Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun

Lesson 2
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ELA

Unit 3

7th Grade

Lesson 2 of 27

Objective


Determine the causes and impacts of the Great Migration and explain how the author develops his central ideas.

Readings and Materials


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Target Task


Writing Prompt

What is the author’s central idea about the experiences of African Americans once they moved North? How does the author develop this central idea?

Sample Response

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Key Questions


Close Read Questions

  • What does the author argue were the primary motivators of the Great Migration (the first and second waves)? List at least three. 

  • What evidence does the author provide to develop the idea that these specific factors led to the Great Migration? Select one or two pieces of strong evidence for each factor you listed in Question 1.

Discussion Questions

  • Author and historian Isabel Wilkerson describes the Great Migration as "the first time in American history that American citizens had to flee the land of their birth just to be recognized as the citizens that they had always been. No other group of Americans has had to act like immigrants in order to be recognized as citizens." What do you think she means by this? What does this suggest about what it means to be seen as an American? 

Vocabulary


Text-based

atrocity

n.

an act of horrifying cruelty

Academic

central idea

n.

the most important idea(s) that the writer communicates to the reader in a nonfiction text.

Notes


The following topics are mentioned in the text. If needed, use the resources below to preview the topics with students.

  • lynching (noun): Murder perpetrated by a group or mob of people in response to a perceived or alleged offense, without a legal trial 
    • Although anyone can be the victim/perpetrator of a lynching, this word most often refers to the murder of Black people by a white mob. Students should understand that lynching was a widespread practice of terrorism against Black people, and the threat of lynching was an ever-present fear in the lives of African Americans—primarily, but not exclusively, in the South.
    • Consider showing students this interactive map by Plain Talk History of racially-motivated lynchings in the United States. You may also wish to excerpt passages from the following report on the history of lynching in America: Lynching in America: Confronting: the Legacy of Racial Terror (Third Edition) by the Equal Justice Initiative.
    • Be mindful that this may be a difficult topic for your students, and you may need to provide additional time for discussion. 
  • white supremacy (noun): the belief that white people are superior to those of all other races, especially the black race, and should therefore dominate society

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Common Core Standards


  • RI.7.2 — Determine two or more central ideas in a text and analyze their development over the course of the text; provide an objective summary of the text.
  • RI.7.3 — Analyze the interactions between individuals, events, and ideas in a text (e.g., how ideas influence individuals or events, or how individuals influence ideas or events).

Supporting Standards

L.7.6
RI.7.1
RI.7.4
RI.7.10
SL.7.1
SL.7.6
W.7.1
W.7.1.a
W.7.1.b
W.7.4
W.7.9
W.7.9.b
W.7.10
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