KEY TERMSOPENING ACTIVITY:  Black Nationalism  Stokely Carmichael and Black Power  Black Panther Party  Shirley Chisholm  Thurgood Marshall  Afrocentrism.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Notes 3.3B –Changes in the African-American Civil Rights Movement
Advertisements

29-3: Challenges and Changes in the Movement
Chapter 20 Section 3 African Americans Seek Greater Equality
Civil Rights Movement P4 Identify the key belief of each Civil Rights activist and evaluate if their strategy had merit? –Malcolm X –Stokely Carmichael.
The Civil Rights Movement. What was the Civil Rights Movement? The Civil Rights Movement was a mass protest movement against racial segregation and discrimination.
10th American History Unit V- A Nation Facing Challenges
Outcome: The Movement Changes. 1. Setting the Stage a.Many were growing impatient even though many significant gains had been made b.People began to question.
The Civil Rights Movement
Chapter 45 Jared Isaiah Fabian James Meredith- went on a march from Memphis, Tenn. to Jackson Miss. to gain followers for the Black Power Movement.
PRESIDENCIES ON THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT STANDARD 8.1 E.Q. HOW DID EACH PRESIDENT IMPACT THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT?
The Civil Rights Movement II: Black Power Reform, Revolt and Reaction Lecture Twelve: Term 2 Week 4.
Redefining Equality: From Black Power to Affirmative Action
Vocabulary Words and Phrases of the Civil Rights Movement
The Civil Rights Movement: The Movement Takes A Turn Mr. Dodson.
Civil Rights Review. What Supreme court case declared “separate is inherently unequal”? Brown v. Board of Ed.
Civil Rights Movement - Part 2 Quiz Review Game. Explain long-term factors and the spark that started the riots. Long-term factors:Spark: Police-Community.
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 20. De Jure Segregation Segregation based on the law Practiced in the South (Jim Crow Laws)
Civil Rights. Laws that were passed Laws that were passed Civil Rights Act of 1957 Civil Rights Act of 1957 –Protected the rights of African American.
Civil Rights – A Time Line Chapter 29. Vocabulary De facto discrimination – cultural/societal discrimination De facto discrimination – cultural/societal.
Section 3 Urban Problems African Americans became impatient with the slow pace of change; this frustration sometimes boiled over into riots.
BELLWORK What was the March on Washington? What was its purpose? What were the Montgomery Bus Boycotts? How did they effect public transportation? What.
Civil Rights Movement. WWII opened the door for the civil rights movement. WWII opened the door for the civil rights movement. In 1941, Roosevelt banned.
How was he involved in the movement? A supporter of Martin Luther King Member of SNCC (Student non-violent coordinating committee) Organiser of peaceful.
Challenges and Changes in the Movement
BELLWORK 1.What was SNCC? Why was it successful? 2.What is the NAACP? 3.If you had to join one civil rights group (SNCC, SCLC, NAACP, CORE) which would.
18.3 New Successes and Challenges. Objectives Explain the significance of Freedom Summer and the march on Selma Explain why violence erupted in some Americans.
New Directions Objectives: List some of the factors responsible for discontent among some African Americans Explain what new philosophies were developed.
Civil Rights Act of 1964 The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was passed under new President ____________________. The law’s major sections included: Title I:
Civil Rights Moves North Lesson Starter: List as many features of a ghetto as you can.
  NAACP – worked toward full legal equality for all Americans.  National Urban League – focused on economic equality.  CORE – pursued.
The Civil Rights Movement Section 1: The Movement Begins The Origins of the Movement “separate-but-equal” Plessy v. Ferguson 1896 de facto segregation.
29.3: The Struggle Continues. Civil Rights Groups SCLC: Southern Christian Leadership Conference; protestors; taught Civil Rights workers how to protect.
Chapter 16.  Origins of the Movement  Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) and the “separate but equal doctrine”  Jim Crow Laws  NAACP and CORE  The Movement.
Aim #85: How do the goals, philosophies and strategies differ amongst civil rights leaders and groups? Do now! Read the 3 excerpts and answer the accompanying.
The Other Side of Malcolm X Ballots or Bullets? 1964: breaks with Elijah Muhammad Makes pilgrimage to Mecca Learned that Islam taught racial equality Attitudes.
Different Views Objective: Explain divisions in the civil rights movement.
New Successes and Challenges Chapter 14 Section III.
The Kerner Commission Lesson Starter: What type of welcome did MLK receive in the North? Explain why this was the case.
The Movement Takes a New Turn Civil Rights Malcolm X and Black Nationalism More radical and militant political leaders emerged Malcolm X of Omaha,
{ The Civil Rights Movement Splits Essential Question: What were the causes and effects of the fracturing of the Civil Rights Movement?
Civil Rights Movement.
Civil Rights Act 1964 & Voting Rights Act 1965
The Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights Movement Making changes.
Outcome: The Movement Changes
New Successes and Challenges
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute June 2, 2016 U.S. History Mr. Green
The Movement Takes a Turn
Warm-up: What is the difference between de jure segregation and de facto segregation and give an example of each.
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Outcome: The Movement Changes
New Successes & Challenges
Civil Rights Section 3.
Section 3 Challenges and Changes in the Movement
Section 4: Disappointed Hopes
The Black Power Movement
Civil Rights Vocab Chapter 18 – Unit 4 – 19 words.
Divisions Destroy the Civil Rights Movement
Civil Rights After 1965.
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Paragraph Response: Topic: Racism in the North 1. When did most African Americans (A.A.) move from the South to the North? 2. What types of jobs fueled.
Groups 1 Groups 2 Laws etc.. Leaders All Areas
Outcome: The Movement Changes
Challenges and Changes in the Movement
Disenfranchisement : is the revocation of the right of suffrage of a person or group of people, or through practices, prevention of a person exercising.
Chapter 16-3 Civil Right New Issues
Outcome: The Movement Changes
The Struggle Continues
The Civil Rights Movement ( )
Changes and Challenges
Presentation transcript:

KEY TERMSOPENING ACTIVITY:  Black Nationalism  Stokely Carmichael and Black Power  Black Panther Party  Shirley Chisholm  Thurgood Marshall  Afrocentrism  Roots  Civil Rights Act of 1968  In most of the nonviolent protests, what factor pushed the federal government to respond to racial discrimination?  Study Test June 3 (Tuesday)

Describe the circumstances the led to the rise of the black power movement and the end of the civil rights movement.

 By the 1960s, 70% of African Americans lived in cities, often concentrated in ghettos, due to poverty.  In 1965, a race riot started in Watts  Lasted 6 days, 34 dead, 900 injured, 4,000 arrested  Riots spread to other cities  A government investigation, the Kerner Commission, concluded the riots were caused by inequality and unfulfilled expectations

 Read pg (just the top of 595)  You are reading to learn about why people abandoned Dr. King’s approach and what ideas did Malcolm X promote that became popular.  Read pg. 595 “SNCC Stands Up for Black Power”  You are reading to learn about what was “black power” and how did it change SNCC.

 Read pg , “Black Panthers Work for Self-Determination”  You are reading to learn what the goals of the Black Panther Party was and why it failed.  Read pg , “Black Power at the Polls Brings Political Gains”  You are reading to learn about what major political positions that African Americans earned in the 1960s.

 Read pg. 597, “Black Pride: The Growth of Afrocentrism”  You are reading to learn about the cultural changes that occurred due to the rise of black power.  Read pg. 598, “The Federal Gov’t Confronts Racism” and “Banning Racial Discrimination in Housing”  You are reading to learn about the end of the Civil Rights movement with Dr. King’s last protests.