the psychology and philosophy of the Negro.

When a Negro has finished his education in our schools, then he has been equipped to begin the life of an Americanized or Europeanized white man, but before he steps from the threshold of his alma mater he is told by his teachers that he must go back to his own people from whom he has been estranged by a vision of ideals which in his disillusionment he will realize that he cannot attain. He goes forth to play his part in life, but he must be both social and biosocial at the same time. While he is a part of the body politic, he is in addition to this a member of a particular race to which he must restrict himself in all matters social. While serving his country he must serve within a special group. While being a good American, he must above all things be a ‘good Negro’; and to perform this definite function he must learn to stay in a ‘Negro’s place.’”

Excerpted/Adapted from: Woodson, Carter G. The Mis-education of the Negro. Eastford, CT: Martino Fine Books, 2018.

The Weekly Text, 2 February 2024, Black History Month 2024, Week I: Alex Wheatle Lesson 2

For the first Friday of Black History Month 2024, and following last week’s relatively turgid Text, this week’s Text is the second lesson of five on the British young adult novelist Alex Wheatle. The do-now for this unit is this Cultural Literacy worksheet on the British Empire. I think a word of caution on this document is called for: this is a full-page worksheet with a reading of four long compound sentences and seven comprehension questions. In other words, it can and probably should be pared down. But I do think it’s important, when teaching about racism around the world, and particularly England, to deal with the problem of imperialism, manifest destiny, or whatever other nonsensical ideologies are in play to justify imperial land and resource grabs.

This biography of Alex Wheatle is adapted from The Guardian; if you want the full version of the article, it’s under that hyperlink–and is 1,898 words long, a fact which strikes me as salient here. Finally, here is the comprehension and analysis worksheet that accompanies the reading.

If you find typos in these documents, I would appreciate a notification. And, as always, if you find this material useful in your practice, I would be grateful to hear what you think of it. I seek your peer review.