The March
  • Home
  • For Teachers
  • For Writers
  • Digital Exhibit
    • James Blue and the Making of The March
    • The Civil Rights Movement and The March
    • Lyndon B. Johnson and Responses to The March
    • Timeline
    • A Field Guide to the Film
    • Meaning of the March
    • American Racism and Anti-Racism
    • The Making of James Blue
    • Making the March on Washington
    • The Making of The March
    • One Film, Two Versions
    • LBJ’s “Difficult Problem”
    • Conflicted Legacy
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • Bibliography
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HMH: March on Washington Activities for Elementary, Middle, and High School Students

Offers five activities for students in grades 4-12:

    1. 5 Ws and One H of a Protest (Grades 4–12)
    2. Count How Many People Were There (Grades 4–12)
    3. What’s Changed Since the First March? (Grades 4–8)
    4. Write for Change (Grades 4-12)
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University of Oregon Sponsored by Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art UO Libraries

The digital exhibition The March is the result of a collaboration between the University of Oregon Libraries and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, with support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Sharealike 4.0 International License to David Frank and the University of Oregon, 2018.