Tuesday, July 26, 2016

We've Got a Job: The 1963 Birmingham Children's March

http://www.cynthialevinson.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Cover-281x300.jpeg



Bibliographic data:


Levinson, Cynthia (2012).  We’ve Got a Job: The 1963 Birmingham Children’s March.  Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers.

Summary: 


The Civil Rights Movement was well underway by May of 1963.  Adults across the nation had participated in marches and sit-ins at lunch counters.  Laws in many places were beginning to change.  Things in Birmingham, Alabama were a different story.  While thousands of African-Americans attended weekly rallies at local churches, not enough were participating in the marches and sit-ins to send a message to local businesses and government.  In May, the children of Birmingham took matters into their hands.  Walking out of school, they took to the streets in peaceful protest of segregation.  Their story is told through the eyes of four children who participated, explaining their personal motives for joining and their individual experiences.

Analysis:


While many young adults are likely to know of the lunch counter sit-ins, speeches and marches of the Civil Rights Movement, We’ve got a Job tells an untold story from the front lines.  Focusing on Birmingham, Alabama in May of 1963, Levinson gives a detailed and in-depth explanation of the political environment, motivations and actions of all those involved with the Civil Rights movement, but focuses on the unique roll the children of Birmingham played.  The book focuses in specifically on four very different children of the time.  Levinson narrates the story, telling about the general atmosphere and filling in facts that would be unknown to children, with quotes directly from the four, now grown, children about their experiences.  The children appear to have been carefully selected, representing a range of experiences; the son of wealthy doctors, the poor ‘bad boy,’ a girl who was actively involved throughout the entire movement and the youngest child to have been arrested.

Because the story focuses on the children’s experiences, it will have an extra appeal to young adult readers.  This isn’t the history adults created, it’s the history of people their own age.  Young adults, both male and female, will be able to see themselves in at least one of the children Levinson highlights, making this historical time period come to life in unusual and captivating ways.

Unfortunately, while the book is written for young adult readers the format has a juvenile feel.  The book is has been printed in a large, square format.  While this allows for detailed, full-page photographs it also makes the book feel like a children’s story, despite the subject matter and upper level reading. 

Activity:


The children of Birmingham became engaged in what was thought of as an adult matter because they saw how important it was to have equal rights.  They chose nonviolent protests as the way to convey their opinions because they knew it had the greatest chance of success.  They knew this was the best way for them to be heard.

Have readers brainstorm problems they see in the world today, and then focus in on the one they believe is most important.  After deciding on a campaign, work together to find the best method to battle the problem.  Readers should then carry through in attempting to enact the change they desire.

Example campaigns: Global warming, endangered animals, Black Lives Matter, women’s rights, presidential candidates

Example projects:  fund raising, writing letters to politicians/organizations, organizing or participating in protests, joining a volunteer organization


 Related Resources:


The Children’s March was a triumph and moment of change during the Civil Rights Movement, but it was only a single event in a crusade that lasted centuries and is continuing today.  Tolerance.org has prepared a list of resources and lessons about various events and aspects of the Civil Rights Movement.  Using these resources readers could learn about other events and people influential to the movement.  Teachers and librarians could create entire units about the era.

Tolerance.org.  The Civil Rights Movement.  Retrieved from http://www.tolerance.org/category/classroom-resources/civil-rights-movement (accessed July 23, 2016)

An award winning video created for the National History Day competition, No More: The Children of Birmingham 1963 and the Turning Point of the Civil Rights Movement provides a video form of the information presented in We’ve Got a Job.  The video could be used to introduce the topic and get readers engaged and excited, or after reading as an extension and summary. 

Additionally, as part of the National History Day competition, the video highlights interesting and unusual opportunities available to students who enjoy history and could inspire students to undertake similar learning experiences.

Jessop, Miranda and McKay.  No More: The Children of Birmingham 1963 and the Turning Point of the Civil Rights Movement.  Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCxE6i_SzoQ (accessed July 23, 2016)


Published Review:


“This chronicle of a pivotal chapter of the civil rights movement weaves together the stories of four black children in Birmingham, Ala., who were among some 4,000 who boycotted school to participate in a march to protest segregation. Before recounting that event, during which almost 2,500 young people were arrested and jailed, first-time author Levinson opens with intimate profiles of the four spotlighted children (drawn from interviews she conducted with each of them), along with descriptions of Birmingham’s racist laws, corrupt politicians, antiblack sentiment—and activists’ efforts to fight all of the above. Readers also get an up-close view of such leaders as Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, who founded the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights; Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who advocated a nonviolent response; and James Bevel, a preacher who rallied the city’s children and teens. Yet the most compelling component is Levinson’s dramatic re-creation of the courageous children’s crusade and the change it helped bring about in the face of widespread prejudice and brutality. Powerful period photos and topical sidebars heighten the story’s impact.”

Murphy, Erin. (2012).  We’ve Got a Job: the 1963 Birmingham Children’s March. n.p.: Booklist, 2012. Book Index with Reviews, EBSCOhost (accessed July 23, 2016).


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