Assumptions and Prejudices - Learning About Dr. King (free copywork download)
Monday, January 14, 2013 at 5:00AM
Mary Prather in Holidays, copywork, copywork, downloads

 

 

I never grew up with an appreciation for Dr. King.   I wasn't taught about him in school, and really never even knew much about him until I moved to Atlanta in 1996.   Isn't that a shame?

The area of southwest Florida where I was born and raised was not very diverse.    Ok.   It wasn't diverse AT ALL. 

As I went to college I began to encounter more people different than me, but when it came down to it, I functioned and lived with people who looked just like me.

When I was 24 my life and perspective broadened, and I am so thankful it did.

I began a teaching job in a 100% African American school in Atlanta.  

This was no ordinary school, either.

It was fashioned after the schools started by Dr. Marva Collins.  It was a strict, rigorous environment, with wonderful parental involvement and student success.   It has consistently been one of the highest performing schools in our state.

(I bet when I said 100% African American you didn't quite expect that description of the school, did you?)  

This is how prejudices and assumptions still run deep, even among people who claim they don't have a prejudiced bone in their body.    It is my hope and prayer that we can abolish this in our children's generation.

I learned quickly how much Dr. King meant to so many people.  

I heard 100 Kindergarten students recite the ENTIRE I Have a Dream Speech.  

I became friends with a teacher who remembered sitting in the back of the bus riding to downtown Atlanta, and not being able to use the same bathrooms as whites.  

I watched a classroom of children dramatize Rosa Parks being unwilling to move to the back of the bus.  I will never forget the little girl that played Rosa... I can still see her fiery attitude as she planted herself in the front and would not move.  

I was changed in many ways during my time teaching in that elementary school.   

I thank GOD for the opportunity I had to be "the minority".   

Most of all, I learned that we are not that far removed from racism.  It is just a generation away, and that is truly sobering.

I believe it is our duty and responsibility to teach our children about Dr. King.  

Ways we will learn about Martin Luther King, Jr. this week:

 

 

I have also created a free copywork download of some of my favorite quotes from Dr. King.   

It is geared toward your learners that are working on beautiful cursive.   

Enjoy!  

Download the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. quotes and copywork.

Included are five quotes which I hope will be meaningful to your student.  

  

Will you be studying Dr. King in your homeschool any time soon?

 

Article originally appeared on Homegrown Learners (http://homegrownlearners.squarespace.com/).
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