PRE-VISIT LESSON
Social Studies, Grades 6-12
Whose Vote Counts?
OBJECTIVES
Students will be able to:
" Perform a simulation of voter discrimination.
" Collect historical information relevant to voting
history in the United States.
" Discuss the implications of the voter discrimination
and voting rights.
" Interpret the information and experience through
creative writing.
INTRODUCTION
During the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950's and 60's,
African-Americans throughout the southern United States
struggled to gain full voting rights, often in the face
of severe and violent opposition. The Freedom Quilting
Bee, an outgrowth of the Civil Rights Movement, was established
in 1966 near Gee's Bend, as local people were losing their
income and sometimes their homes on local farms after
registering to vote. Father Francis X Walter, an Episcopal
priest and civil rights worker, saw the potential economic
value of quilts he saw hanging on a clothesline and helped
the group get started.
MATERIALS
" Writing materials
" Voting rights research resources (textbooks, U.S.
Constitution, and internet links:
http://www.usdoj.gov
http://www.voicesofcivilrights.org
http://www.votingrightsact.org
http://www.americaslibrary.gov
http://www.wise.fau.edu
ACTIVITIES
Have students elect a class president with one fourth
of the class kept from voting. Explain that the president
can make decisions regarding lunchtime, homework, and
breaks for the entire class.
Discuss what it is like not to have all members of the
class vote even when the non-voters have to abide by the
class president's rules. Ask the non-voters what it felt
like not to vote. Did you want to vote? Why? Ask the voters:
How did it feel to vote when others could not?
Have students work in small groups to research the history
of voting in the United States. Each group will research
and share their findings regarding one of the following
topics:
" Definition of democracy
" 1776 - Declaration of Independence from England,
taxation without representation
" 1870 - 15th Amendment, voting rights to African-American
males
" 1920 - 19th Amendment, voting rights to women
" 1948 - Native American voting rights
" 1960 - Civil Rights Act, protection of voting rights
" 1964 -- 24th Amendment, ended the poll tax
" 1971 -- 26th Amendment, reduction of voting age
qualification to eighteen years
Elect a new class president with all students participating
this time. Ask students to discuss the difference in outcomes:
Who is president this time? How did those who did not
vote the first time feel about voting the second time?
Why is it important for everyone to vote? Where and how
does a potential voter receive a voter registration card
in your community?
Students will work individually or with a partner to
compose a spoken-word style poem or rap that expresses
their feelings about voter discrimination, voting rights,
and/or voting history and perform for the class if they
choose.
Lesson adapted from: Auburn University,
http://auburn.edu/academic/other/geesbend/
Artists
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