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about the series
eight workshops
ten novels
ten authors

the teachers

Milton Brasher-Cunningham
Frankenstein

Donna Denizé
Great Expectations

Dirk Detlefsen
Harry Potter & the Sorcerer's Stone

Sharon Madison
Ceremony

Pauline Moller
Bridge to Terabithia

Frazier O'Leary
A Lesson Before Dying
Song of Solomon

Ashby Reid
Flowers for Algernon

Diana Russell
To Kill a Mockingbird

Betty Williams
Things Fall Apart

 

the project

DIANA RUSSELL

Related Topics: To Kill a Mockingbird | Harper Lee

Diana Russell has taught in the public schools of Arlington County, Virginia, since 1990. She has worked in the County’s “Transitions” program, which focuses on minority and ESL students. She is a consultant and member of the National Paideia Faculty and a practitioner of the Paideia method, giving workshops, speaking at conferences, training faculties, and developing materials.
Lesson Plan for To Kill a Mockingbird

OBJECTIVES:

  1. After reading and discussing To Kill a Mockingbird, students will gain a greater understanding of relevant racial issues, especially as they touch upon economics, class, education, politics, and religion.
  2. Students will develop skills in the Socratic method, following the Paideia philosophy.
  3. Students will increase their understanding of plot, theme, character, and setting.


ACTIVITY/PLAN: (Ninth grade GT English/History, three weeks)

Reading and discussion of:

  • To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
  • How It Feels To Be Colored Me by Zora Neal Hurston
  • To Be Black and Middle Class by Shelby Steele
  • The Lynching of Emmett Till by John Wesley
  • We Have Led the Children” by Dave Halberstam
  • The Struggle for Equality National Education Association publication
  • The Movement by Ann Moody
  • The Decade Visual Narration from the 1930s — 1990s (students’ group work from the history class, given in class in Power Point presentations)

Assignment: Write a personal, reflective essay that considers and cites:
The black/white community in To Kill a Mockingbird (four citations)
The readings and visual narration listed above (one citation from each)
The essay will discuss your understanding of civil rights and the treatment of the various communities in Maycomb, Alabama, taking into account economics, politics, social class, education, and religion,

 


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