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Group Presentation Project: Apartheid + South Africa (Born A Crime)

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Mike Kentz
8 Followers
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
6 pages
$19.99
$19.99
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Mike Kentz
8 Followers

Description

If you are planning to teach Born A Crime by Trevor Noah, this group presentation resource is a perfect way to kick off the Unit.

Inside:

1. Two-Page Rubric for Presentation Quality

2. Digital Notebook for Sourcing and Note-Taking

3. Credible Internet Resources to Get Students Started (for each topic)

4. An Introduction Page that breaks kids into four groups

A. The Causes, History, and Laws of Apartheid in South Africa

B. Apartheid and the Struggles in Life of the Black People

C. The Factors that Brought Apartheid to an End in 1994

D. The Post-Apartheid Restorative Justice movement (Structure, Laws, Effects)

This resource will:

--Establish a clear understanding of the background for Born A Crime

--Develop collaboration skills

--Develop research skills

--Develop presentation skills

--Establish a framework for researching and citing

Total Pages
6 pages
Answer Key
N/A
Teaching Duration
2 Weeks
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.
Determine a central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of the text, including how it emerges and is shaped and refined by specific details; provide an objective summary of the text.
Analyze how the author unfolds an analysis or series of ideas or events, including the order in which the points are made, how they are introduced and developed, and the connections that are drawn between them.
Analyze various accounts of a subject told in different mediums (e.g., a person’s life story in both print and multimedia), determining which details are emphasized in each account.
Delineate and evaluate the argument and specific claims in a text, assessing whether the reasoning is valid and the evidence is relevant and sufficient; identify false statements and fallacious reasoning.

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8 Followers