In this activity, students will examine a diagram of the bus in which Rosa Parks took a seat. Ms. Parks's name has been blacked out. Students will analyze and evaluate the document, then apply prior knowledge to discern what this document is and why it is important.
Suggested Teaching Instructions
This activity can be used during a unit on the Civil Rights movement, in teaching about protests and civil disobedience, or when focusing on Rosa Parks individually. For grades grades 4-8. Approximate time needed is 15 minutes.
Most students have learned about Rosa Parks and the Civil Rights Movement: On December 1, 1955, Ms. Parks took part in a deliberate planned act of civil disobedience by refusing to relinquish her seat on a public bus for a white person.
Ask students to begin the activity, working in pairs to engage in conversation and share their thought processes. The activity asks students to: “Look carefully at this document. It’s part of a famous story, but an important clue has been blacked out. Use every bit of information contained here to describe what you see. Then, apply your knowledge of history to figure out what this document is and whom the story is about.”
Depending on students’ abilities and prior knowledge, assign 3-10 minutes to analyze the document and to try to determine what has been blacked out. Then, ask students to report both their thinking and their answers to the class. Follow up with a review of the events related to Rosa Parks. Find more information about her arrest on the
Teaching With Documents section of the National Archives website.
To conclude the activity, lead a discussion based on the follow-up questions in the “When You're Done” section:
- This document tells part of a famous story of a person, of a group of people, and of our country. It's a big story of courage and audacity, and this document provides the evidence of what really happened.
- What evidence was most helpful? What was confusing or surprising? What helped you discover whom this story is about?
- Look at other documents related to Rosa Parks and to the Civil Rights Movement. Tell the story of Ms. Rosa Parks using this document and others as the factual basis of your narrative.