Description
Focus on segregation during the Civil Rights movement with this critical thinking activity that asks students to decide if they would stay on the bus with the Freedom Riders in 1961.
In this one-day, discussion-based Civil Rights lesson, students examine a real historical dilemma, make a difficult decision, and justify their reasoning — all in one class period.
This lesson is part of the Real History Decision series, designed to get students thinking, discussing, and reflecting on real choices people faced in history.
⭐ What Students Do
In this lesson, students will:
- Read a background knowledge page
- Imagine themselves in a short historical scenario
- Examine multiple perspectives
- Make a forced decision with no easy answer
- Discuss their reasoning with a partner and the class
- Learn what actually happened in real history
The focus is on critical thinking, discussion, and reflection — not right or wrong answers.
⏱️ Time Needed
One class period (45–60 minutes)
Discussion extensions may take longer if desired.
📄 What’s Included
- 6 student pages
- Setting the Stage
- The Story Begins
- Voices From the Past
- The Decision
- Making Meaning
- Real History: Real Decisions
- Teacher Directions
- Answer Key
✔️ No prep
✔️ Print-friendly
✔️ Sub-safe
🧠 Why Teachers Like This Lesson
- Creates meaningful discussion without chaos
- Structured enough for quiet classes
- Neutral and non-judgmental
- Encourages student reasoning and justification
- Easy to drop into existing plans
- Includes reading and writing
Students are guided through the thinking process without being told what to choose.
📚 Where This Lesson Fits
This lesson works well during:
- Civil Rights Movement units
- Social Studies / ELA crossover discussions
- Civics or ethics discussions
- Historical decision-making and perspective-taking
- Sub plans or low-prep days with high engagement
👩🏫 Grade Level
Grades 6–8
If you’re looking for a no-prep, one-day lesson that gets students thinking and talking about history in a meaningful way, this resource is designed to fit seamlessly into your classroom.
I’d love to hear your feedback! Please leave a review to let me know how it worked in your classroom. Leaving reviews helps you earn Teachers Pay Teachers credit towards purchases!
Notes:
1. This is a zip file. You will need a zip extractor to access the presentation.
2. This is a pdf document. You must open it with a pdf viewer such as adobe.
Get a free copy of the Real History Decision lesson Do You Trigger Nuclear Retaliation?, by clicking here.
Happy Teaching!
(c) Teaching With My Girl
All rights reserved by author
Permission to copy for single classroom use only
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Civil Rights Movement Critical Thinking Lesson | Freedom Riders & Segregation
Highlights
Description
Focus on segregation during the Civil Rights movement with this critical thinking activity that asks students to decide if they would stay on the bus with the Freedom Riders in 1961.
In this one-day, discussion-based Civil Rights lesson, students examine a real historical dilemma, make a difficult decision, and justify their reasoning — all in one class period.
This lesson is part of the Real History Decision series, designed to get students thinking, discussing, and reflecting on real choices people faced in history.
⭐ What Students Do
In this lesson, students will:
- Read a background knowledge page
- Imagine themselves in a short historical scenario
- Examine multiple perspectives
- Make a forced decision with no easy answer
- Discuss their reasoning with a partner and the class
- Learn what actually happened in real history
The focus is on critical thinking, discussion, and reflection — not right or wrong answers.
⏱️ Time Needed
One class period (45–60 minutes)
Discussion extensions may take longer if desired.
📄 What’s Included
- 6 student pages
- Setting the Stage
- The Story Begins
- Voices From the Past
- The Decision
- Making Meaning
- Real History: Real Decisions
- Teacher Directions
- Answer Key
✔️ No prep
✔️ Print-friendly
✔️ Sub-safe
🧠 Why Teachers Like This Lesson
- Creates meaningful discussion without chaos
- Structured enough for quiet classes
- Neutral and non-judgmental
- Encourages student reasoning and justification
- Easy to drop into existing plans
- Includes reading and writing
Students are guided through the thinking process without being told what to choose.
📚 Where This Lesson Fits
This lesson works well during:
- Civil Rights Movement units
- Social Studies / ELA crossover discussions
- Civics or ethics discussions
- Historical decision-making and perspective-taking
- Sub plans or low-prep days with high engagement
👩🏫 Grade Level
Grades 6–8
If you’re looking for a no-prep, one-day lesson that gets students thinking and talking about history in a meaningful way, this resource is designed to fit seamlessly into your classroom.
I’d love to hear your feedback! Please leave a review to let me know how it worked in your classroom. Leaving reviews helps you earn Teachers Pay Teachers credit towards purchases!
Notes:
1. This is a zip file. You will need a zip extractor to access the presentation.
2. This is a pdf document. You must open it with a pdf viewer such as adobe.
Get a free copy of the Real History Decision lesson Do You Trigger Nuclear Retaliation?, by clicking here.
Happy Teaching!
(c) Teaching With My Girl
All rights reserved by author
Permission to copy for single classroom use only
Related Products
✨ MLK Assassination + RFK Speech Analysis | Civil Rights Primary Source Lesson
✨ Atomic Bomb Decision Activity | Truman Hiroshima Nagasaki WWII Lesson Discussion
✨ Cuban Missile Crisis | Nuclear Launch Decision Activity | Cold War Middle School
✨ D - Day WWII Lesson | Operation Overlord : Invasion of Europe Decision Activity
✨ Nuremberg Trials: Holocaust + Justice Decision Activity | WWII History Lesson




