Structure I
Structure II
The Civil Rights Movement: Court Cases
The Civil Rights Movement: Leaders and Figures
The Civil Rights Movement: Events
100

What shouldn't a hook be?

What is a question?

100

What is a thesis?

What is a claim

100

The plaintiff and defendant of Plessy v Ferguson

Defendant Plessy

Plaintiff Ferguson 

100

The person who gave the "I Have a Dream" Speech

Who is Martin Luther King

100

The event where the "I Have a Dream" speech was given

What is the March on Washington

200

The three portions of a introduction paragraph

What is an attention grabber, background, and claim

200

The three levels of analysis

what, how, why

200

The amendment that Plessy v. Ferguson was thought to violate?

What is The Fourteenth Amendment

200

The person who refused to give up their seat on the bus.

Rosa Parks

200

The phrase that Martin Luther King coined regarding non-violent protest?

What is Civil Disobedience?

300

The four portions of a body paragraph?

What is Point, Evidence, Explain, Link

300

What makes up the "how" level of analysis?

Literary devices; how the author portrays something (the what)

300

The court case that rules "separate but equal".

What is Plessy v. Ferguson?

300

The repetition of "I Have a Dream" is an example of which literary device?

What is anaphora?

300

The media spread event that caused national outrage and support of the civil rights movement?

What is the march on Birmingham?

400

The question to ask yourself when writing a hook.

How can I make this interesting to me?

400

The things that make up the why portion of analysis

What is authorial intent and effect on the reader

400

The name of the child involved in Brown v. Board

Who is Linda Brown?

400

The three notable leaders of the civil rights movement

Who is Thurgood Marshall, Rosa Parks, and Martin Luther King

400
Four examples of Civil Disobedience

Boycotts

Refusing to buy goods or services from a business in order to force it to change its policies

►Hunger strikes

Refusing to eat anything in order to get attention for your cause

►Petitions

Writing a letter to ask the government or a company to change its policy, and then getting as many people to sign it as possible.

►Marches and demonstrations

Getting as many people as possible to gather in one place to get attention to your cause

►Strikes

Refusing to work in order to force your managers or government to change their policies

►Sit ins

The protesters come into a place, sit down, and refuse to move.



500

The three steps to a background

1. Connect/Expand on hook

2. Connect to overall topic

3. Connect to claim

500

The things that make up the what of an analysis

characters, plot, theme

500

The court case that overturned the "Separate but Equal" ruling.

What is Brown vs. Board?

500

The meaning of the SCLC and the leaders of it

What is the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and who is Martin Luther King/Thurgood Marshall

500

What event ended with 17 hospitalized marchers?

What is Bloody Sunday