The Harlem Renaissance 11 th Grade English 7 Days

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Nalin Needham EDS 500 Sociocultural Contest of Teaching and Learning Unit Plan Final The Harlem Renaissance 11 th Grade English 7 Days Curriculum Standards (1) Common Core Readiness (CCR) Speaking & Listening Standards L.1: Comprehension and Collaboration (Grades 11-12). a. L.1: Initiating and participating in collaborative discussions (2) Common Core Readiness (CCR) Speaking & Listening Standards L. 4: Presentation of Knowledge and Ideas (Grades 11-12) a. L.4: Presenting information clearly (3) Common Core Readiness (CCR) Writing Standards L.1-L.6: Text Types and Purposes, Production and Distribution of Writing (Grades 11-12) a. L.1: Writing supporting arguments b. L.2: Writing informative/explanatory texts c. L.3: Writing narratives d. L.4: Producing clear and coherent writing e. L.5: Developing and strengthening writing (editing) f. L.6: Using technology (4) Common Core Readiness (CCR) Reading Standards L.1-L.6: Key Ideas and Details, Craft and Structure (Grades 11-12) a. L.1: Citing textual evidence to support analysis b. L.2: Determining and analyzing central ideas c. L.3: Analyzing complex sets of ideas/events d. L.4: Determining the meaning of words and phrases e. L.5: Analyzing structural effectiveness f. L.6: Determining point of view Objectives: (1) Students will the explore and analyze history of The Harlem Renaissance and the events that influenced it (ex. The Great Migration). (2) Students will examine the cultural artifacts of The Harlem Renaissance, including poetry, artwork, and music that was created during that era. (3) Students will contextualize, analyze, critique and synthesize cultural artifacts from The Harlem Renaissance into the larger socio-historical context surrounding that era.

Essential Questions: (1) Where does The Harlem Renaissance fit into the broader concepts of American history and American Literature? (2) What were the realities faced by residents in Harlem during The Harlem Renaissance? How did they differ from the expectations that people who moved to Harlem during The Great Migration had? (3) What do the cultural artifacts covered in this unit say about The Harlem Renaissance? How do they address expectations, fears, and the search for a new Black voice/culture? Day 1 I will open the class by providing introducing the Harlem Renaissance as a historical era. Part of this introduction will focus on the Great Migration and the rest will focus on the Harlem Renaissance. In both cases, historical information will be presented as an audiovisual lecture formatted as a PowerPoint presentation. Following the introductory lecture, students will have the opportunity to ask questions and there will be a brief class discussion. Following this discussion, a sheet will be passed out introducing the student research project tied to this unit. The research project will be to select a piece of art/literature/poetry not covered in the unit and to write an analytical essay about that piece of art/literature/poetry. Following this, students will engage in a creative writing hypothetical, where they place themselves in the position of a migrant from the South and detail their potential fears and expectations about moving North. At the end of the period, students will spend 5-10 minutes writing in a reflection journal, where they will react and reflect upon the topic discussed in class. PowerPoint presentation. Creative writing hypothetical worksheet/prompt. Assignment sheet for student research project. Small notebooks for reflection journals. Lecture, class discussion, hypothetical thinking viz. creative writing, and reflective thinking. Class/Group participation (0-3 scale of points to be added to student s unit grade). Creative writing rubric assessed on a 1-5 scale on the quality of ideas and engagement with the material presented in class as well as on spelling and grammar. Reflection journal ( or 0).

Day 2 I will open the class by discussing the idea of dreams/aspirations and their nonfulfillment in the context of the Harlem Renaissance. The class will discuss some of the hopes and expectations that the people of Harlem had, their dreams and goals that they carried with them from the South. I will then provide information as to the problems encountered by the people of Harlem, the frustration of those expectations and the inequity they faced in their transition to a Northern, urban environment. I will then read three poems, Langston Hughes Harlem (Dream Deferred) and Claude McKay s The Tired Worker and Birds of Prey. The class will then discuss as a group what these poems are saying, what frustrations they are detailing and how those frustrations are being presented. I will then divide the class into small groups and have the groups read an excerpt from Native Son (Ch. 1, scene with the rat) that details the squalor that many residents in Harlem faced. The groups will then discuss the excerpt from Native Son. After small group discussion, the class will reconvene (time permitting) for a wrap-up discussion on the texts covered. At the end of the period, students will spend 5-10 minutes writing in a reflection journal. Langston Hughes Harlem (Dream Deferred), Claude McKay s The Tired Worker and Birds of Prey, and Richard Wright s Native Son (Chapter 1). Small notebooks for reflection journals. Comparison exercise (contrasting expectations with reality), small group discussion, class discussion and sharing of ideas, and reflective thinking. Class/Group participation (0-3 scale of points to be added to student s unit grade), and reflection journal ( or 0). Day 3 I will open class with a brief lecture on forms of Black expression during the Harlem Renaissance. This lecture will focus on visual media and music. In doing this, I will play selected excerpts of jazz from the Harlem Renaissance era. This will be followed by a brief classroom discussion of the music, specifically about what the students reactions to the music are and how the music relates to other forms of black

expression (ex. Blues) as well as the Harlem Renaissance environment. Following this, pictures of well-known Harlem Renaissance artists paintings will be shown, with the same class discussion occurring afterward. Following this, I will divide the class into small groups and assign 1-2 further paintings to be viewed and discussed by the students. Small group discussion will focus on the subjects of the paintings and what they say about the artists impressions of the Harlem Renaissance. The period will end with 5-10 dedicated to students writing in their reflection journals. Selected excerpts of jazz. Art works by the following painters: William H. Johnson, Aaron Douglas, Jacob Lawrence, Romare Bearden and Louis Mailou Jones. Small notebooks for reflection journals. Audiovisual representation and interpretation. Small group discussion. Reflection on artistic modes of expression. Reflective thinking. Class/Group participation (0-3 scale of points to be added to student s unit grade), and reflection journal ( or 0). Day 4 The idea of modes of expression will be continued in this class. Specifically, this class will be oriented around writing and the emergence of new ideas regarding Black culture in the Harlem Renaissance. The class will open with a discussion about the concept of voice and agency, highlighting the fact that many Black literati in the Harlem Renaissance needed white sponsorship in order to pursue artful expression. The discussion will also highlight the emergence of ideas regarding a new, urban Black culture, and the contrast that exists between this culture and the rural, agricultural roots of many Harlem residents who migrated from the South. These ideas will then be shown at work through a reading of two poems, Langston Hughes Easy Boogie and Countée Cullen s Yet Do I Marvel. Students will then be divided into small groups, wherein each group will be assigned a poem from among Langston Hughes s Theme for English B, and Dream Boogie, Countée Cullen s Heritage, and Claude McKay s Exhortation: Summer 1919 and Harlem Shadows. In these small groups, students will read the assigned poem and, as a group, complete a poem worksheet, identifying key ideas and imagery from the poem and how it relates to the larger unit of the Harlem Renaissance. Following this, class will reassemble for class discussion.

Langston Hughes Theme for English B, Dream Boogie, and Easy Boogie, Countée Cullen s Yet I Do Marvel, and Heritage, and Claude McKay s Exhortation: Summer 1919, and Harlem Shadows. Poetry worksheet/exercise. Small notebooks for reflection journals. Examination of voice/agency. Promotion of reading comprehension and interpretation. Reflective thinking. Class/Group participation (0-3 scale of points to be added to student s unit grade). Poetry worksheet rubric assessed on a 1-5 scale on the quality of ideas and engagement with the material presented in class as well as on spelling and grammar. Reflection journal ( or 0). Day 5 I will open the class with a brief lecture on how to conduct research. This lecture will include a discussion of research methods and resources and will be accompanied by a checklist denoting sources of potential interest, available resources for research and types of research documents. Students will then work individually, conducting research into their chosen topic for their student writing project. List of sources for starting point in Harlem Renaissance research. Checklist of available resources for research and types of research documents. Student lead learning and exploration. Assessment & Evaluation Class participation evidenced through conducting research (0-3 scale of points to be added to students unit grade).

Day 6 Students will continue their research for their Writing Project. List of sources for starting point in Harlem Renaissance research. Checklist of available resources for research and types of research documents. Student lead learning and exploration. Assessment & Evaluation Class participation evidenced through conducting research (1-0 scale of points to be added to students unit grade). Day 7 Students will each give a short presentation of their research project, noting what piece of art/literature/poetry they selected and 3 things it says about 3 areas it relates to the Harlem Renaissance. Prior to these presentations, the students will receive a What Did I Learn? worksheet, which they will fill out during the presentations. On the worksheet, the students will relate briefly what they learned from the unit and choose 3 things they learned from the other students presentations. Student projects and What Did I Learn? worksheet. Synthesis of ideas covered in the Harlem Renaissance unit through the students writing projects. Group sharing. Reflective thinking.

Assessment & Evaluation The project document (research paper) and presentation will be graded on a scale that will be determined. Worksheet on a 1-5 scale based on reflection, ideas, spelling and grammar. Reflection journal ( or 0). Possible Obstacles/Back-Up Plans: This unit is directed at students who already have an understanding of how to engage in basic readings of texts and who have the ability to reflect on larger themes and apply those themes to readings of texts. Although I expect that students would be able to do this type of work, I will not take it as given that such reading and engagement with the texts to be read and discussed will be possible for all (if any) of the students. Consequently, in the event that students are struggling with analyzing the texts in this unit, I will provide mini-lessons on composition, poetic techniques, and literary techniques as needed in order to allow students to truly engage with the unit. Additionally, I will make myself available for after school clinics during which time students can receive one-on-one or small group instruction on these topics. Additionally, I will make myself available during these after-school clinics for further instruction on how to conduct research. Unit Reflections: I selected this because it not only addresses the idea of multi-cultural education in that it focuses on the history and writings of a minority group (African-Americans) but also because it provides a natural, self-contained event that lends itself readily to the creation of a lesson unit. Additionally, from a multi-cultural perspective as well as an English perspective, there are lots of interesting ideas regarding expression and voice/agency that exist in The Harlem Renaissance, all of which makes it an apt event around which to plan a unit.