Outschool
Abrir configuración de moneda, zona horaria e idioma
Iniciar sesión

El movimiento por los derechos civiles y la filosofía de la protesta no violenta FLEX

Este curso analiza cómo los humanos respondieron a la injusticia, centrando su atención en el movimiento por los derechos civiles y, en particular, en las formas de protesta no violenta y desobediencia civil.
Kirsten Bowman JD
Puntuación media:
4.9
Número de reseñas:
(765)
Popular
Clase

Qué está incluido

Tarea
2-4 horas por semana. There will be homework assigned each week based on the materials given. Learners will present their homework in class and engage in online discussion and debate. Beyond the weekly homework, there will be one final project to be posted for critical analysis from all the learners.
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.

Learners will engage in this learning via many modalities.  First, via video lecture from the teacher.  Secondly, through outside readings, including, among others, primary source materials and video links of those who created and led the civil rights movement.  Third, learners will engage through online discussions based on carefully crafted prompts designed to engage critical thinking.  Fourth, learners will engage in project based learning to engage critical thinking on social theory.   

The FLEX format of this course can provide a more personal learning experience between teacher and learner.  As the learner submits assignments, the teacher and learner may engage in discussion either through posts or through asynchronies video posts.  The value in this format is that it can allow for a more individualized attention and interaction.
Metas de aprendizaje
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
objetivo de aprendizaje

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.
Se unió el May, 2018
4.9
765reseñas
Popular
Perfil
Experiencia y certificaciones del docente
I am a human rights lawyer and have engaged in this material for decades.  As well, I have taught this theory at the University level, in law school and now on Outschool for the past two years in the Live version of this class.  

Reseñas

Clase grupal
Compartir

50 US$

por 4 semanas
4 semanas

Completado por 31 alumnos
No hay videoconferencias en vivo
Edades: 11-16

Esta clase ya no se ofrece
Acerca de
Apoyo
SeguridadPrivacidadPrivacidad de CAPrivacidad del alumnoAdministrar preferencias de datosTérminos
Obtener la aplicación
Descargar en la App StoreDescargar en Google Play
© 2024 Outschool