Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu...

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Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct Click to begin.

Transcript of Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu...

Page 1: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Choose a category. You will be given the answer.

You must give the correct question.

Click to begin.

Page 2: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Click here for Final Jeopardy

Page 3: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Abolition Arts Education

10 Points

20 Points

30 Points

40 Points

50 Points

10 Points 10 Points 10 Points 10 Points

20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points

30 Points

40 Points

50 Points

30 Points 30 Points 30 Points

40 Points 40 Points 40 Points

50 Points 50 Points 50 Points

FirstsCivil Rights

Page 4: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

This NAACP local secretary launched the Montgomery bus

boycott with her act of civil disobedience.

Page 5: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Rosa Parks?

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This Indian peace activist inspired the use of nonviolent

civil disobedience in the American civil rights movement.

Page 7: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Mohandas Gandhi?

Page 8: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

This civil rights organization, known as SNCC, played a major role in the Freedom Rides, the 1963 March on

Washington, and the Mississippi Freedom Summer.

Page 9: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

What was the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee?

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This prominent civil rights activist went on to serve as the mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, and the United States’ first Black ambassador to

the United Nations.

Page 11: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Andrew Young?

Page 12: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

This Mississippi voting rights activist, known for singing hymns to galvanize protesters, caused a

stir at the 1964 Democratic National Convention as an

outspoken “Freedom Democrat.”

Page 13: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Fannie Lou Hamer?

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This American abolitionist and orator wrote a well-known

autobiography and edited the North Star newspaper.

Page 15: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Frederick Douglass?

Page 16: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

This former slave, born Isabella Baumfree, delivered her “Ain’t I a

Woman?” speech at an 1851 women’s rights convention.

Page 17: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Sojourner Truth?

Page 18: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

When this novel was published in 1852 by Harriet Beecher Stowe,

its condemnation of slavery outraged Southerners and won many Northerners over to the

abolitionist cause.

Page 19: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

What is Uncle Tom’s Cabin?

Page 20: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Originating in Galveston, Texas, this celebration commemorating the end of slavery in the United

States is now observed in 26 states.

Page 21: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

What is Juneteenth?

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This country, whose name means “Land of the Free,” was colonized

by freed African American slaves in 1822 with the support of the U.S.

government.

Page 23: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

What is Liberia?

Page 24: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

While in law school in 1990, this future U.S. senator was elected

the first Black president of the

Harvard Law Review.

Page 25: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who is Barack Obama?

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This philanthropist, political activist, and pioneer of the modern hair care and cosmetics industries

became the first self-made U.S. woman millionaire.

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Who was Madame C.J. Walker?

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This physician and former NASA astronaut became the first Black

woman to travel in space on September 12, 1992.

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Who is Mae Jemison?

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In 1957, she became the first African-American to win

Wimbledon.

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Who was Althea Gibson?

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Born in Atlanta, Texas, she was the first African American woman to become an airplane pilot, and the first American woman to hold an

international pilot's license.

Page 33: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Bessie Coleman?

Page 34: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

This Harlem Renaissance writer is best known for poems such as

“Dream Deferred” and “Life Ain’t No Crystal Stair.”

Page 35: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Langston Hughes?

Page 36: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

She is considered the founder of African-American

literature, having published “Poems on Various Subjects,

Religious and Moral,” in 1773.

Page 37: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Phillis Wheatley?

Page 38: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

In 1993, this author, activist, and professor became only the

second poet in American history to read a poem at a presidential inauguration.

Page 39: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who is Maya Angelou?

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Recipient of 13 Grammy Awards and the Presidential Medal of

Freedom, this composer led his influential orchestra from 1923 until

his death in 1974.

Page 41: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was “Duke”

Ellington?

Page 42: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

This famous painter was awarded the U.S. National Medal of the Arts

in 1990 for his work, which often depicted the history and struggles

of African Americans.

Page 43: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Jacob Lawrence?

Page 44: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Carter G. Woodson, African-American historian and author, created this annual recognition

of the achievements of Black Americans.

Page 45: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

What is Black History Month?

Page 46: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

In 1957, the 101st U.S.-Airborne Division escorted nine students into a segregated high school in this city.

Page 47: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

What is Little Rock, Arkansas?

Page 48: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

This famous educator, who headed Tuskegee

University until his death, published Up From Slavery

in 1901.

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Who was Booker T. Washington?

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Dr. Ruth Simmons, from Grapeland, Texas, became the first Black president of an Ivy League school when she was appointed to

lead this university in 2000.

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What is Brown University?

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Supreme Court cases such as Brown v. Board of Education

and Sweatt v. Painter challenged this 1896 decision, which

established the “separate but equal” doctrine of racial

segregation.

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What was Plessy v. Ferguson?

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Make your wager

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This famous educator, a member of FDR’s so-called “Black Cabinet,”

wrote in her Last Will and Testament:

“I leave you love. I leave you hope. I leave you the challenge of developing confidence in one another. I

leave you a thirst for education. I leave you a respect for the use of power. I leave you faith. I

leave you racial dignity. I leave you a desire to live harmoniously with your fellow men. I leave you,

finally, a responsibility to our young people.”

Page 56: Instructions for the game. Activate the game by selecting “View Show” in the Slide Show menu above. After a contestant has selected a category and point.

Who was Mary McLeod Bethune?