El movimiento por los derechos civiles y la filosofía de la protesta civil no violenta
Qué está incluido
4 reuniones en vivo
3 horas 40 minutos horas presencialesTarea
1 hora por semana. There will be homework assigned for several of the weeks including reading and watching materials that will be presented in class and occassional critical thinking exercises to help learners consider the materials.Evaluación
If requested, grades and assessments are available. All assignments must be completed in order to receive grade or assessment.Calificación
If requested, grades and assessments are available. All assignments must be completed in order to receive grade or assessment.Experiencia de clase
Nivel de inglés: desconocido
Grado de EE. UU. 6 - 9
Individuals, groups and nations have responded to injustice throughout history. The purpose of this course is to look at one particular approach to responding to injustice: the strategy of nonviolence through the lens of its application in the American civil rights movement. During the first class learners will understand the goals and rationale that provided a foundation for the philosophy of nonviolence as advocated by activists in the civil rights movement, including James Lawson, Martin Luther King Jr., Diane Nash, Bayard Rustin, John Lewis, Ella Baker the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and many others. The second and third classes explore how this philosophy played out in practice throughout the civil rights movement. In the second class learners become familiar with the overall strategy of nonviolence by identifying how these steps played out during one important struggle of the civil rights movement: the student protests in Nashville to end segregation. The third class focuses on the direct action tactics of nonviolence used at different points during the civil rights movement. Learners will come away from these three lessons understanding the ways individuals and groups can apply the philosophy and practice of nonviolence to inform contemporary struggles against violence and injustice. In the fourth and final class in this course learners will compare this model of advocacy to other forms of protest including some of those advocated by leaders such as Malcolm X in order to analyze which models and modes of civil action are most effective and the challenges that various forms of civil action may face. This final class will provide the learner a framework to critically analyze various forms of civil action to assist them in a determination of which forms of civil action may be the best in a given set of circumstances. The purpose of these lessons is to help students Understand the philosophy of nonviolence Understand nonviolence in practice Explore how the philosophy and practice of nonviolence played out during various moments in the civil rights movement Understand how the philosophy and practice of nonviolence can inform contemporary struggles against injustice and violence Critically compare and contrast nonviolent forms of social injustice movements with other types of protest Learners will be engaged through discussion debate as well as focused teaching of the materials by lecture supplemented by original source materials and audio visual aids.
Otros detalles
Orientación para padres
Mature themes involving civil rights, protest and civil action will be discussed throughout the course. The final course will introduce to the learners other forms of protest, which may include more violent forms, in order to compare and contrast the various methods used to achieve social change.
Recursos externos
Los estudiantes no necesitarán utilizar ninguna aplicación o sitio web más allá de las herramientas estándar de Outschool.
Experiencia y certificaciones del docente
I am a human rights lawyer by profession and a university professor and mom by passion. I have my JD with a specialization in international law and completed my PhD in international law in 2023.
I have travelled the world working for the UN as a human rights attorney and now travel the world with my two children while I consult for the UN and teach at universities around the globe. My home base is in San Francisco, and my University employer is in Sweden. I am passionate about teaching human rights and global issues to everyone from children to adults. No one is too young to understand the importance of human rights and it is never too early to learn about our world, our differences and our shared values as humans on this planet. I love sharing this passion. My children also learn on Outschool and I love sharing my knowledge and passion on Outschool as well.
My teaching style includes discussion and project style learning. I love interaction, but if you want to sit and soak it all in quietly, that’s ok by me too.
An important note about inclusiveness: One of the most important elements of my classes is inclusiveness. ALL are welcome, accepted and included in my courses. Part of learning in my classroom includes learning to make space for everyone. This may mean allowing extra time for learners who need to type answers for example. It also means allowing for all learning styles and having patience when learners might make mistakes and try again with encouragement and compassion from the whole class. This tolerance for diversity is provided, respected and expected in my classroom.
Some important administrative notes:
1) I am rarely able to accommodate schedule requests. Please leave them as when making up future schedules I will try to look at past requests and do my best. However, I work full time for a University, publish and travel to conferences often and usually live in three different time zones a year. On top of that, I homeschool my children and consult for the United Nations. I love teaching on Outschool so much, but am forced to limit my hours during the week in order to fit everything in. I am sorry!
2) due to the busyness of my schedule and the large number of messages I receive it can take me time to respond. I will likely not respond to schedule requests. My priority in response times will always be my students. I will try very hard to respond right away to them. My second priority will be parents of current students as they likely have an issue that needs immediate attention. After that I will do my best to respond. However, know that I travel a lot, so it may take some days for me to return your email, I sincerely apologize for this, I am just trying to make it all work, just like we all are. (Too many balls in the air....this juggling act of life is rough, right?) Thank you for your patience and understanding. It is priceless.
My Class Offerings:
UPPER ELEMENTARY - these classes are designed to engage upper elementary and middle schoolers in critical thinking skills and civic involvement. They are active in nature and involve project based learning.
LIVE COURSES - these are classes which meet weekly at a specific time. They are ongoing in nature and can be joined at any time. They will cycle through and begin again, and you can always check ahead to see where we are in the cycle.
1) Great or Terrible Leaders: You Decide! - an ongoing course which studies global historical leaders throughout time, this class aims to engage students to think about what leadership means and what traits or characteristics are needed to truly be a great leader.
2) Micro Nation: Create Your Own Country! - In this class learners get the chance to create their own unique realm while learning about what makes a country a country - from law to government, language to culture, learners explore what it takes to build a nation. At the end, each learner will have the chance to present their very own Micro-Nation at our 'World's Fair'.
FLEX COURSES - these are asynchrosus and taught by video and online written interaction. They include one office hour per class section where you can show up on a flexible or as-needed basis to tough base and have facetime connection if needed.
1) It's All Perspective: History Depends on Who Is Telling It - This 4-week class is designed to help students to analyze historical information and consider the perspective from which it has been reported. Concepts such as bias, perspective, primary and secondary sources, corroboration and more are explored.
2) Micro Nation: Create Your Own Country! - In this 8 week class learners get the chance to create their own unique realm while learning about what makes a country a country - from law to government, language to culture, learners explore what it takes to build a nation. At the end, each learner will have the chance to present their very own Micro-Nation at our 'World's Fair'.
3) Great or Terrible Leaders: You Decide! - a 10 week course which studies global historical leaders throughout time, this class aims to engage students to think about what leadership means and what traits or characteristics are needed to truly be a great leader.
MIDDLE SCHOOL AND HIGH SCHOOL OFFERINGS:
1) Water School: The Ways Water and Humankind Affect Each Other - This 7-week course is designed to teach learners to ultimately respect and understand the importance of water. It will encourage critical thinking from all aspects - how water effects learners individually, their homes, their families, their communities. The course comes at the topic of water in an interdisciplinary way, learning about water scientifically, sociologically, economically and culturally in order to ultimately allow learners to critically analyze the importance of water and how our treatment of it impacts themselves and the world they live in.
Reseñas
Clase grupal
60 US$
por 4 clases1 x por semana, 4 semanas
55 min
Completado por 31 alumnos
Videoconferencias en vivo
Edades: 11-16
4-12 alumnos por clase