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N.C. schools get new black history teaching tools

Todd Luck November 1, 2012 1
N.C. schools get  new black history  teaching tools

Students have a new way to learn about the state’s rich African American culture.

AT&T North Carolina and the N.C. Department of Public Instruction unveiled the 2013 Heritage Calendar last week in Raleigh. Each month, an individual who has played a key role in North Carolina black history is highlighted. The calendar is available online and will be provided to schools throughout the state. Lesson plans about each honoree will be made available to educators in the hope that they will use them to teach their students more about these iconic figures, who were selected by an AT&T panel based on submitted nominations. Not all of those featured are black. Whites who have contributed to black history being made – like former UNC Basketball Coach Dean Smith and former Governor Jim Hunt – also appear.

A team of 24 teachers from across the state prepared lessons for the project. Lee Anne Stiffler, who retired as a science teacher at Meadowlark Elementary after an education career that spanned nearly 40 years, was on the team.

“I hope that (students) get a chance to use this to meet North Carolinians they probably never have heard of before,” Stiffler said of the calendar. 

Stiffler was among a group of four teachers assigned to develop lesson plans centered around Hunt, who appointed many African Americans to prominent positions as governor, and Clarence “Big House” Gaines, the late legendary Winston-Salem State University basketball coach. Stiffler said she had long admired both men.

The educators were allowed to get creative with their lesson plans. For example, for Gaines, Stiffler used basketball as the basis for physics and to create a language arts lesson centered around leadership.

In a press release, State Superintendent Dr. June Atkinson praised Stiffler and the other educators who crafted the lesson plans.

“Each teacher involved in crafting these plans has provided important leadership to their colleagues,” she said. 

Gaines is not the only calendar icon with Triad ties.

Greensboro residents Henry and Shirley Frye are featured. He became the first African American to serve in the state General Assembly in the 20th Century and the first black justice and chief justice of the N.C. Supreme Court; she is an esteemed educator who has devoted countless volunteer hours to worthy causes. Fittingly, the Greensboro Four are featured for February, the month in 1960 that they made history with a sit-in at a Greensboro lunch counter.

Less obvious figures are included as well, like former Wendell-Wake NAACP Chapter President  Mary Perry, who is the longest-serving NAACP president in the state. Coach Smith is highlighted for recruiting UNC’s first black athlete in 1966 and helping to integrate the Chapel Hill restaurant, The Pines.  Smith also helped Howard Lee, a black UNC graduate student and future Chapel Hill mayor, move into an all-white neighborhood in 1965.

“The inaugural honorees  are all incredible role models and have made a lasting difference in their relative fields and communities, excelling in areas such as education, public service, civil rights, sports, arts and law enforcement,” said Cynthia Marshall, president of AT&T North Carolina, in a press release. “It is our hope that this calendar will serve as a tribute to their tremendous integrity, commitment and dedication to enhancing the lives of African-Americans throughout North Carolina’s rich history.” 

The other North Carolinians featured are: former Wake County Sherriff John Baker Jr.; former Raleigh Mayor Tom Bradshaw; former U.S. Rep.  Eva Clayton; pre-school education advocate Dorothy Scoggins; Sandhills Family Heritage Association founder Ammie McRea Jenkins; and education advocate Olinzie Johnson.

 

To learn more about the AT&T 2013 Heritage Calendar, visit  HYPERLINK “http://ncheritagecalendar.com” http://ncheritagecalendar.com/.

TAGS » 2013 Heritage Calendar, African American culture, Ammie McRae Jenkins, AT&T North Carolina, black athletes, Clarence "Big House" Gaines, Cynthia Marshall, Dorothy Scoggins, Eva Clayton, first African American on General Assembly, first black justice and chief justice of the N.C. Supreme Court, former Wake County Sherriff John Baker, Greensboro lunch counter, Henry and Shirley Frye, language arts, Lee Anne Stiffler, Lesson Plans, Mary Perry, Meadlowlark Elementary, N.C. Department of Public Instruction, new black history teaching tools, North Carolina Black History, Olinzie Johnson, Raleigh, state heritage, State Superintendent Dr. June Atkinson, Tom Bradshaw, Wendell-Wake NAACP Chapter President, WSSU basketball coach
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About the author: Todd Luck View all posts by Todd Luck

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  • Erich Hicks

    Keep history alive by telling that history:

    Read the greatest ‘novel’, Rescue at Pine Ridge, the first generation of Buffalo Soldiers. The website is: http://www.rescueatpineridge.com This is the greatest story of Black Military History…5 stars Amazon internationally, and Barnes & Noble. Youtube commercials are: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iD66NUKmZPs and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEgEqgNi2Is

    Rescue at Pine Ridge is the epic story of the 9th Cavalry from its Congressional conception in 1866, to the rescue of the famed 7th Cavalry by the 9th Cavalry Buffalo Soldiers, 1890. The 7th Cavalry was entrapped again, after the Little Big Horn Massacre, fourteen years later, the day after the Wounded Knee Massacre. If it wasn’t for the 9th Buffalo Soldiers, there would of been a second massacre of the 7th Cavalry. This story is about, brutality, compassion, reprisal, bravery, heroism, redemption and gallantry.

    You’ll enjoy the novel that embodies the Native Americans, Outlaws and African-American/Black soldiers, from the east to the west, from the south to the north, in the days of the Native American Wars with the approaching United States of America.

    The novel was taken from my mini-series movie with the same title, “RaPR” to keep the story alive. The movie so far has the interest of major actors in which we are in talks with, in starring in this epic American story.

    When you get a chance, also please visit our Alpha Wolf Production website at; http://www.alphawolfprods.com and see our other productions, like Stagecoach Mary, the first Black Woman to deliver mail for the US Postal System in Montana, in the 1890′s, “spread the word”, http://www.stagecoachmary.net.

    Peace.

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