Lesson: Ruby Ibarra Song Analysis

$18.75

Ruby Ibarra Song Analysis is a 100-minute secondary ELA lesson that explores the intersection of art, science, and activism. By analyzing the work of Filipino-American rapper and scientist Ruby Ibarra, students investigate themes of colonialism and identity, culminating in an optional fourth informational paragraph for their research projects.

Description

Ruby Ibarra: Song Analysis and Writing is a high-octane addition to the Informational Reading & Writing Unit. This lesson highlights the multidimensional nature of modern activists, featuring Ruby Ibarra—a woman who is both a professional scientist and a revolutionary rapper. It’s designed to push students toward a more nuanced understanding of how identity and history, specifically colonialism, shape the goals of an activist.

Designed for a 100-minute ELA block, the lesson utilizes a synthesis approach. Students build background knowledge through an article about Ibarra’s work in medicine and music, followed by a deep-dive analysis of her lyrics and music videos. This serves as a mentor experience for students to then draft an optional fourth paragraph for their final reports, focusing on a choice topic or a deeper individual-to-system connection.

The lesson includes student examples and a robust rubric to ensure that even optional work maintains the highest academic standards.

What’s Included

  • Detailed 100-minute lesson plan featuring Ruby Ibarra as a modern activist mentor.

  • L11. Ruby Ibarra Article & Lyrics Notes Sheet to scaffold synthesis across multiple texts.

  • Instructional Slides that define and explore the concept of colonialism in a secondary-friendly way.

  • L11. Informational Writing with Rubric for drafting and assessing an optional fourth research paragraph.

  • Student Writing Example to provide a clear model of what a high-level informational response looks like.

  • Academic Sentence Stems for Table Talks and Numbered Heads sharing routines.

  • Alignment with WAESN Elements of Liberation (Identity & Resistance) and CCSS ELA standards for synthesizing information across mediums.

Why Educators Use This Lesson

  • Representation Matters: Centers a Filipino-American woman who balances a career in STEM with a career in social justice art.

  • Explores Complex Concepts: Provides a safe and structured way to introduce colonialism as a systemic issue.

  • Flexible Pacing: Acts as a bridge or extension lesson for students who are moving quickly through the unit and want to add more depth to their final project.

  • High-Level Synthesis: Challenges students to connect a biography, a music video, and a lyric sheet into one cohesive understanding of an activist’s mission.

  • Peer-Led Revision: Includes a structured sticky-note feedback protocol to keep the classroom community collaborative and supportive.

This lesson proves that you don’t have to choose between being a scientist and being a revolutionary—you can be both.

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