Lesson: Preview Background Knowledge

$18.75

Preview Background Knowledge is a comprehensive, 100-minute secondary ELA lesson that introduces students to the core concepts of activism and systemic oppression. Through comparative media analysis of historical figures and contemporary youth activists, students build a foundational Word Wall and complete a diagnostic writing pre-assessment to kick off the Informational Reading & Writing Unit.

Description

Preview Background Knowledge sets the stage for a deep dive into the lives and strategies of activists of color. As the introductory lesson of the Informational Reading & Writing Unit, it moves beyond dictionary definitions to explore activism as a living, breathing response to systemic harm.

Designed for secondary ELA, this lesson utilizes a multi-media approach to engage students with varying levels of prior knowledge. Students analyze mini-bios of legendary figures like Rosa Parks alongside modern-day footage of Black Lives Matter youth voices in West Seattle. The lesson is built around the Numbered Heads cooperative learning strategy, ensuring total participation as students investigate the NAACP Youth Coalition’s demands and define what it truly means to be an activist.

The session serves a dual purpose: it builds a collective Word Wall of essential academic vocabulary (identity, agency, oppression, etc.) and provides teachers with a critical diagnostic through an informational writing pre-test.

What’s Included

  • Detailed 100-minute lesson plan with structured timing for media analysis and group work.

  • Curated Media List featuring BLM Youth Voices and historical mini-bios.

  • L1. Source Note-Taking Sheet to scaffold evidence collection from videos and text.

  • NAACP Youth Coalition Investigation Guide to connect classroom learning to local, real-world action.

  • Informational Writing Pre-assessment with two distinct options (General vs. Activism-specific) to gauge student writing levels.

  • Vocabulary Support for building a classroom Word Wall centered on the WAESN Elements of Liberation.

Why Educators Use This Lesson

  • Bridges History and the Present: Shows students that activism isn’t a thing of the past—it’s a current, local necessity.

  • Comprehensive Diagnostic: Provides a clear baseline for student writing skills before the core unit instruction begins.

  • High Engagement Media: Uses video and digital investigation to hook students who may find traditional informational text daunting.

  • Collaborative & Equitable: The Numbered Heads strategy ensures that every student’s voice is heard and valued during the discovery phase.

  • Centering Identity: Encourages students to see themselves as potential activists by analyzing the motivations and actions of people their own age.

This is the lesson that proves information isn’t just for school—it’s for the struggle.

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