enese mentioned, for example, DCABDA wants to go to different schools for the Deaf/Hardof Hearing for, Black History Month, which is a great idea and it would be perfect for NAOBI-DC to be there as an the interpreters. This would help the students to look up to both organizations. The President, Niesha Washington-Shepard, made it clear that DCABDA’s event is traditional whereas it is not the same for NAOBI-DC. A member, Christene White, wants to know if there is going to be any money involved when it comes to the collaboration of the event. Jenese Portee responded…
While in school we all learn how Columbus, Pilgrims, and others came to America. But we were never taught our history. Today we are going learn what is considered the first record case of Africans in the Americas.…
The month of February is called Black History Month. It celebrates African Americans who changed our world for the better. One such man is Bill Cosby. He may now be involved in scandals, but he was an important figurehead for African Americans on Television.…
February is Black History month and blacks impacted our history by what they did and the lives that they changed. All blacks that lived back then went through unimaginable things, like slavery, segregation and racism. Martin Luther King Jr. had awful experiences, he was making speeches against the whites in order to free the blacks from slavery in result of him doing this, his house got burned down. He fought for blacks to do activities with whites, eat with them and even live in the same neighborhoods. The time that he lived was related to the same time the Finches, Ewells, Cunninghams, and the Black community in To Kill a Mockingbird.…
Black History Month, or National African American History Month, is a period in which we celebrate the achievements and progression of black Americans. In honor of Black History Month and our new intensive focus on food and food systems, we will CONNECT the history, progression, and importance of black farmers to health disparities.…
History has a deep past involving white and black relations. It is a history of deep oppression and hatred based on color of skin. Out of the Reconstruction Era of the United States, slavery was abolished but racial oppression would be evident and existent 100 years from then. White supremacist ideals kept the two races segregated. Not only did white people find black people grotesque and less than human, but they especially feared miscegenation. The only thing worse than being black was being of mixed race of black and white. Black Boy by Richard Wright and Separate Pasts by Melton McLaurin are both autobiographies that touch upon the ideas of growing up in the segregated South but from different perspectives. Richard Wright experiences the effects of blatant racism and segregation in the south first hand from his boyhood during World War I until his adulthood during the Great Depression. Melton McLaurin experiences segregation in Wade, North Carolina during the 1950s era from the point of view of a white boy undergoing…
It is said the African American race is misunderstood and the misunderstanding lead to various stereotypes aimed against black people by whites. I feel Woodson is implying that we as African American need to be taught our history, foundation and culture not only once a year (Black History Month) but everyday. Most importantly don’t teach it only to Black people but to everybody so that they to can see African Americans as who we really are, beautiful people who do have some type of self worth and history.…
The very essence and importance of Black History Month is to the whole world. It is of importance to educate the world and make sure that everyone is aware of the trials and hardships that we had to go through starting with slavery. There are various way that you can tie this significant month with education. Most Africans American do not realize how you need education to learn about these significant events that we lead up to today. Black History Month is celebrated during the month of February each year. Black History Month is not just a month but each day is a celebration for what our ancestors went through. During Black History Month, there days where we look at the things that all our ancestors and famous African Americans did for us like…
History always comes to an equilibrium with time, so does everything else. Nobody is purely saint or evil, and no history is purely great or dark. While it is impossible to learn all the history to reach that optimum equilibrium, it is the College Board’s responsibility to make sure that the curriculum is balanced between progresses and setbacks. History is history because time has past. What we currently have will become history as time flows. Therefore history is not just past events, but rather past events seen and evaluated by current eyes with current values. American history taught in other countries will be different from that taught domestically, since people with different identities share different values. Students with different races will feel differently when learning the same materials. Hence, I believe that learning history is not only about “what should be taught” or “what should be emphasized;” it is about how to draw connections between historical events to currents events to foster existing values while adding what we do not know to construct…
Our history has become diverse: different ethnic history that becomes part of the nation’s history. Our nation, the United States, even requires kids to take history classes so everyone is aware of significant and insignificant events that occur in the past. Though some parts were good others were harmful. We learn about our nations and ancestor’s past so we don’t have to repeat the events and suffered devastating consequences. We have designated the month of February as Black History both, though there is some occurrence that not even one moth could held, some appreciation is better than none.…
In honor of Black History Month, I’ve selected Langston Hughes as the figure I would write about, because through his poetry; Hughes displayed to America, the world through the eyes of African Americans living in Harlem, in the rough 1920s. The poet, lyricist, author, playwright, and social activist, was born on February 1, 1902, in Joplin Missouri, to James Hughes and Carrie Langston. Unfortunately, the couple divorced shortly after his birth, leaving Hughes to be raised mainly by his grandmother. When she passed away, Hughes was sent to live with his mother. In search of better jobs, Hughes’ mother would often move, and the two moved to several cities before eventually settling in Cleveland, Ohio.…
African Americans have pushed through so much adversity in America they should not want to be separated in history. Does the shortest month in history suffice for all the trial and tribulations that African Americans went through to progress in America. This has been a joke for years and I feel we have all heard it. African American history and American history are all one in the same, so why not teach and celebrate them equally. African Americans pushed for space in the history book and should not be singled out in one month. There should not be selective people or moments that we as Americans should hear about in black history. African Americans should aggressively push as American history a just as hard as our ancestors pushed in history for progression in America.…
These women changed society before this movement, not just during it. But their oppression is also a crucial piece to their participation in the struggle for freedom that has to be recognized too. It must become common knowledge that they were not dormant before or during this movement and that they chose to work in the face of their discrimination. They have to be connected to and equal victors in a significant event that left an impression in America’s story. Once this happens, students can learn the Civil Rights movement as a struggle for all Black people’s freedom that took place in the 1950’s and 60’s and has Black women and men who actively challenged and transformed the system they were both oppressed…
Black History Month to many is considered racists and discriminates Whites. Many people who believe in reverse racism debate if there is a Black History Month there should be a White History Month. However others debate that there is no need for White History Month and it is not only for a month but every single day. White History is amended in our school curriculum. While African American history is considered an elective. Black History Month is not a racist act but an act for people of all races to see what African Americans have done for this country as well as the…
This was vital because so many of the students were unaware that they were the descendants of greatness. Professor Maulana Karenga (1982), the creator of Kwanzaa, wrote “History gives blacks an understanding of themselves by suggesting possibilities of future national and world achievement based on what they have achieved in the past” (p. 49).…