Activism Common Assessmentmr. Becker's Classroom




Lesson Plans - Activism

The Fillmore

Neighborhoods: The Hidden Cities of San Francisco

TITLE: The Rise of Community Activism

PDF: DOWNLOADABLE FILE (see PDF Instructions)
GRADES: 11-12

SUBJECT AREA(S):

  • U.S. History (Twentieth Century)
  • American Democracy
  • English/Language Arts
OVERVIEW: When the city of San Francisco announced phase two of 'urban renewal' in the Fillmore district, the mostly African American community was skeptical. The real impact of phase one, as James Baldwin noted in 1963, was not improvement of life for residents, but the 'removal of Negroes.' This time residents fought back. Ordinary citizens became leaders as they formed the Western Addition Community Organization, a group whose legal victory against the city marked the first time in US history that the people won the right to participate in their community's redevelopment.
STANDARDS
PROGRAM SEGMENTS

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

MATERIALS & TIME

PRE-VIEWING ACTIVITIES

FOCUS FOR VIEWING

VIEWING ACTIVITIES

POST-VIEWING ACTIVITIES

EXTENSIONS

ASSESSMENT

PROGRAM SEGMENTS:

  1. 0:52-1:04 Fillmore becoming a ghetto; community activist Mary Rogers; Phase A-2 of Urban Renewal; Reverend Hannibal Williams becomes a community leader; the birth of the Western Addition Community Organization; Hamilton hired as Redevelopment Agency director; WACO wins legal victory
  2. 1:04-1:08 New mayor Joseph Alioto; preservation rather than destruction; promissory notes earned by WACO go unused because residents couldn't afford new properties
  3. 1:24 Activist Mary Rogers is the community
LEARNING OBJECTIVES:
  • Students will analyze the birth of the Western Addition Community Organization (WACO) and the rise of citizen leaders, and interpret the significance of WACO's legal victory against the city of San Francisco for communities nationwide.
  • Students will relate lessons learned about community organizing and activism to issues today, identifying leadership roles and legal channels to have an impact on their own communities.
MATERIALS:
  • The Fillmore, part 4 of The Neighborhoods of San Francisco
  • 'Resident Experts: Neighbors study, solve problems,' by Benjamin Pimentel, San Francisco Chronicle, 10/1/99
  • newspapers
  • the World Wide Web

TIME:

2 class periods (60 min. each)
PRE-VIEWING ACTIVITIES:

Have students:

  1. Read 'Resident Experts: Neighbors study, solve problems' in The San Francisco Chronicle (10/1/99).
  2. Discuss: What is the article about? How are community groups 'expanding their role as watchdogs by hunting down information to solve problems'? How does community-based research differ from 'traditional' research, and why does it matter? In your opinion, what importance does community activism have in a democracy? Identify problems in your community and brainstorm strategies for community participation in their solutions.
  3. Define: Community organization, activism. 4. Introduce The Fillmore, a document about a San Francisco neighborhood that was targeted for urban renewal from 1949 through the 1960s. [Note: If the preceding lesson (Urban Renewal) is not studied, it is advised to view or summarize 0:35-0:52 also and define 'urban renewal.'] Define: federal injunction.
FOCUS FOR VIEWING:

Ask students:

  1. As you watch, identify:

    - A-2 (urban renewal plan)
    -
    Justin Herman (city official in charge of redevelopment)
    - Mary Rogers and Hannibal Williams (community activists)
    - WACO (Western Addition Community Organizations) and its accomplishments

  2. After watching the video, be prepared to evaluate the successes and failures of WACO's strategies to fight the city government.
VIEWING ACTIVITIES:

Pause the tape after segment 1.

  1. Identify community activists. What did they want? How did they become leaders? Discuss their leadership qualities and compare to other ordinary folks who have become leaders (e.g. the Civil Rights Movement, the American Revolution, other countries).
  2. Identify WACO. Why was WACO helpless against Justin Herman? What strategies did they employ to protest A-2, and what did they win?

Pause the tape after segment 2.

  1. Explain the purpose of the promissory notes WACO won for local residents. Why did 96% go unused?
  2. Discuss: In the end, how effective was WACO's legal victory in protecting the interests of the residents of the neighborhood? Consider Carlton Goodlett's statement: 'Experience has taught minorities if we don't start out right, we may not end up right.' How could WACO have achieved greater results?
POST-VIEWING ACTIVITIES:

Have students organize to address an issue affecting their school community.

  1. As a class, brainstorm problems affecting students' learning at the school, exploring their causes within and outside the school. Examples might include: violence, class size, school size, resources, teacher turn-over, disciplinary policies, health conditions, class offerings, Internet access.
  2. By vote, choose one issue to address as a class. As a class, hypothesize about possible causes of the problem. Based on their interests, have students form teams to research the causes. Teams will collect data, conduct interviews of authorities with influence over the situation, and formulate a report. Teams will select a leader from their group to report out to the class. Invite a community organizer or activist from your city to talk with the class about his/her job and strategies for making change from the grassroots level. Invite a panel of youth activists into class to talk about their experiences. Some possible groups to ask: YO! (Youth Outlook), Third Eye, Youth Speaks, Urban Arts in Oakland.
EXTENSIONS:

Lessons of History: Civil Rights and the end of Apartheid
Research strategies used by Civil Rights activists and opponents of South Africa's Apartheid regime to achieve change. Explore how local activism, combined with national and international organizing, achieved results.

Community organizing around key local issues
Extend the community organizing activity by connecting with other classes, schools, or local community organizations to achieve greater impact. Study recent success stories, such as Oakland Community Organizations' Action for Small Schools (Oakland, CA 11/8/99, search The Oakland Tribune [www.newschoice.com/newspapers/alameda/tribune]) to gain ideas for effective strategies. Interview members of effective groups in person, by telephone, or via e-mail.

Leadership
Invite community leaders to speak in class. How did they become leaders? Did they always see themselves as leaders, or did their concern for an issue require them to become one? What does it take to be an effective leader and what mentorship possibilities exist for students?

Media Advocacy
Study the role of media in community activism. Contact KQED to learn about the KQED Youth Media Corps where students learn how to use the media to express issues of importance in their lives.

Connecting & Talking Back
Participate in online petitions and debates on issues of importance to the local community as well as national and international communities. Visit www.e-thepeople.com or find talk-back sections on your local newspapers' web sites. Join existing discussions or start new ones.

Hold a strategy session in class (a straight-forward guidebook about community organizing ). Based on the qualities identified earlier, the class should vote for a leader(s) to facilitate the session who will spearhead future action steps. The leader(s) will:

  • REPORT: Have each team report on their findings.
  • GOALS: Lead the class in defining the goals of change and the key authority figures who can help achieve them.
  • SCOPE: Lead the class in evaluating the scope of the goals to make sure they are concrete, realistic, and highest-impact.
  • ACTION PLAN: Lead the class in developing an action plan based on clear strategies. Possibilities include: rally (action), write-in campaign, petition (Internet or paper), sit-in, or even a lawsuit. The action plan should clearly state the responses expected of authority figures.
  • DELEGATE ROLES: All class members should have a job to prepare for the action plan. Jobs may include: Event planning (organizing the space, microphones, multimedia for presentations, etc.), Promotion (attracting members of the community to attend, including other students, parents, teacher, administrators, and politicians; consider how the Internet can be used to draw participants, e.g. protesters at the World Trade Organization Summit in Seattle), Publicity (attracting media coverage of the event, including newspaper, online, radio and television reporters), Managing speakers (inviting and coaching both ordinary people affected by the issue and authorities or experts.

Hold your event!
Afterward, have students take 20 minutes to write a reflective piece about the experience. What worked and what would they do differently next time? How did it change their feeling of power to make change? In what ways are people who bind together stronger than individuals in confronting problems?

ASSESSMENT:
  1. Evaluate students' written and oral reports, including understanding of the goals of community organizing/activism, depth of research, and rationale for suggested action steps.
  2. Have students review their own and peers' performance in preparing and running the community organizing activity, offering suggestions to improve effectiveness.
  3. Read and respond to each student's reflective writings, offering feedback on talents/abilities you observed him/her contributing to the community.
STANDARDS:

This lesson addresses the following national content standards found in the McRel Standards Database: www.mcrel.org/standards-benchmarks.

Grades K-12:

United States History:
31. Understands economic, social and cultural developments in the contemporary United States.

Civics:
1. Understands ideas about civic life, politics and government.
9. Understands the concept of a constitution, the various purposes that constitutions serve, and the conditions that contribute to the establishment and maintenance of constitutional government.
11. Understands the role of diversity in American life and the importance of shared values, political beliefs and civic beliefs in an increasingly diverse American society.
14. Understands issues concerning the disparities between ideals and reality in American political and social life.
28. Understands how participation in civic and political life can help citizens attain individual and public goals.
29. Understands the importance of political leadership, public service and a knowledgeable citizenry in American constitutional democracy.

Language Arts:
Writing:
4. Gathers and uses information for research purposes.

Reading:
5. Uses the general skills and strategies of the reading process.

The sprawling operation by Turning Point Action, led by conservative activist Charlie Kirk, evades guardrails put in place to prevent the spread of online disinformation, experts said. 5 Things You Should Know About FBI Database: File Size: 201 kb: File Type: doc. Browse essays about Social Activism and find inspiration. Learn by example and become a better writer with Kibin’s suite of essay help services. It looks like you've lost connection to our server.


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Students on college and university campuses across the nation are protesting—and they are protesting a lot. Responding to everything from controversial speakers to politically-themed social events, students are more comfortable than ever with communicating their displeasure about what is or is not happening on their campuses.

In May 2016, TIME reported, in “The Revolution on America’s Campuses,” that major protests had occurred at more than 50 institutions where student protesters “made demands to right what they see as historic wrongs—demands for greater faculty diversity, new courses, public apologies, administrators’ ousting.”

Certainly, the results and aftermath of the 2016 presidential election, which ignited activism for and against President Donald Trump’s policies and decisions, presented another opportunity for unrest on campus in the form of various protests that ranged from petitions and signs to walkouts and rallies. Invitations extended to controversial figures to speak on campus also have been met with rigorous resistance by students who consider these individuals’ views so contrary to the values and ideals of the institution as to deny them a forum for addressing the campus community (see sidebar, “Speak Freely, But Not Too Freely”). And, protests against sexual assault and rape continue across the country, with a backdrop of data reported by the National Center for Victims of Crime indicating that as much as 60 percent of acquaintance rapes on college campuses occur in casual or steady dating relationships.

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Whatever the issue or cause, according to the most recent results from UCLA’s annual CIRP Freshman Survey (2016), this trend in student activism is likely to continue. Close to 138,000 first-time, full-time students from around the U.S. were surveyed; and 22 percent report having already demonstrated for a cause; 51 percent have spoken up publicly about a cause; and 55 percent have helped raise money for a cause or campaign. In the 2015 survey, 8.5 percent of respondents indicated that they had a “very good chance” of participating in protests; this is the highest percentage in the survey’s 51-year history and an increase of almost 3 percent since the 2014 survey.

In 2016, participating students also expressed interest in becoming community leaders (43 percent), influencing social values (49 percent), and promoting racial understanding (47 percent).

Given these trends, higher education institutions are well served by efforts to better coordinate their strategic responses to social unrest on their campuses before, during, and after specific incidents take place.

Readying for the Rally

Students’ commitment to promoting racial understanding on their campuses and eliminating all forms of bias has generated numerous protests as evidenced by events last year at Duke University, Durham, N.C. Last April, several students staged a weeklong sit-in at the school’s Allen Building, which houses its administrative offices, to protest alleged racist treatment of employees.

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During his tenure in higher education, Benjamin Reese, vice president of Duke’s Office for Institutional Equity since 2005, has seen his fair share of student protests. However, in his view, what distinguishes today’s student activism from that of previous decades, such as the 1960s, are methods of communication and student expectations. “If I think about a protest happening on Duke’s campus tomorrow, it likely will be in rapid response to some form of communication on social media,” Reese says, “which then influences students’ expectations in terms of how quickly we communicate and in what form.”

Additionally, according to Reese, students have greater expectations of those in leadership roles in terms of their ability to address their concerns. “Students expect them to be skilled in dealing with issues related to sexual orientation, race, and ethnicity,” he explains. “They expect them to be competent and responsive, which has led some of us in the higher education community to think differently about what’s appropriate preparation for leaders on our campuses.” To that end, following this most recent protest, the university put initiatives in place, including the formation of a Task Force on Hate and Bias Issues, the first to address student concerns as well as better prepare faculty and staff to address these issues.

While no specific incident precipitated the administration’s actions, similar measures were put in place at the University of Texas, Austin, to ensure that issues involving diversity were fully addressed. “We felt it was important to get out in front of this and not be reactive,” says Gregory Vincent, the university’s vice president of diversity and community engagement. “Because these issues are so high profile, it was critical to bring together the areas of the administration responsible for responding to concerns both on and off campus.”

In fact, it was an off-campus party hosted by a student organization in February 2015 that caused the most concern among faculty and students. The UT chapter of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity held an event deemed a “Border Patrol” party, at which some individuals dressed as construction workers and border patrol agents, while others dressed in ponchos and sombreros. The online reporting system monitored by the university’s Campus Climate Response Team (CCRT) provided a mechanism for tracking concerns about the event, which accounted for 20 percent of all reports of campus climate incidents received during the 2014–15 academic year. All reports filed about the party indicated race/ethnicity as the primary bias concern. Established in 2012, the CCRT plays a significant role in managing the university’s response to such potential incidents of bias on campus.

Both universities have put mechanisms in place that enable them to take a decidedly more coordinated and collaborative approach to responding to social issues on their campuses than they may have accomplished in the past.

Conversation and Collaboration

Perhaps student activism continues on higher education campuses because, in some respects, it proves effective in getting the leadership at these institutions to take action. A case in point is the establishment of Duke’s Task Force on Bias and Hate Issues—and subsequently the Bias and Hate Issues Committee—after a group of students staged the sit-in.

“After the takeover of the administration building, we established the task force and then the committee,” Reese notes. “One of the students’ demands was a better focus on addressing bias and hate issues on campus.”

The committee held its first meeting in February, met twice a month through May, and then began holding monthly meetings. Made up of students, faculty, and staff, the committee is charged with reviewing university policies and practices, examining educational and training programs, offering recommendations on university adjudication processes, and analyzing data on bias and hate issue trends. At Reese’s request, the committee will also provide guidance to the university president on specific incidents and issues.

According to Reese, this type of collaborative effort has become the norm and expectation on Duke’s campus. Here are a few examples:

  • The Office of Institutional Equity provided leadership in the creation of a revised Institutional Statement of Commitment to Diversity and Inclusion. “Five years ago, a few leaders on campus would have worked on this statement,” says Reese. “This time, a group of 40 people across campus participated in developing it. This was a community effort, which is the expectation that people have. Students expect that they will be included in leadership discussions.”
  • Reese’s office also took a collaborative approach to developing a video, “Building an Inclusive Work Environment at Duke,” to facilitate increased understanding of diversity and inclusion. “During the production process, I gathered input from the campus community,” Reese explains. “As a result, we went back and filmed three more segments based on their feedback after the first preview.” The goal is for 35,000 people to view the 15-minute video and respond to questions. More than 9,000 individuals have viewed the video so far.
  • Duke’s efforts include other resources to provide faculty and staff relevant education about diversity and inclusion. Reese’s office focuses about 20 percent of its efforts on students and the remainder on faculty and staff, so he has been very involved in coordinating and presenting training for the latter two groups, particularly in the area of implicit bias. (Reese describes such bias as “the positive or negative unconscious attitude we may hold about an individual or group.”)

At the beginning of their employee orientation, all new faculty members in arts and sciences participate in 90 minutes of training in recognizing implicit bias and techniques to temper unconscious beliefs and attitudes. “Doing this training at the beginning of orientation sends an important message,” says Reese. Additionally, attendance at workshops focused on unintentional biases is required before faculty can sit on search and selection committees within arts and sciences.

From Reese’s standpoint, all these efforts represent an important step towards addressing one of the primary challenges institutions face in their efforts to better address systemic bias on their campuses: “ … helping people at all levels of an organization to be more proficient in responding to the issues of the day around diversity and inclusion. Many people who are in leadership positions have not had that kind of formal learning experience.”

And leadership’s full commitment to an institution’s efforts is key. “Whether you have 9,000 students on your campus or 40,000, commitment from leadership is really critical,” Reese says. “After you’re six to eight months into your efforts, if addressing diversity and inclusion is going to remain a priority, senior leaders must view it that way and provide the necessary resources.”

Controlling Campus Climate

Significant resources have been allocated to support the work of Gregory Vincent’s office at the University of Texas, Austin. Since he began his tenure 10 years ago, Vincent has seen the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement grow to encompass a $50 million budget and more than 400 employees, 50 units, and 400 community partners.

The division includes the exemplary UT Charter School System, the Office for Inclusion and Equity (OIE), the Longhorn Center for Community Engagement, the University Interscholastic League, and the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health. The division also oversees initiatives to increase in the higher education pipeline the number of first-generation college students, and students from other underrepresented populations.

Other initiatives in the division’s portfolio include the Multicultural Engagement Center and the Social Justice Institute, which focus on building partnerships to solve challenges related to social justice, campus culture, equity, and access.

In general, all of these efforts are designed to encourage campuswide coordination around what can be, as Vincent notes, “very high-profile issues.” In his view, it was critical to bring together under one umbrella—the Campus Climate Response Team (CCRT)—all the areas of the university responsible for responding to concerns both on and off campus.

“This is a large university,” Vincent points out. “We felt it was really important to get out in front of potential issues and not be reactive, so we brought the leaders with strategic responsibility for ensuring a good campus climate together with the staff members who have the day-to-day responsibility for managing concerns that arise. Together they developed a good plan.”

This plan included the establishment of the CCRT, with the additional component of a comprehensive online reporting system. The CCRT is a universitywide strategy resource team that “develops and facilitates the implementation of appropriate responses to campus climate incidents impacting the UT Austin community.”

The team reports to Vincent, but is jointly coordinated through the division of diversity and community engagement and the division of student affairs. Its core functions include:

  • Gathering information about the specific incident and determining the best university office to respond or investigate the incident, if needed.
  • Supporting individuals involved, including both those targeted by the incident and those who initiated the incident.
  • Providing appropriate and effective education to everyone involved.
  • Identifying and connecting with appropriate support services.
  • Evaluating the response process post-incident.
  • Coordinating, when appropriate, activities with other campuswide entities, especially those involved with crisis management.

Triggering response. Most of the CCRT’s work is set in motion when a member of the campus community reports, via an online form, an incident related to bias or disrespect. While students make the majority of reports, the form is designed for use by students, faculty, staff, alumni, parents, and visitors. In addition to identifying themselves relative to their relationship to UT and the incident (victim, witness, or third party), those individuals filing reports are asked to describe the particulars of the incident (who, what, when, and so on) as well as what they believe is the perceived motive for the bias—and what type of response they would like to see as a result of reporting the incident.

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From Vincent’s perspective, having this robust reporting system in place is crucial in leveraging the university’s resources to respond to and resolve these incidents. “Our primary goal is to get an accurate picture of what’s happening,” he says. “We can’t keep our heads in the sand.”

Still, he acknowledges that underreporting continues to be a challenge. “There’s a reluctance to report incidents because once you do, all the details are out there,” Vincent explains. “However, we’re trying to minimize underreporting by making sure that people know that we take this seriously, and we will take action.”

Continual communication. Educating UT Austin’s large campus community about the team’s work is important but also presents a delicate balance due to FERPA and other privacy concerns. “Because of such concerns, it is often not possible to share final actions and outcomes related to reported incidents,” says Leslie Blair, executive director of communications for the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement.

“We do try to educate the campus community about CCRT and the reporting system, so students, faculty, staff, and visitors know that reporting a bias incident or concern is possible. Every year, there’s a new incoming class that needs to be educated,” Blair explains, “so information about our work has been added to freshmen orientation. We also get the word out through campus presentations and publications, slides in the student union, and bus placards.” Certain members of the CCRT meet with the Diversity and Equity Student Action Council, which serves the team in an advisory capacity. However, because of confidentiality, there were no student representatives on the response team, a fact that concerned some students.

Student involvement. In line with students’ increased expectations of being involved in strategic campus discussions and processes, then-president of the UT Austin student body, Kevin Helgren, introduced a resolution to the student assembly in February supporting the creation of a Campus Climate Advisory Board. “CCRT currently lacks student representation, and we certainly want student voices to be heard during these climate conversations,” Helgren said in an interview with The Daily Texan, the university’s student newspaper. Composed of 20 students, the group was established and will begin meeting regularly.

Both Vincent and Blair underscore the importance of ongoing efforts to not only make stakeholders aware of the CCRT’s work, but to gain the response team’s trust and confidence in the process. “It’s really important that you empower complainants, and they feel that they have a say in the process,” Vincent says. “For example, if the complaint is about a professor and comments that he or she made in the classroom, we may coordinate a meeting between the complaining student and the faculty member, if that’s the desired outcome.

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“Once you’ve got the right people at the table—representatives from student affairs, communications, and campus police, for example—you have to communicate that there’s a resource available on your campus for addressing bias issues,” says Vincent. “Then you must follow through. The process communicated to the campus has to work.”

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APRYL MOTLEY, Columbia, Md., covers higher education business issues for Business Officer.