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  • Writer's pictureElis Clain Group Staff

What More Can Black People Do?




What More Can Black People Do? is about some of the things black people have contributed to the world and is the 17th activity in the ECG Black History Month (BHM) series. Starting with:
 
Activity #1: The Original People
Activity #2: What Makes Black People Black
Activity #3: The Lebombo & Ishango Bones
Activity #4: Pre-Colonial Africa
Activity #5: The African Diaspora
Activity #6: Slavery in the Americas 
Activity #7: The Power of the Reconstruction Era 
Activity #8: More on the Black Codes and Jim Crow
Activity #9: Anti-Black Racist Propaganda 
Activity #10: Blacks As Artists and Subjects
Activity #11: Culture and Music Innovators
Activity #12: Fashion Trend Setters
Activity #13: Researching Your Genealogy 
Activity#14: Amazing African Genetics
Activity#15: Some of the First Teachers (After Moms) 
Activity #16: The Great Repair
 
This 20-Activity series provides supplemental learning for each school day of the month of February 2023. The first activity is FREE but each subsequent activity will be offered at a discount during BHM. Activities will be uploaded throughout the month of February.  Come back each day for the latest activity.
 
The activities contain a vocabulary section to ensure students are comprehending the material,  a reading section which includes much of the vocabulary and introduces students to the topic, a STEM section which requires students to scientifically think about the material and may include vocabulary, and a writing section which requires students to reflect on the material or answer the prompt using evidence or by making inferences. 

The Brief Student Reading:

*It is impossible to list everything black people have done to develop the Americas, just as it is impossible to list the sands of the Sahara or the stars of the sky.

*First, all humans come from the original huemans (OH). Without these original black huemans, there would be no human life on earth.

*Second, the OH brought forth the knowledge of all core sciences, including mathematics, medicine, astronomy, writing, philosophy, and spirituality.

*After millennia of immigration and mutation, the OH brought the lost of those migrants, who had mutated into other races, out of their dark ages by educating them in the core subjects and in hygiene.

*In the Americas, black people transformed the terrain from a wilderness into arable land and built the first structures of civilization.

*Fast forward until after the Maafa (the great disaster known as the Tran-Atlantic Slave Trade), and you will discover such stores as presented in 28 Days of Black History by the National Park Service.

The Brief Student Reading:



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