Press highlights
of Putting the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching
Civil
Rights 'Myths' Exposed by D.C. Group
By Regan Toomer
December 6, 2005
"While the boycott has the capacity to connect
Black students with their history and learn that you do not
have to be a hero to change the world, Menkart says there
are a lot of myths that have circulated in classrooms for
years...the mythbusters
quiz is based on the award winning book "Putting
the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching." The goal
of this book is to move beyond heroes and holidays to uncover
and humanize the stories of the many people who, like Rosa
Parks, challenged the government in the name of justice."
HNet
(Humanities and Social Sciences Online)
HNet
Review
By Trevor Griffey
September 2005
"Putting the
Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching takes an important
first step at making recent trends in civil rights historiography
useful to K-12 teachers. These trends include a turn toward
the local and grassroots, the role of women in movement-building,
multiracial components of civil rights history, and the importance
of political culture. It also includes provocative personal
stories about the sometimes controversial nature of different
types of civil rights teaching, which may include uneasy role-playing
simulations, taking students to protests, and struggling with
images of the brutal violence many civil rights activists
faced."
The
Gazette
Rethinking
History's Heroes
By Warren Parish
May 4, 2005
"..she [Alana Murray] says heroes are not born extraordinary,
but are ordinary people who learn to do great things as
they confront problems. Murray tries to get that point across
daily, teaching from the instructional and community resource
guide she contributed to and co-edited 'Putting
the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching.'"

Book
Review: 'Putting the Movement Back Into Civil Rights
Teaching'
Eddie B. Allen
April
7, 2005
"It
is overdue, then, that a publication examine the contemporary
black struggle's literary history and the often uncredited
intellectuals who applied literature to activism. Billed
as a resource guide for classrooms and communities, 'Putting
the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching' makes a significant
contribution toward updating the body of writing on black
political movements...'Putting the Movement Back
Into Civil Rights Teaching' offers promise for
classroom learning that, for far too long, ended -- literally
and figuratively -- with the death of Martin Luther King
Jr."

The
Roots of Change
Students Learn of Widespread Efforts That Propelled
Civil Rights Movement
By Avis Thomas-Lester
February 17, 2005; Page B01
“Barlev, Faus and other educators credited a textbook
written by three local educators – ‘Putting
the Movement Back Into Civil Rights Teaching --
with providing original ideas and instruction material.
‘I
wept when I found this book,’ Barlev said. ‘Until
I saw it, I thought I was the only one teaching about the
civil rights movement’ "
THE
COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Civil Rights Movement's Histoy's
One of Hit and Myth
By Wendi C. Thomas
February 17, 2005
"‘Too
often, the teaching of the Civil Rights Movement -- as a
spontaneous, emotional eruption of angry but saintly African-Americans
led by two or three inspired orators -- discounts the origins,
the intellect, and the breadth that guided this complex
social movement,’ writes Jenice L. View, a co-author
of "Putting the Movement Back into Civil Rights
Teaching" a new book designed to destroy those
myths… The story of the civil rights movement in America
isn't a black-white story. It's not a story that ended when
King was killed. It's a story that has relevance today,
a movement whose lessons can be applied globally. ”

Black History Month Needs Constant
Renewal to Remain Relevant
By Baye Betty Winston
February 10, 2005
“I'm
sympathetic to the view that teaching African-American history
in February has become an exercise in celebrating a few
and ignoring the many. Now, to the rescue of parents and
teachers who are similarly concerned about how poorly and
simplistically black history is taught comes a book, Putting
the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching: A Resource
Guide for K-12 Classrooms. The editors - Deborah
Menkart, Alan D. Murray and Jenice L. View…[have]
produced a guide that encourages critical teaching as well
as critical thinking.”

Resources for Teaching
By Molly Cooney-Mesker
March – April 2005
“Putting
the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching encourages
critical teaching and learning. Lessons are based on the
philosophy that the purpose of education is to create equality
and justice. It teaches how to take the spirit of the Civil
Rights Movement and let it guide our lives to better our
communities and our world.”

Message
to Teachers (page 13 of PDF)
Winter 2005
“Putting
the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching published
by Teaching for Change and Poverty & Race Research Action
Council (PRRAC)…has given us an incredible treasure
trove of stories, exercises, poetry, primary source materials
in lesson plan form in many cases that broaden individual
and group understanding of what to takes to make change.
The book clearly demonstrates the multiracial involvement
and impact of the efforts for freedom in the mid-twentieth
century. Those readers who are not teachers can find in
the book excellent materials for newsletters and handouts
at meeting.”