Want to make your black history month studies more relevant to your students? Get them to think historically by getting them to “walk a mile in someone else's shoes.”
Check out these great resources to get your kids talking about the Little Rock Nine- nine black students their age who were among the first to step foot in white schools after sixty years of “separate but equal” laws.
Start the discussion
Check out this Collaborize Classroom topic from the TregoED library “Put Yourself in the Shoes of the Little Rock Nine” which uses an interview with Melba Beals – as she describes her point of view as one of the Little Rock Nine students.
Follow it up with the free lesson: “Desegregating Schools: A Historical Perspective” from the SCAN library at TregoED. Students will discuss the issues of desegregation through the eyes of Linda Brown, parents, community members and local police as they work to resolve the problems that occurred when the schools had to desegregate with “all deliberate speed.”
Beef it Up with More Resources:
Primary documents:
African American History Month resources
NY Times historical front pages
Children’s nonfiction titles:
Primary Source books, articles, etc.
Online curriculum:
Background information:
On the Front Lines with the Little Rock Nine
*Relevance and rigor: the key to keeping kids engaged and thinking!*
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Tags: activities, black, black_history_month, desegregation, discussion, history, links, month, tools
© 2012 Created by Greg Limperis.

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