LESSONS AND RESOURCESLessons and readings from Putting the Movement Back Into Civil Rights Teaching and additional resources. Purchase Book Introduction An overview of the rationale for Putting the Movement Back Into Civil Rights Teaching, the lenses used to select the lessons and readings, and the organization of the content. Learn More Critiquing the Traditional Narrative Examine and challenge the traditional narratives of the modern Civil Rights Movement. Learn more Framing the Movement Reframe the Civil Rights Movement for students and ourselves. Learn More Desegregation Explore the desegregation of public spaces, including schools, transportation, and commercial and government establishments. Learn More Voting Rights Investigate the historical fight for African American voting rights, partially won with the 1965 Voting Rights Act and gutted in 2013 by the U.S. Supreme Court in Shelby County v. Holder. Learn More Black Power A closer look at the myriad ways the Black Power Movement extended the critique of capitalism and colonialism offered by the Civil Rights Movement. Learn More Labor and Land Labor and land have always been central to the struggle for civil rights, including the 1963 March on Washington. Learn More Transnational Solidarity Explore how the U.S. Civil Rights Movement was connected with international struggles for human rights, independence, and anti-colonialism. Learn More Student Engagment Examine ways that teachers have engaged young people in a study of Civil Rights Movement history and making it relevant to their lives today. Learn More Editors Advisors Authors donors