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To Kill a Mockingbird - Research topics & inforgraphic maker

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An infographic is a collection of imagery, charts, and minimal text that gives an easy-to-understand overview of a topic.

Mrs. Adams
Topics for TKAM 
  
1) Jim Crow Laws: Their History, Guiding Policies, and Impact on Blacks  
 a) Explain what Jim Crow Laws were and how, where, and why they originated. Who was Jim Crow? What were the  original laws and policies?   b) What impact did Jim Crow laws have on blacks and what rights did they violate? How did whites and states  defend Jim Crow laws?   
  
2) The Ku Klux Klan: Its History and Methods of Instilling Fear  
 a) Explain where the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) originated in the United States. What was its mission and who were its  members? Provide significant historical facts about the group.  b) What impact did the KKK have on life in America (particularly on blacks and minorities? What methods did the  organization use in order to promote its agenda?  c) What influence did the KKK have on local governments and people in power?  

3) Plessy v. Ferguson: A Landmark Case and Its Impact on “Separate but Equal”  
  a) Explain and summarize the case (who was involved, what the case was about, when it occurred, and what the final decision was)  b) Why was this case such a significant one in terms of its impact on life for blacks? How did it push the agenda of “separate but equal,” and how was this constitutional?   

4) Lynching and Lynch Mobs: Citizen Enforcement of Jim Crow Laws and Nooses: Modern Day Symbolic Threats (the Jena Six) and Sundown Towns  
  a) Give a brief history of lynchings in America and the origins of the lynch mob. What influence did they have on  local governments and people in power?  b) How did lynchings come to represent white hatred of blacks? Why were so many white people supportive of  them? At their peak, how frequent were lynchings of black people by white lynch mobs in America? Where in the  country were they most prominent? What were sundown towns? How were they connected to lynchings?   c) Explain the recent re-emergence of the symbols of lynching (the Jena Six and others). What effect has it had on  racial tensions in America?   

5) The Stock Market Crash and the Great Depression: The Impact on Economic Prosperity for Blacks and Whites in America  
 a) What was Black Friday? What caused the stock market to crash? Had it happened before? Where and when?  Could the stock market crash have been prevented? How?  b) What impact did the stock market crash have on Americans and life in America? Explain some of the tragic  events that occurred immediately after the crash.  c) Explain what the Great Depression was and its importance or prominence in American history. Who was  president, and what policies affected the Great Depression?  d) What factors led to the Great Depression? What was life like for Americans during the Great Depression? Who  was hardest hit and how? What were some examples you can give to make the Great Depression real to today’s  audience?  
  
6) The Dust Bowl: The Impact on Economic Prosperity for Blacks and Whites  
 a) What was the Dust Bowl? Where did it take place and when? Who was directly affected by it?   b) What impact did the Dust Bowl have on life in America? How is it connected to the Great Depression? Could it  have been prevented? If so, how? Has anything been done since then to prevent it from happening again, or could  it still happen?  c) How did Herbert Hoover deal with this natural disaster and the people involved? What were Hoovervilles, and  why were they called that? Who were the Okies? Explain the problems that arose in the country in places like  California as a result of the Dust Bowl, the Okies, and migrant farming.   

7) Herbert Hoover vs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Two Presidencies, Two Policies, One Era in American History  
  a) When was Herbert Hoover president? What condition was the country in when he started as President? What  were his major policies as president (economic and domestic policies, specifically)? What major changes happened  in the United States while Hoover was president? What condition was the country in when he left office? What was his legacy as president (Hoovervilles and what he is remembered for)?  b) When was FDR president? What condition was the country in when he started as president? What were his  major policies as president (economic and domestic policies, specifically)? What major changes happened in the  United States while FDR was president? What condition was the country in when he left office? What was his  legacy as president (the New Deal and what he is remembered for)?  c) Compare and contrast each presidency and the effect both had on the country. What were some famous quotes  from each president?  Explain the significance of these quotes.
 
 
8) The Rise of Hitler and Nazi Germany: Hitler’s Rise to Power, the Formation of the Nazi Party, and the Treatment of Blacks in the United States Compared to Jews in Germany. 
 a) Who was Adolph Hitler? When was he born, and what was his family like? Explain how he came into power in  Germany (the condition of Germany before Hitler rose to power and Hitler’s policies and beliefs that gained him a  following).   b) Who were the Nazis? What were their beliefs and political philosophies that appealed to Germans and gave  them popularity? Why were Jewish people the target of Hitler’s and the Nazis’ hatred (what they blamed the Jews  for and why)? Explain how the Nazis gained a following and rose to power.  c) Compare the treatment of the Jews in Nazi Germany at this time to the treatment of blacks in America at the  same time. Specifically look at the condition of Germany and the United States economically and politically, and  explain laws in both countries that were created in each to target Jews and blacks.  

9) W.E.B. Dubois and the NAACP: Fighting Against Scientific Racism  
 a) Who was W.E.B. Dubois? Give important biographical facts on his background. Why was he so important, and  why is he a historical figure?  b) What ideas did W.E.B. Dubois promote that focused on improving life for blacks in America and supporting their  rights? What is scientific racism, and what were his views on it? Who were his main supporters, and who were his  main opponents?  c) What is the NAACP? What was W.E.B. Dubois’ connection with the NAACP? What was the purpose or mission  of the NAACP with Dubois’ help?  d) What impact did Dubois have on the education and the general welfare of Blacks in America? Do you agree with  his views? Why or why not?  
  
10) Booker T. Washington and the Tuskegee Institute: Up from Slavery  
 a) Who was Booker T. Washington? Give important biographical facts on his background. Why was he so  important, and why is he a historical figure?  b) What was the Tuskegee Institute? Who founded it, and what was its purpose? What role did Booker T.  Washington have at Tuskegee, and what did he accomplish while he was there?  c) What ideas did Booker T. Washington promote that focused on improving life for Blacks in America and  supporting their rights? Who were his main supporters, and who were his main opponents?   d) How did Washington’s views differ from those of W.E.B. Dubois? What impact did he have on things such as  education and the general welfare of blacks in America? Do you agree with his views? Why or why not?  
11) Brown v. Board of Education: A Landmark Case and Its Impact on Education Rights  
  a) Explain and summarize the case (who was involved, what the main points of the case were, when it occurred,  and what the final decision was). What problems did Linda Brown encounter in Topeka that eventually resulted in  this case?  b) What were segregated schools? Why were they created? What right does the Fourteenth Amendment give  citizens?   c) Why was Brown v. Board of Education such a significant case in terms of its impact on education and the rights  of blacks? What was its connection to Plessy v. Ferguson?   d) How did Brown v. Board of Education change the legal definition of equality and advance the Civil Rights  Movement for blacks?  

12) Education of Blacks in the South after the Civil War and Prior to the 1950s (leading up to Brown v. Board of Education): General History and Overview  
  a) Explain the laws and policies regarding the education of Blacks during the Civil War. What were they, and how  were they any different after the Civil War?   b) For those blacks who were receiving an education, what were their schools like? What obstacles did they face in trying to get an education? Who or what opposed their opportunities to get an education?  c) What effect did blacks’ education or lack of education have on their abilities to compete with whites as equals in the United States? How has that had a longstanding impact on equality between blacks and whites in the United States?  

13) The History of the Use of Capital Punishment/Death Penalty in the United States  
 a) For what cases was the death penalty initially used in colonial United States? Was it ever outlawed nationally?  Why?  b) What states currently use the death penalty, and what crimes are worthy of the death penalty in those states?  c) Has the death penalty been disproportionally used between blacks and whites? Explain the disproportionality and  factors that may explain it.  

14) The Scottsboro Case: A Landmark Case and Its Impact on Capital Punishment Cases  
 a) Explain and summarize the case (who was involved, what the charges were, when it occurred, and what the final decision was)  b) Why was this case such a significant one in terms of its impact on capital punishment?  c) What were the mistakes made in this case by prosecutors, defenders, and witnesses that indicate this may have not been a fair case? How does this case illustrate how race impacted the outcomes of many court cases?  

15) The Fairness of Capital Punishment: The Eighth Amendment, the Death Penalty, and “Cruel and Unusual Punishment”   
a) Summarize the major points of the Amendment and explain the rights it ensures and protects for every individual charged with a crime. b) Under the Amendment, how can capital punishment be viewed as “cruel and unusual punishment”? How is it viewed as falling outside this Amendment and therefore still used by certain states? c) How has your research changed or informed your own views on capital punishment? How has it changed your view of the prisoners sitting on death row who are facing capital punishment? What are some of the major obstacles that come up in death penalty cases that make them complicated instead of clear cut?  
 
The Rise of Black Identity and Culture after The Civil War    
16)The Great Migration: Blacks Moving from the South to the North after the Civil War  
  
 a) What was the Great Migration? What started it? Where did it occur and when?   b) How did the Great Migration change or affect life in places where blacks were migrating from and where they  migrated to? What changes can we still see in America today as a result of the Great Migration?  c) What effect did the Great Migration have on blacks who decided to stay and not join the migration? What  connections does this have to the novel To Kill a Mockingbird?  
  
17) The Harlem Renaissance: The Rebirth of Black Arts and Culture in the North  
  a) What was the Harlem Renaissance? Where did it occur, and who and what did it involve? Name some major  people involved and some results of it.  b) How did the Harlem Renaissance change life for blacks in America? Can evidence of it still be seen in America  today? If so, how and where?  c) Does the result go against what many people in America believed about Blacks at the time and today? If so,  how?  d) How did the Harlem Renaissance affect the politics of the decades leading up to the Civil Rights Movement of  the 1950s and 60s?  
  
18) The Black Church: The Rise of the Church in the Southern Black Community and in Educating and Organizing Black Communities for Civil Rights  
  
 a) What were some of the earliest black churches in the United States? Who started or founded them? Give some  history of some of these pioneering churches including dates, locations, Christian denominations, and early church  leaders.  b) What role did black churches (particularly in the South) play after the Civil War in educating African Americans?  How did singing in the church help reading and literacy? Discuss “call and response” and early Negro Spirituals.   c) What role did black churches play in organizing the Civil Rights Movement for in the Unites States? Who were  some famous Civil Rights activists who were also church leaders? Explain how the black church was critical to  educating and organizing blacks in the South after the Civil War.   
  
 
Beyond the Book: The Culture of To Kill a Mockingbird  
  
19) Harper Lee’s Biography: How Her Life Connects to Story She Wrote  
  
 a) Provide a clear biographical profile of Harper Lee both as a person and as a writer. What are some myths about  Harper Lee that exist but are not true?  b) How did her childhood and upbringing influence her writing of this novel? What major characters, elements of its  setting, and plot emerge directly from real experiences in her childhood?  c) What connections did Harper Lee have to the Civil Rights movement? Was she trying to make some political and  social statements with this book? If so, what were those statements? What impact has her book had on American  culture?   
​
20) The Role of Women in 1930s South and Women Characters in To Kill a Mockingbird   
  a) What was the typical role of women in the South in 1930s America? What limited rights did they have, and what  were they expected to be in the South at this time?   b) Based on your research, what was a proper woman of the South supposed to be like? What was the social  code she was trying to uphold in the South? Look for descriptions of clothing, behavior, personality, and social  roles.  c) Based on your research, would a woman be doing and behaving like that  be considered “improper” or “breaking the code” of a Southern lady? Are there any examples in history of such  women? Who were they, and what did they do to break the code? ​
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