人教新课标高中英语选修十《Unit3 Reading》教案
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1、Unit 3 Fairness for all Part One: Teaching DesignPeriod 1: A sample lesson plan for reading(THE START OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT)AimsTo help students develop their reading ability To help students learn about fairnessProcedures Warming up by learning about how to be a fair personHello, class. We h
2、ave come to Unit 3 Fairness for all. But what is fairness? What does a fair person do? How do fairness and unfairness affect our relationships with others?Have you ever said, “thats unfair“? How do you know when something is unfair? Has anybody ever tricked you or cheated you? How did you feel about
3、 it? Lets discuss how to be a fair person ourselves. Treat people the way you want to be treated. Take Turns. Tell the truth. Play by the rules. Think about how your actions will affect others. Listen to people with an open mind. Dont blame others for your mistakes. Dont take advantage of other peop
4、le. Dont play favorites. Warming up by learning about the six pillars of characterGood morning, class! Do you know the words “character”? How is your character formed? Your character is defined by what you do, not what you say or believe. There are six pillars or supporting stones of our character.
5、And they are: Trustworthiness Respect Responsibility Fairness Caring Citizenship Warming up by learning about some of the great menMartin Luther King is known throughout the world as a famous civil rights activist. He did not believe it was fair that blacks did not have the same rights as whites. He
6、re are some examples of ways blacks were treated unfairly in MLKs time. Separate drinking fountains “Colored“ balconies in movie theaters Mandatory seats in the back of buses Soldiers were needed to help young African Americans attend school safely.I. Pre-reading-American Civil Rights Movement (1896
7、-1954) The civil rights movement in the United States has been a long, primarily nonviolent struggle to bring full civil rights and equality under the law to all Americans. The movement has had a lasting impact on United States society, both in its tactics, the increased social and legal acceptance
8、of civil rights it brought about and its exposure of the prevalence and cost of racism. It has been made up of many movements, though it most often refers to the struggles between 1945 and 1970 to end discrimination against African-Americans and to end racial segregation, especially in the U.S. Sout
9、h. This article focuses on an earlier phase of that particular struggle, using two United States Supreme Court decisionsPlessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896), which enshrined “separate but equal“ racial segregation as constitutional doctrine, and Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483 (1954) wh
10、ich overturned Plessyas milestones. This is an era of stops and starts, in which some movements, such as Marcus Garveys Universal Negro Improvement Association, achieved great success but left little lasting legacy, while others, such as the NAACPs legal assault on state-sponsored segregation, achie
11、ved only modest results in its early years but gradually built to a key victory in Brown v. Board of Education. After the Civil War the United States offered civil rights and laws privledges to Afro-Americans. The Government of the United States passed an amendment ending slavery in 1865, it was the
12、 Thirteen Amendment of the United States Constitution. This amendment only outlawed slavery, it did not provide citizenship and equal rights. The government of the United States passed another amendment giving Afro-Americans residing in the United States citizenship. In 1868, the Fourteen Amendment
13、of the United States Constitution was passed, offering Afro-Americans citizenship. Blacks born in the United States had equal protection under the laws of the Constitution. and the 15th Amendment (1870), which provided the right to vote to all citizens, regardless of race. During Reconstruction (186
14、5-1877), Northern troops occupied the South and enforced these new constitutional amendments. Many blacks took prominent positions in society, including elected office. Reconstruction ended following the Compromise of 1877 between Northern white elites and Southern white elites. The compromise calle
15、d for the withdrawal of Northern troops from the South, giving Southern whites a free hand to reinstitute discriminatory practices, in exchange for deciding the contentious Presidential election in favor of Rutherford B. Hayes, supported by Northern states, over his opponent, Samuel J. Tilden. The R
16、adical Republicans who spearheaded Reconstruction had attempted to eliminate both governmental and private discrimination by legislation. That effort was largely ended by the Supreme Courts decision in the Civil Rights Cases, 109 U.S. 3 (1883), in which it held that the Fourteenth Amendment did not
17、give Congress power to outlaw racial discrimination by private individuals or businesses.II. Reading On page 22 there is an article entitled “THE START OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT”You are going to read it to the recording. Now read the text again to: cut/ the sentence into thought groups, blacken t
18、he predicative, darken the connectives and underline all the useful expressions. THE START OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENTSunday, December 4th, 1955Today /we went to church/ where our minister, Martin Luther King, Jr, announced that/ a boycott of the buses/ and trolleybuses will begin tomorrow. Ive alw
19、ays hated having to sit/ in the worst seats/ on the bus /so /Im happy to support it. Dr King encourages us /to fight against this unfair system/ which prohibits us /blacks /from sitting /where we like. It is regarded as an offence/ if we sit /at the front of a bus /and/ if we break this law, we rece
20、ive a heavy punishment. But /on Thursday, Im glad to say, this unjust separation of people/ on the basis of skin color/ was challenged. A black lady, Rosa Parks, got on board a city bus /and sat in the fifth row/ with three other blacks. Gradually/ the seats/ for whites/ filled until one white man r
21、emained standing. By law/ he could not sit with Rosa/ and by tradition /blacks were expected to move. All four /were asked to stand. The other three /submitted/ but Rosa was unwilling to do so/ and she refused. She was arrested. How brave /she was! Im not sure/ if I would have had enough courage/ to
22、 refuse/ like that.King /and the other black leaders/ in Montgomery/ have seized on this incident/ and decided on a collision course /to change the law. Theyre hopeful that /they can negotiate a fairer situation/ if all the blacks /support them. But I do worry about what will happen tomorrow. Will i
23、t be chaos?December 5th, 1955This morning /I yawned/ as I woke /even earlier/ than usual, but my sister, Serena was already up. She urged me/ to dress quickly /and to wear my most comfortable sandals. Immediately /I jumped out of bed. I like to be punctual/ for work /and no boycott is going to make
24、me late. By coincidence/ a bus arrived /as we reached the empty bus stop, but we ignored it. Normally/ we would have been only too happy, as it would have guaranteed us a seat/ for the whole journey. But /not today! Taxis passed/ all full of passengers/ as we pedestrians marched on the pavement. Tho
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