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Grade: 11th 

Subject(s): U.S. History

Standards: 

Arizona History and Social Science Standards 

  • HS.G2.2 Evaluate how political and economic decisions throughout time have influenced cultural and environmental characteristics of various places and regions.
  • HS.G3.2 Evaluate the impact of economic activities and political decisions on spatial patterns within and among urban, suburban, and rural regions.

National Council for Social Studies Standards

  • Geography Theme 3: People, Places, and the Environments
  • Assist learners to analyze the spatial information about people, places, and environments on Earth’s surface.
  • Enable learners to describe the processes, patterns, and functions of human settlement. 

Learning for Social Justice Standards

  • JU.9-12.12 I can recognize, describe and distinguish unfairness and injustice at different levels of society.

Objectives: 

  • Students will be able to
    • identify political and economic processes involved in redlining.
    • evaluate the impact of redlining on spatial patterns within cities.
    • describe the systemic injustice embedded in redlining. 

Guiding Questions: 

  • What political and economic decisions create the consequences of redlining?
  • How does redlining shape spatial patterns within urban and suburban regions?
  • Why is redlining unfair and unjust?

Assessment:

  • Use students’ definitions, answers to discussion questions, and exit tickets to assess student understanding.

Prior learning: Students will have previously learned about the rise in industrial capitalism and the New Deal. 

Materials: 

Differentiation Strategies:

  • Students will work in small, teacher-led groups during group practice. 
  • Students will be provided with discussion questions before watching the text and before discussion time.
  • Students will have access to captions on the videos they watch.

Cross-Curriculum Connections: 

  • Students could read primary sources about people who experienced redlining and create narratives to describe the ways redlining affects multiple generations.

Extension: 

  • Evaluate racial wealth gap statistics to understand the link between redlining and current material conditions. 

Total time: 60 minutes 

Activating background Knowledge: [10 minutes]

  • Instruct students to create a list of the neighborhoods in Flagstaff that they can think of in two minutes.
  • Encourage students to compare their list with someone next to them. 
  • Invite students to write answers on the board.
  • Ask students to write a description of or draw something that distinguishes their neighborhood from another neighborhood. 
  • Facilitate a class discussion about different characteristics of neighborhoods.
  • If they struggle, choose two different neighborhoods from the list and elicit differences between them.
  • Some possibilities include: size of houses, type of places to live, yards to play in, types of cars, space between houses, jobs the residents have, ethnic differences.

Presenting New Information: [15 minutes]

  • Facilitate a discussion about the factors that influence neighborhoods to form.
    • Consider using these questions:
      • What social factors encourage people to form neighborhoods?
      • What economic factors encourage people to form neighborhoods?
      • What political factors encourage people to form neighborhoods?
    • Tell students that you will revisit these ideas at the end of class. 
  • Ask students if any of them have heard of or are willing to try to define the term redlining.
  • Form groups with four to five students in each group.
    • Provide students with directions before the activity.
  • Show students the questions they will discuss after watching the videos:
  1. What were some of the consequences of redlining? 
  2. What political and economic decisions shape the consequences of redlining?
  3. What is unjust about redlining and why is it unjust?
  • Tell students that after they watch the first video, they will write a definition of redlining in their own words.
  • Give students time to watch the first video and write a definition of redlining in their own words.

Guided Practice: [10 minutes]

  • Instruct students to synthesize their definition with the other member(s) on their team.
    • Notice similarities and differences.
    • Build from the similarities and revise or expand your definition to address the differences.
  • Encourage students to synthesize their team’s definition with the other team.
    • Notice similarities and differences.
    • Build from the similarities and revise or expand your definition to address the differences. 
  • Invite each group to write their definition on the board.
    • If it’s a large class with many groups, you can have two groups compare definitions before writing it on the board.
  • Engage students in a class synthesis to arrive at a class definition of redlining. 

Group Practice: [20 minutes]

  • Review the discussion questions before students watch the second video.
    • What were some of the consequences of redlining? 
    • What political and economic decisions shape the consequences of redlining?
    • What is unjust about redlining and why is it unjust?
  • Give students time to watch the second video.
  • Tell students to choose roles within their groups to facilitate small-group discussions.
    • If they have 5 people in their group, they can choose two reporters.
    • Time keeper—keeps track of the time to make sure they spend three minutes or less discussing each question.
    • Note taker—writes down the groups’ answers to the discussion questions.
    • Facilitator—leads the conversation to make sure everyone in the group contributes.
    • Reporter—shares highlights from the conversation with the whole class. 
  • Encourage students to answer the following discussion questions in small groups:
  1. What were some of the consequences of redlining? 
  2. What political and economic decisions shape the consequences of redlining?
  3. What is unjust about redlining and why is it unjust?
  • Invite the reporters from each group to share highlights from their conversations with the class. 
  • Explain to students that the next class will focus on redlining in Flagstaff.

Reflection: [5 minutes]

  • Ask students to complete an exit ticket that answer the following question:
    • How does redlining shape spatial patterns within a community?

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