ETHNIC STUDIES CURRICULUM
XITO’s available curriculum packages include: full 30-week course, two semester-long courses, or individual 3-6 week units. Each unit includes a scope and sequence, detailed lesson plans, corresponding slides, and all linked readings and resources.
Consulting services and professional development training can be incorporated with any of the curriculum offerings. Please contact XITO to discuss pricing and implementation options.
INTRODUCTION TO ETHNIC STUDIES
COURSE DESCRIPTION
Ethnic Studies examines the history, politics, economics, society, and/or culture of one or more of the racial/ethnic groups in the United States. This course will take a comprehensive approach to studying the contemporary issues affecting racial/ethnic groups overall as well as diving into a few specific racial/ethnic groups relevant to our region and the participants in the course.
The one semester or full year Ethnic Studies course offers an interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary, and comparative study of the social, cultural, political, and economic expression and experiences of ethnic groups. Relevant standards will be addressed in Social Studies as it pertains to the counternarratives, epistemologies, and cultures of those who have been historically marginalized. While the curriculum is standards aligned this course will also be student, community, and culturally responsive developing students' critical consciousness, agency, and positive identities.
COURSE OVERVIEW
Please note: the overview listed below is one example of how this course has been implemented in the past - we are happy to work with you to design a curriculum package to fit your needs.
SEMESTER 1: INTRODUCTION TO ETHNIC STUDIES
3 UNITS | 18 WEEKS
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Compelling Question: Who are you in relation to yourself, culture, and society?
LESSONS
What is Ethnic Studies?
Who Am I & What Are My Identities?
Race & Ethnicity
Life in the Hyphen & A Double Consciousness
Intersectionality & Solidarity
Lotería: Developing a Love of Ourselves & Our Cultures
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Compelling Question: What are systems of power and oppression and how have institutions maintained or perpetuated them?
LESSONS
Levels of Consciousness
Four I’s of Oppression (FREE SAMPLE LESSON HERE)
The Legal Struggle for Educational Equality
Medical & Healthcare Systems
Policing & Prisons
Immigration
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Compelling Question: Why is Change Necessary?
LESSONS
The Movement for Ethnic Studies
The Black Power Movement
Young Lords: The People Fight Back
Indigenous Resistance: Standing Rock & The NoDAPL Movement
Farmworker Movement: Chicanx, Filipinx & Arab Solidarity
How Does Change Happen?
SEMESTER 2: ETHNIC STUDIES HISTORY
4 UNITS | 12 WEEKS
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Compelling Question: How has settler colonialism impacted Native American communities throughout history and how did the Red Power Movement resist land theft and assimilation tactics?
LESSONS
Settler Colonialism & The Road to the Reservation
Native American Boarding Schools
Native American Resistance: The Red Power Movement
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Compelling Question: What are pivotal episodes in Chicanx-Latinx History which have proven to be socially and politically transformational for both Chicanx and greater U.S. society?
LESSONS
The Birth of Mexican Americans/Chicanx in the United States: Resistance & Affirmation
Mass Deportations Then & Now
The Zoot Suit Riots
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Compelling Question: How has the Black/African American community in the U.S. been impacted by systemic racism and how have they fought back against these injustices?
LESSONS
Slave Rebellions & The Abolitionist Movement
Housing Discrimination
Black Lives Matter
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Compelling Question: How have exclusionary policies, practices and laws historically impacted the Asian American & Pacific Islander community and how are the effects felt today?
LESSONS
From China to Gold Mountain
Japanese American Internment
Pacific Islander/Oceania Resistance to Colonialism