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LESSON PLAN
Digging Up a Painful Past
Skill
Pairing a Primary & Secondary Source
Read the Article
One hundred years after one of the worst race massacres in U.S. history, the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma, is searching for victims’ graves.
Before Reading
1. Set FocusPose these essential questions: What lessons can we learn from the past? What are the dangers of not understanding the past?
2. List VocabularyShare some of the challenging vocabulary words in the article (see below). Encourage students to use context to infer meanings as they read.
3. EngageHave students examine the before and after photos of the Dreamland Theatre on page 19. Then ask: What kind of life do you think the owners of the theater enjoyed before it was destroyed? How do you think they felt seeing their business destroyed so violently?
Analyze the Article
4. Read and Discuss Ask students to read the Upfront article about the race massacre in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Review why the article is a secondary source. (It was written by people who didn’t personally experience or witness the events.) Then pose these critical-thinking questions::
5. Use the Primary Sources
Project or distribute the PDF ‘Fleeing to Safety’ (or assign it in Google Classroom), which features excerpts from Mary E. Jones Parrish’s first-person account of what she experienced during the Tulsa race massacre. Discuss what makes the excerpts from the account a primary source. (They provide firsthand evidence concerning the topic.) Have students read the excerpts and answer the questions below (which appear on the PDF without answers).
Extend & Assess
6. Writing PromptResearch one of the white supremacist riots and massacres of the Red Summer of 1919, such as in Chicago or Philadelphia. Then write a one-page summary of your findings.
7. QuizUse the quiz to assess comprehension.
8. Classroom DebateIs Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum correct that the only way forward is by being honest about the past?
9. More Primary SourcesHave students choose two of the first-person accounts Parrish (of the primary source) collected in her book Events of the Tulsa Disaster (https://bit.ly/3noxWoL) and compare and contrast them for what the authors included and emphasized and what these choices help convey.
Download a PDF of this Lesson Plan