Walt's Wacky Wait
Walter E. Disney was a man with a passion for animation and set a gold standard for the craft to this day; his legacy lives on today with The Walt Disney Company being a media behemoth. Let's explore his creativity while avoiding UFOs!
Latin Review
Review Latin from Unit One!
Ancient Roman Families
Latin Quiz Week 3, Ancient Roman families and their household
The Miseducation of the Negro by Dr. Carter G. Woodson
Blacks of his (Dr. Carter G Woodson) day were being culturally indoctrinated, rather than taught, in American schools.
The-Mis-education-Of-The-Negro (chapter 3) by Dr. Carter G. Woodson
You might study the history as it was offered in our system from the elementary school throughout the university, and you would never hear Africa mentioned except in the negative. You would never thereby learn that Africans first domesticated the sheep, goat, and cow. developed the idea of trial by jury, produced the first string instruments, and gave the world it's greatest boon in the discovery of Iron.
The Mis-Education of the Negro (Chapter 6) by Dr. Carter G. Woodson
"While serving as the avenue for the oppressors propaganda, the Negro church although doing some good, has prevented the union of some diverse elements and has kept the race too weak to overcome foes who have purposely taught Negros how to quarrel and fight about trifles until their enemies can overcome them." - Dr. Carter G. Woodson
Presidential Decree No. 1006
Build your own band by answering questions correctly! Get a new band member with each correct answer! The answers here are related to the topic on "Presidential Decree No. 1006." Good luck!
The-Mis-education-Of-The-Negro (chapter 9) by Dr. Carter G. Woodson
Having the stamp of science, the thought of these polemics was accepted in all seats of learning. These rewriters of history fearlessly contended that slavery was a benevolent institution: the masters loved their slaves and treated them humanely; the abolitionists meddled with the institution which the masters would have eventually modified: the Civil War brought about by "fanatics" like William Lloyd Garrison and John Brown was unnecessary; ..." Dr. Carter G. Woodson
THE MIS-EDUCATION OF THE NEGRO (Chapter 10) by Dr. Carter G. Woodson
Denied participation in the higher things of life, the "educated" Negro himself joins, too, with ill-designing persons to handicap his people by systematized exploitation. Feeling that the case of the Negro is hopeless, the "educated" Negro decides upon the course of personally profiting by whatever he can do in using these people as a means to an end. He grins in their faces while "extracting money" from them, but his heart shows no fond attachment to their despised cause.
THE MIS-EDUCATION OF THE NEGRO (Chapter 11) by Dr. Carter G. Woodson
If we can finally succeed in translating the idea of leadership into that of service, we may soon find it possible to lift the Negro to a higher level. Under leadership we have come into the ghetto: by service within the ranks we may work our way out of it. Under leadership we have been constrained to do the biddings of others; by service we may work out a program in the light of our own circumstances