The Fight for Equality in Education in the United States



Similar documents
The History of the Chicano and Puerto Rican Struggle for Equality in Education

How successful was the Civil Rights campaign in achieving its aims between 1950 and 1965? I have a dream...

Vocabulary Builder Activity. netw rks. A. Content Vocabulary. The Bill of Rights

Screening Host Guide. M13 Movie Guide/Curriculum

USA - A Divided Union? - African American Civil Rights

Human Rights Crisis in Puerto Rico;

Self-Defense and Predominant Aggressor Training Materials

BLACK MIGRATION INTO ORANGE COUNTY FINDING AID-IN PROGRESS

RHODA PIERRE CATO

Teacher s Guide For. The First Amendment in the 21 st Century: Garcetti v. Ceballos - The Whistleblower Case

Lesson Plan: Citizenship

Colonial Influences STEP BY STEP. OPTIONAL: A PowerPoint presentation is available to walk students through the activities in this lesson.

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. Remarks of U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno NATIONAL ASSEMBLY. Drugs, Alcohol Abuse, and the Criminal Offender

I. WHAT IF THE POLICE, FBI OR DHS AGENTS CONTACT ME?

ORANGE COUNTY PUBLIC DEFENDER BRIAN L. DUCKER SENIOR ASSISTANT PUBLIC DEFENDER

New Horizons Regional Education Centers (C&T) Pacing Guide

Washington in the 60s Discussion Guide

How accurate is it to say that the Black Power movements of the 1960s achieved nothing for Black Americans?

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ STREET ADDRESS: MAILING ADDRESS: CITY AND ZIP CODE: BRANCH NAME:

WHAT IS MY ROLE AS THE LAWYER FOR A JUVENILE CLIENT?

Realistic Job Preview Youth Counselor (YC)

New Horizons Regional Education Centers (C&T) Pacing Guide

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF CONTRA COSTA. Mock Trial Script. The Case of a Stolen Car

Learn, Share, Fight Back:

Media Studies / 6th 7th Grade

TAMALPAIS UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT Larkspur, California COURSE OF STUDY STREET LAW: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE U.S. LEGAL SYSTEM

A Know Your Rights Guide for Law Enforcement Encounters. national lawyers guild

a threat made in school

Because Fear Makes No Class Distinctions Abuse Support Group Helps Affluent Women End Silent Suffering

U.S. Voting Rights Timeline

Statutory Rape: What You Should Know

How Harsh School Discipline Fuels the School to Prison Pipeline. Sarah Biehl Policy Director Children s Defense Fund-Ohio

Experts Concerned that LA County Youth Not Always Well Served by the Juvenile Justice System

What brings you to the work of the Blue Ribbon Commission, and marijuana?

CITIZEN ADVOCACY CENTER

Fifty Years Later: What Would King Say Now? Keith M. Kilty. On August 28, 1963, some 250,000 people marched on Washington, DC. The

At the Frontline: Miami International Airport Security Director Lauren Stover

Purpose, origin, and content of the Bill of Rights and other important Amendments to the Constitution

Juvenile Court Mock Trial

5th social studies core skills (5thsocstud_coreskills)

CITY OF MARYLAND HEIGHTS OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF POLICE

BETHEL SCHOOL DIST. NO. 403 v. FRASER, 478 U.S. 675 (1986)

Learning from Harvey Milk: Building Support and Coalitions for Change

Remember the Alamo. The Changing Border of the Southwest

I Am Rosa Parks. Teacher s Guide for the unabridged audiobook. Introductory Material

Criminals; Rehabilitation CHAPTER 364 CRIMINAL OFFENDERS; REHABILITATION

If You have Been Arrested Don t Do Anything Until You Read My Special Report!

Orders of Protection

TYPE OF OFFENSE(S) AND SECTION NUMBER(S) LIST OFFENSE(S), CASE NUMBER(S) AND DATE(S) CASE NUMBER(S) AND DATE(S)

The Innocence Legal Team specializes in [defending against] false allegations of

PEOPLE V. HARRY POTTER

SUMMER 2014 LEGAL INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY NOTICE TO LAW STUDENTS American Civil Liberties Union Foundation Reproductive Freedom Project, NY

ACLU Advisory: Bond Hearings for Certain Immigrants Subject to Prolonged Immigration Detention Under Rodriguez v. Robbins

Reducing the cost of crime through reserve police officers and volunteer citizen patrol

Youth and the Law. Presented by The Crime Prevention Unit

Governor Edmund G. Pat Brown, NAACP attorney Nathaniel S. Colley and California Democratic Senator Clair Engle, Ca

Self-Help Guide for a Prosecutorial Discretion Request

Interview with Yolanda Cruz

תילגנאב תורגבה תניחב ןורתפ

MANDATORY MINIMUMS AND DRUG LAW

How to Apply for a Pardon. State of California. Office of the Governor

Zoot Suit Riots Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: What caused the Zoot Suit Riots?

I.D.E.A.S at UCLA Improving Dreams, Equality, Access & Success ideas@ucla.edu

Department, Board, Or Commission Author Bill Number

How To Get Your Criminal History From The Justice Department

CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM: Addressing Deficiencies in Idaho s Public Defense System

Know Your. Help End Discriminatory, Abusive & Illegal Policing! facebook.com/changethenypd

Understanding the Criminal Bars to the Deferred Action Policy for Childhood Arrivals

ORANGE COUNTY PUBLIC DEFENDER NEW LEAF APPLICATION Personal Information First Name Middle Name Last name Other names used

You Know Me: CHILDREN TELL US WHO S NOT IN Watch the movie here: SCHOOL AND WHY IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA

Sample Portfolio Fire Science

Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes

Do You Have A Criminal Conviction History? A GUIDE TO YOUR EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS IN NEW YORK

State of Nature v. Government

Principles in Collision: Labor Union rights v. Employee civil Rights

BIZ KID$ Program 115: Credit (The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly)

Chapter 3. Justice Process at the County Level. Brooks County Courthouse

Preparing a Federal Case

Preparing a Federal Case

SEALING YOUR JUVENILE RECORDS

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

2015 STATE OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT SURVEY A Project Sponsored by the Newseum Institute

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA-COUNTY OF CONTRA COSTA 1. Mock Trial Script: The Case of a Stolen Car

Adult Citizenship Education Content Standards and Foundation Skills

I DO, WE DO, YOU DO: Siege at the Alamo. WE DO-READERS THEATRE: Enrique Esparza and the Battle of the Alamo

The Invention of Hugo Cabret: Part I Chapters 1-6

CASE STUDY. The Education of a Special Education Student: with Parental Disallowance of Prescribed Psychological Drugs. Howard M. Holt, Ph.D.

Using sentence fragments

One Person, One Vote

STEVEN G. PEARL, ESQ. Speaking Engagements and Publications

NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 12

Teaching the Faith Christian Education

Women s Justice Center Centro de Justicia Para Mujeres Tel. (707) PO Box 7510, Santa Rosa, CA 95407

WHEN ENCOUNTERING LAW ENFORCEMENT

Transcription:

The Fight for Equality in Education in the United States Lesson #3: Chicano! Taking Back the Schools Learning Objectives Students will understand the motivation for and outcomes of the 1968 walkouts in Los Angeles. Students will answer the guiding question, How did Chicano groups advocate for equal education in the 1960s? Students will compare the two films they saw about the East LA walkouts. Introductory Activity Ask students to identify the main characters from the HBO movie Walkout. Explain that today they will see many of those people in real life as adults being interviewed in the PBS documentary. Information for teachers about the film The MLA entry for this film is o Chicano! History of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement. Dir. Public Broadcasting Service, 1996. TV. The documentary is part three in the PBS series Chicano! It was already taken down from the PBS website, but can be found on youtube and then converted into a file that will play on school web servers. (If you are a Mac user, MacTubes works very well!) It is not on Netflix, but might be at the public library. Activity 1 Distribute the questions worksheet (last page) or ask students to simply take notes if they are able to do so without guided questions. The questions are provided below with answers but also appear after the procedural plans in a student-friendly worksheet. Show Chicano!. Questions and Answers for During Viewing 1. How many Mexican Americans lived in East LA in 1968? Was that neighborhood integrated with the rest of the city? a. Almost 100,000 and no, it was completely separate 2. How many Chicanos graduated high school? Why so few? a. Only 25% because their culture was not addressed and their needs were not being met. 3. What happened to Harry Gamboa as a monolingual Spanish speaker in elementary school? a. He had to wear a cone hat that said Spanish that he could take off when he learned to speak English. 4. What message did the schools send to Chicano students about their futures? a. They were not going to get into college. They needed to pay attention in the skills classes because they would be doing jobs that required less education. 5. What was the first step in the students activism? a. They took a survey of students to see what their concerns were. 1/6

6. What did the students call for? a. An end to corporal punishment, bilingual instruction, Mexican American history courses and the hiring of more Mexican American teachers and counselors 7. What did the school board do when presented with the survey results and student demands? a. Patted them on the back and threw it out 8. What message was sent to students about being Mexican and speaking Spanish? a. The Mexican culture was not as good as others. Speaking Spanish was not allowed and was therefore inferior to English. 9. What happened in 1946 in Santa Ana, California? a. Parents filed a lawsuit demanding equal education for their children. Mendez v. the Westminster School District declared the segregation of Mexican American children to be unlawful. Despite this ruling, segregated schools remained. This ruling did set the foundation for the Brown v. Board of Education ruling that went before the Supreme Court in 1954. 10. What is UMAS? a. United Mexican American Students, an organization at UCLA. 11. According to Sal Castro, whom did the schools blame for Mexican American student failings? a. The home 12. What was Sal s activism shaped by? a. His father s deportation and the Zoot Suit Riots, when sailors and soldiers attacked Mexican Americans. 13. How many schools were affected by the walkouts by the end of the week? a. 16 schools with 10,000 students out in the streets 14. Did everyone in the community support the blowouts? Why or why not? a. No, some felt that the walkouts were disrespectful and were showing an ugly side of Mexican culture. 15. What role did the Brown Berets play in the walkouts? a. They wanted to protect the kids from the police. They re a paramilitary group of college students that advocated direct action and were often confrontational. They were blamed for the walkouts and caused concern with the police because of their radical tactics in the past. 16. What effect did the Watts Riot in 1965 have on the police? a. Law enforcement went to riot training and consequently beat high school students during the walkouts. 17. Why did the principal tell the police they couldn t arrest the student who broke the lock on the gate at Garfield? a. He was the quarterback and they needed him. 18. How did the police react to the protests? a. They blocked the street at first but then beat the students. 19. Did Bobby Kennedy support the students? a. Yes 20. How were parents involved in the movement? a. They got involved after the walkouts turned dangerous. They took up the fight for their children and asked to meet with school officials. 2/6

21. What does this movement show about mass involvement? a. There is strength in numbers and mass involvement can be an effective way to make change. 22. What happened in June 1968? a. 13 people were arrested for their involvement in the riots. They were charged with disrupting a public school, a misdemeanor, and conspiracy to commit a misdemeanor, a felony. 23. Who acted as attorneys for the LA 13? a. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). 24. What is meant by the quote from an ACLU member who said, the demonstration is the poor man s printing press? 25. How and why was the FBI involved in the Chicano movement? a. An FBI counter intelligence program was created to deal with civil rights and black power movements. They, along with LAPD, infiltrated the movements and were watching the movement leaders. 26. What did the cops and FBI agents who infiltrated the Brown Berets and the activists do? a. They were the organizers of events and were the ones who proposed violent actions. 27. How did the arrests of the LA 13 change the focus of the movement? a. They had to go from offense to defense. They were seen as dangerous subversives, just for protesting non violently. 28. What happened after Sal Castro got fired? a. Students and parents fought to get him reinstated by picketing. When that didn t work, they did a sit in for 7 days. At the end, the school board voted to reinstate him. 29. Were the walkouts only in East LA? a. No, some schools in West LA also walked out in support of the kids in East LA. 30. What was the outcome of the legal battle for the LA 13? a. It continued for 2 years, and then was thrown out based on the Bill of Rights (freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom to petition the government for aggressive grievances) Activity 2 Discuss the film with the class either orally or have students respond to the discussion questions in writing. This could be assigned for homework if class time is limited. Post-viewing Discussion Questions 1. Which movie was more compelling to watch? Why? 2. What information was left out of the HBO movie? 3. Which film did a better job portraying the actual outcomes of the walkouts? Why do you think that is? 4. Why do you think each director chose to include the information he did? 3/6

Class Date Chicano! Taking Back the Schools Name Instructions: As you watch the movie, answer the following questions. 1. How many Mexican Americans lived in East LA in 1968? Was that neighborhood integrated with the rest of the city? 2. How many Chicanos graduated high school? Why so few? 3. What happened to Harry Gamboa as a monolingual Spanish speaker in elementary school? 4. What message did the schools send to Chicano students about their futures? 5. What was the first step in the students activism? 6. What did the students call for? 7. What did the school board do when presented with the survey results and student demands? 8. What message was sent to students about being Mexican and speaking Spanish? 9. What happened in 1946 in Santa Ana, California? 10. What is UMAS? 11. According to Sal Castro, whom did the schools blame for Mexican American student failings? 4/6

12. What was Sal s activism shaped by? 13. How many schools were affected by the walkouts by the end of the week? 14. Did everyone in the community support the blowouts? Why or why not? 15. What role did the Brown Berets play in the walkouts? 16. What effect did the Watts Riot in 1965 have on the police? 17. Why did the principal tell the police they couldn t arrest the student who broke the lock on the gate at Garfield? 18. How did the police react to the protests? 19. Did Bobby Kennedy support the students? 20. How were parents involved in the movement? 21. What does this movement show about mass involvement? 22. What happened in June 1968? 23. Who acted as attorneys for the LA 13? 5/6

24. What is meant by the quote from an ACLU member who said, the demonstration is the poor man s printing press? 25. How and why was the FBI involved in the Chicano movement? 26. What did the cops and FBI agents who infiltrated the Brown Berets and the activists do? 27. How did the arrests of the LA 13 change the focus of the movement? 28. What happened after Sal Castro got fired? 29. Were the walkouts only in East LA? 30. What was the outcome of the legal battle for the LA 13? Discussion/Reflection Questions 5. Which movie was more compelling to watch? Why? 6. What information was left out of the HBO movie? 7. Which film did a better job portraying the actual outcomes of the walkouts? Why do you think that is? 8. Why do you think each director chose to include the information he did? 6/6