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The Civil Rights Act of 1964 – Titles II and III: The Right to Go Where You Want
Selecting Primary Sources to Examine the Civil Rights Act of 1964
Freedom Summer 1964—and Ongoing Civil Rights Battles
Freedom Summer not only marked the mobilization of civil rights organizers in Mississippi during the 1960s, but it also yielded the creation of Freedom Schools and historic legislation. The fight for civil rights continues today, from voting rights to efforts to keep educators from teaching truthfully about our country’s full history. Use these resources next school year to help students contextualize Freedom Summer and how it connects to movements today.
- Young, Gifted and Black: Teaching Freedom Summer to K-5 Students
- Freedom Wasn’t Free in ’64—and It Isn’t Free Now
- No School Like Freedom School
Announcing Our Newest Curriculum: ‘Teaching the Civil Rights Movement’
If young people are to make the vision of a just and peaceful world a reality, we must give them the tools to build a strong multiracial democracy—and those tools include an accurate, comprehensive and inclusive history of the United States. We are thrilled to introduce Teaching the Civil Rights Movement, our newest curriculum, which begins in 1877 with Reconstruction and continues the narrative of the movement for equality and civil rights to the present. At this critical moment in which states and districts are attempting to censor discussions of race and racism in U.S.
- Teaching the Civil Rights Movement
- Teaching Hard History: American Slavery
- ‘Teaching Hard History’ Podcast