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10th American History Unit V- A Nation Facing Challenges

10th American History Unit V- A Nation Facing Challenges. Chapter 18 Section 4 Changes and Challenges. Fighting Discrimination (05:08) . Changes and Challenges. The Main Idea

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10th American History Unit V- A Nation Facing Challenges

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  1. 10th American History Unit V- A Nation Facing Challenges Chapter 18 Section 4 Changes and Challenges

  2. Fighting Discrimination (05:08)

  3. Changes and Challenges • The Main Idea • Continued social and economic inequalities caused many young African Americans to lose faith in the civil rights movement and integration and seek alternative solutions. • Reading Focus • Why did the civil rights movement expand to the North? • What fractures developed in the civil rights movement, and what was the result? • What events led to the death of Martin Luther King Jr., and how did the nation react?

  4. The Civil Rights Movement Expands to the North • The civil rights movement had done much to bring an end to de jure segregation—or segregation by law. • However, changes in law had not altered attitudes and many were questioning nonviolent protest as an effective method of change. • In most of America there was still de facto segregation—segregation that exists through custom and practice rather than by law. • African Americans outside the South also faced discrimination—in housing, by banks, in employment.

  5. Conditions outside the South Most African Americans outside the South lived in cities. African Americans were kept in all-black parts of town because they were unwelcome in white neighborhoods. Discrimination in banking made home ownership and home and neighborhood improvements difficult. Job discrimination led to high unemployment and poverty. Urban Unrest Frustration over the urban conditions exploded into violence. Watts (Los Angeles) in 1965 Detroit in 1967 President Johnson appointed the Kerner Commission to study the causes of urban rioting. Placed the blame on poverty and discrimination Expanding the Movement

  6. The Movement Moves North The riots convinced King that the civil rights movement needed to move north. He focused on Chicago in 1966. The eight month Chicago campaign was one of King’s biggest failures. Chicago’s African Americans did not share his civil rights focus—their concerns were economic. King discovered that some northern whites who had supported him and criticized racism in the South had no interest in seeing it exposed in the North.

  7. Expanding the Movement • Why did the civil rights movement expand to the North? • Recall – What is de facto segregation? • Analyze – Why is it more difficult to end de facto segregation than de jure segregation? • Develop – Why do you think the civil rights movement began in the South rather than the North?

  8. Expanding the Movement • Recall – What reasons did the Kerner Commission give as the cause of urban rioting? • Analyze – Why is it more difficult to end de facto segregation than de jure segregation? • Develop – Why do you think the civil rights movement began in the South rather than the North?

  9. Fractures in the civil rights movement • Conflict among the diverse groups of the civil rights movement developed in the 1960s. • Many SNCC and CORE members were beginning to question nonviolence. • In 1966 SNCC abandoned the philosophy of nonviolence. • Huey Newton and Bobby Seale formed the Black Panther Party and called for violent revolution as a means of African American liberation. • Malcolm X and the Black Muslims were critical of King and nonviolence.

  10. Sports and Games II (03:15)

  11. Fractures in the Movement • Black Power • Stokely Carmichael became the head of SNCC. • SNCC abandoned the philosophy of nonviolence. • Black Power became the new rallying cry. • Wanted African Americans to depend on themselves to solve problems. • Black Panthers • The Black Panther Party was formed in Oakland, California, in 1966. • Called for violent revolution as a means of African American liberation. • Members carried guns and monitored African American neighborhoods to guard against police brutality. • Black Muslims • Nation of Islam was a large and influential group who believed in Black Power. • Message of black nationalism, self-discipline, and self-reliance. • Malcolm X offered message of hope, defiance, and black pride.

  12. Nation of Islam and Black Nationalism (04:17)

  13. The Assassination and Legacy of Malcolm X (02:27)

  14. Fractures in the Movement • What fractures developed in the civil rights movement, and what was the result? • Recall – What was one of the first major signs of trouble in the civil rights movement? • Summarize – What was Black Power? • Draw Conclusions – Why do you think that discontent developed in civil rights organizations in 1964?

  15. Fractures in the Movement • Explain – Who were the first Black Muslims? • Describe – In what ways was Malcolm X different from Martin Luther King Jr.? • Analyze – Why do you think Malcolm X began to call for racial harmony?

  16. The Promised Land (02:33)

  17. The Death of Martin Luther King Jr. King became aware that economic issues must be part of the civil rights movement. King went to Memphis, Tennessee to help striking sanitation workers. He led a march to city hall. James Earl Ray shot and killed King as he stood on the balcony of his motel. Within hours, rioting erupted in more than 120 cities. Within three weeks, 46 people were dead, some 2,600 were injured, and more than 21,000 were arrested.

  18. April 4, 1968: MLK is Assassinated by James Earl Ray (02:41)

  19. A Dream Deferred (03:05)

  20. The Assassination of King • What events led to the death of Martin Luther King Jr. and how did the nation react? • Recall – Who murdered Martin Luther King Jr.? • Elaborate – What did Robert F. Kennedy as the nation to do following the death of King?

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