Black History Month Counter Sit In Craft | Civil Rights Freedom on the Menu
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- This Black History Month Art Project Bundle makes a great bulletin board display and is an engaging way to reflect on the Counter Sit In Movement of the 1960s. Students makes a diner counter poster and a menu to display their research after learning about the counter sit-ins that began in GreensboroPrice $5.50Original Price $7.00Save $1.50
- These Black History Month art projects that are more than just worksheets! Crafts, projects and activities for K-5 students are the perfect way to engage students with these pioneers in the fields of flight (Bessie Coleman), botany (George Washington Carver), the counter sit in movement and civil riPrice $11.58Original Price $14.47Save $2.89
- This set of 23 Black History Month activities includes hands-on crafts and projects to engage your students and get them excited about historical and modern day figures and events! Leave the worksheets behind and inspire your students with these activities in a meaningful way that they will rememberPrice $49.97Original Price $85.38Save $35.41
Description
This Black History Month Counter Sit Ins Project is a retro 1960s menu writing activity for students containing prompts to research after learning about the counter sit-ins that began in Greensboro, NC, sparking a nation wide protest. Check out the preview to view this product in detail. This is a great way for students to share what they have learned about the civil rights counter sit ins and makes an engaging and thought provoking bulletin board.
What's included (Check out the preview for a closer look):
- Step-by-step directions with photographs
- Menu Templates with color or printer friendly black and white options.
- Each menu item has a research prompt
- Protest sticker page for the back of the menu
- Background information for students and teachers
This product is not editable.
On February 1, 1960, four young men from NCAT university sat at the counter in Woolworth's department store and asked for coffee and a doughnut. They were refused service and asked by the management to leave. The photograph that appeared of them in the newspaper the next day quickly became global news. Less than a week later, 1000 people protested at Woolworths and other local stores and the movement rapidly spread. Six months on, Woolworths integrated its counter service.
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