Boston Desegregation
(Video)
Brown: A Landmark Case
(Video)
Burke Marshall
(Document)
Bus to the Burbs
(Video)
Documenting Brown 3: Gong Lum v. Rice
(Document)
Harry Briggs, Sr. and Eliza Briggs
(Document)
Hyde County School Boycott
(Image)
Brown Reactions: Zora Neale Hurston
(Document)
Ike and Little Rock
(Video)
Implementing Brown
(Video)
Melba Pattillo Beals
(Video)
Vanessa Venable
(Document)
White Resistance
(Video)
This lesson explores the historical complexity of the struggle to desegregate schools. Students will examine the geographic scope of racism, the conditions that prompted both activism and litigation, and how laws changed over time.
Four role-plays will help students understand some of the people and issues that triggered the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case in 1954, the nation's divided response to the Supreme Court ruling, and finally, how the legacy of Brown affects African Americans as well as other non-white minorities today. Each student will prepare for the role-plays by researching a historical figure. Then students will work in small groups toward a final presentation in which they will present their characters as well as the issues and positions each one represented.
Examine the resources ahead of time to familiarize yourself with the lesson content and the complexity of segregation in education over time. Read the background article for each resource, and consider additional questions for discussion you may want to address. Read and print the PDF documents, watch the videos, and listen to the audio segments. Make copies of the background essays that students will reference in researching their characters.
Using the background articles for reference, provide an overview of the Brown case, the issues that led to the lawsuit, and the resistance that civil rights activists faced in trying to implement desegregation. View Brown: A Landmark Case together as a class, and explain that the struggle for desegregation began much earlier and involved many people in different parts of the country. Next, explain that each student will be assigned a historical character that s/he will research and represent in a group presentation.
The following role-plays examine the struggle to desegregate schools at four separate points in time. The goal of this lesson is to give students a deeper understanding of the different positions over time by putting themselves in someone else's shoes. When assigning characters, consider mixing gender, race, and ethnicity so that students can learn about a position in society different from their own.
Divide the class into four groups and assign each student one of the historical characters listed for that group (see below). This lesson is designed for a class of about 25 students; if you have more students, feel free to add characters for each era. Note that the role-plays are listed in chronological order. Students should begin their research by looking at the relevant Teachers' Domain resources (indicated in parentheses), including the background essays. Depending on the number of computers in your classroom, you may want to show several of the resources in class, and print and distribute the background essays for each character in the role-plays.
Role-Play 1: Living with Plessy
Each student in this group will research and present one of the following characters from the era preceding 1954, when the "separate but equal" doctrine sanctioned legalized segregation:
Role-Play 2: A Landmark Decision
Each student in this group will research and present one of the following characters from the Brown case, and the public reaction in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling (up until 1957):
Role-Play 3: Implementing Brown
Each student in this group will research efforts to desegregate schools in the aftermath of the Brown ruling. Some students will represent hypothetical figures from different regions of the country, while others will research and represent actual historical figures.
Role-Play 4: Current Desegregation Strategies: How Far Have We Come?
Each student in this group will research current conditions and desegregation strategies in a different region of the country, and present the views of one of the following characters:
*Orfield's commentary provides a background narrative on current conditions.
The presentations can take the form of a skit, debate, mock trial, or oral history presentation. For each of the simulations, students should research the context and issues for their character, prepare an opening statement to introduce their character, and address the following questions from their character's perspective:
You may want to schedule one or two group presentations for each day, or pause for a day after the first two group presentations to reflect on the questions and issues. After each presentation, allow time for questions. Students who are not presenting should take notes and/or think of questions for the presenters. Presenters may question other each another staying in character.
After each group finishes, ask the students who are listening to the presentations to reflect on who the most compelling character was, why, and what they learned from the presentation.
After the presentations, ask students to reflect on what they've learned and to consider the following questions from their own present-day perspective:
Ask students to pick two people from the list of characters, preferably two people who represent different points of view. In a written essay, students should describe who the people were, the issues they faced, specific legal action they took or supported, and how the laws changed. Students should also explain whether they disagree or agree with the position each character took. In making their arguments, students should incorporate examples from their present-day school experiences, making connections between past and present events and conditions.