The Civil Rights Film Studies Unit | Movie Analysis | Cinematography
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The Civil Rights Film Studies Unit | Movie Analysis | Cinematography

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Description

The Civil Rights Film Studies Unit | Movie Analysis | CinematographyThe Civil Rights Film Studies Unit brings five weeks of movies and vibrant, evidence based discussion into your civil rights curriculum. This stand alone unit pairs five classroom friendly films with structured Movie Guides, a spiraled Cinematography Extension, two Comparative Analyses, and a three part Summative Assessment. Students analyze change through four leverslaw courts, workplace school policy, team community culture, and operations

The Civil Rights Film Studies Unit brings five weeks of movies and vibrant, evidence-based discussion into your civil-rights curriculum. This stand-alone unit pairs five classroom-friendly films with structured Movie Guides, a spiraled Cinematography Extension, two Comparative Analyses, and a three-part Summative Assessment.

Students analyze change through four levers—law/courts, workplace/school policy, team/community culture, and operations/logistics—while learning how film craft (framing, lighting, sound, editing) guides audience empathy and judgments about power.

Who it’s for:

  • Film Studies/Movie Analysis/Film as Literature Elective Classes
  • ELA teachers building argument writing and close-reading of film as text
  • Social Studies/History/Civics/Civil Rights courses seeking a rigorous, discussion-rich alternative to textbook-only units
  • Mixed-readiness groups (clear scaffolds, concrete prompts, short yet meaningful writing tasks)


What’s Included (teacher-ready & customizable)

  • Weekly Lesson Plans (Weeks 1–5) aligned to each film’s Movie Guide (student copy + answer key)
  • Educator's Planning Guide (See sneak peek in the preview file)
  • At a Glance for Students (Doc and Slides Version)
  • Movie Parental Guide and Permission Slip
  • Cinematography Extension (6 core elements): learn in Weeks 1–2; student presentations in Weeks 3–5
  • Comparative Analysis I (end of Week 2): To Kill a Mockingbird & 42 (lever maps + argument)
  • Comparative Analysis II (end of Week 4): Remember the Titans & The Six Triple Eight (values-first vs. process-first change
  • Summative Assessment (Week 5): Part I argument; Part II Craft → Meaning portfolio; Part III Community Interview (tactful, consent-based)
  • Language supports for multilingual learners (sentence frames, precise vocabulary lists, talk moves)
  • Differentiation toolkit (choice of organizers, presentation scaffolds, discussion icons)

Standards:

Targets CCSS Anchor Standards across Reading (R.1–R.7), Writing (W.1–W.9), Speaking & Listening (SL.1–SL.3), and Language (L.4–L.5). Each guide/assessment calls out the specific anchors used.

Weekly Outline (5 weeks)

  • Week 1 — To Kill a Mockingbird (PG, 1962) Courts, conscience, and community bias; how a verdict can reveal norms more than it changes them; craft choices that build empathy for testimony and fairness.
  • Week 2 — 42 (PG-13, 2013) - Workplace policy + public stance; allyship on and off the field; how visible actions (Rickey’s decision, Reese’s gesture) and media attention shift expectations.
  • Week 3 — Remember the Titans (PG, 2000) Team culture and leadership; rules, rituals, and accountability that turn rivals into one unit; music and montage as “unity engines.”
  • Week 4 — The Six Triple Eight (PG-13, 2024) Operations/logistics as change: indexing systems, 24/7 shifts, and measurable outcomes (“No Mail, Low Morale”) that force institutional recognition.
  • Week 5 — Hidden Figures (PG, 2016) Policy access + technical literacy; who gets into the briefing room and why it matters; how cinematography highlights dignity, precision, and momentum toward inclusion.

Assessments:

  • CA I (Wk 2): Which lever (law, policy, culture, logistics) moves norms more effectively in Mockingbird vs. 42? Include lever maps and counterclaims.
  • CA II (Wk 4): Compare values-first team culture (Titans) vs. process-first logistics (Six Triple Eight); present a clear cause→effect chain and evidence table.

Summative (Wk 5):

  • Part I: Argument (choose lever or allyship typology; include counterargument).
  • Part II: Craft → Meaning mini-portfolio (4 techniques; ≥3 films).
  • Part III: Community Interview on belonging/fair processes with dignity safeguards; connect insights to unit scenes.

Cinematography Extension (spiraled)

  • Weeks 1–2: Learn 6 elements — Exposure, Mise en scène, Camera Movement, Camera Angles, Shot Size, Color & Lighting — through quick demos + guided identification in current films.
  • Weeks 3–5: Short student presentations with peer feedback; presenters become the “class experts,” applying craft terms accurately to scenes.

Implementation & Film Availability

  • Films are not included (copyright). Teachers secure access through school/district channels.
  • Finding films (tips):
  • Ask your school librarian or district media center about DVD collections, interlibrary loan, or classroom streaming licenses.
  • Many public libraries provide free streaming with a library card; check local options.
  • Commercial platforms (e.g., Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video) may have titles available to rent or stream. Catalogs change—always verify availability the week before and day of your showing, and keep a backup plan (alternate clip set or second-choice title).
  • Accessibility: Turn on captions/closed captions; offer vocabulary sheets; seat students for best audio/visual access.

Why it works in ELA and Social Studies

  • ELA: argument writing with counterclaims, close “reading” of film, structured comparative analysis, and domain vocabulary.
  • Social Studies/Civics/Civil Rights: concrete case studies of law, policy, culture, and logistics working together; respectful community-interview practice; connections to primary/secondary context where appropriate.

Time & Pacing

  • Designed for 5 weeks of ~45-minute periods. Each day blends a 10-minute craft mini-lesson/presentation, a 5-minute connection to prompts, and ~30–35 minutes of guided viewing/discussion.
  • Flex pacing notes are embedded in weekly plans (e.g., trimming the longest guide items on CA weeks).

Digital or Print—your choice

  • Digital workflow: Turn on Drive › Settings › “Convert uploads to Google Docs editor format,” then drag in the folder. Docs/Slides are ready for Classroom.
  • Print workflow: DOCX and PPTX files are classroom-ready; print slide decks via File → Print → Handouts → 2 per page.

Does K12MovieGuides offer two full Film Elective Curriculum Options?

Yes! Read below to find out which one is best for your needs:

  • Film Studies & Movie Analysis: a plug-and-play film curriculum that every class can access?
    • This is a lighter, more accessible companion to our original program—built for introductory learners and mixed-readiness classes. It uses mainstream, easy-to-stream films available on the big three platforms (Disney+ / Netflix / Amazon Prime Video) with strong subtitles for accessibility.
    • Audience: Grades 9–12 general ELA, newcomers, co-taught classes.
    • Content: School-friendly slate (mostly G–PG-13), with only two R-rated titles
    • Scope: 36 movie guides, one simple schedule (no alternates to juggle), streamlined comparative tasks.
    • Standards: Hits core CCSS strands while keeping cognitive load manageable.
  • Film as Literature & Cinematic Arts: a deep-dive, university-prep experience with canonical titles.
    • This is designed for college-level or highly skilled high school students who thrive on challenging texts and seminar-style analysis. It features more mature, gold-standard films widely recognized for film-study rigor.
    • Audience: Honors, AP bridge, dual-enrollment, advanced electives.
    • Content: Heavier themes and academic film language; titles chosen for canonical significance and depth.
    • Scope: 45 movie guides (vs. 36 in the other edition), with alternate schedules and assessments to support varied pacing and deeper comparative work.
    • Outcomes: Extended research, richer theory/application, and sustained argumentative writing—ideal for students aiming at college-level analysis.
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SKU: 63271561660

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Kat
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
a quiet life???
This is a short story collection like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie have for Holmes and Poirot/Marple. The characters remind me of the Phryne Fisher books. There are four stories in Book 1 A Quiet Life in the Country Lady Emily Hartcastle and her maid Miss Florence Armstrong are enjoying some time in the country in the small town of Littleton Cotterell when they come across a dead body. They find out that it is Frank Pickering, a local man and it is thought that he committed suicide. But investigating, it seems that he has been murdered. Who did it and why? The Circus comes to town Lady Hartcastle meets an old friend George who is the manager who for a circus that has come to town. The next day, the juggler Hubert 'Huey' Parving is found dead mawled in a cage and then others began to die. Who is behind this? The Case of the Missing Case Lady Hartcastle and Flo go to the engagement party of young Clarissa Farley-Strouds. The next day, Nelson Holloway, the trumpet player with that night's entertainment - Roland Richman's Ragtime Revue. Who killed him? As they investigate, the clues lead them to possible cursed stolen jewel. The Half-Death of Gunther Ehrlichmann Florence recounts her life before and after meeting Lady and Lord Hartcastle as she and Lady Hartcastle along with Lady Hartcastle's brother hunt down a killer. Each story is tied into the other, but exciting! Must read!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2016
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Cynthia D. Vosler
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Great read!
Format: Kindle
Absolutely enjoyable read. Great characters, can't wait for their next adventure! If you like enjoyable fast reads a good mystery and some delightful laughs this series is for you!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2026
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Sophia Rose
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 4
Fun Seeing Where it All Begins for the Fantastic Amateur Detecting Duo
Format: Audiobook
I started with book three in this series, progressed forward, and finally took the opportunity to go back and get the first book in the series. The whimsical, cozy mystery paired with historical Edwardian setting was light and whimsical. Actually, when I started listening, I realized that the first book introduced Lady Hardcastle and her ladies' maid, Florence Armstrong along with their new home and the other regular characters, in such a way that it didn't feel like the first book so much as the first of the stories that had been recorded. There are hints of their unusual, dangerous work abroad and no big explanation why the pair happened to be set upon 'a quiet life in the country' or why Lady Hardcastle and Florence have a relationship that is nearly family rather than an employer and servant from separate classes. The author trickles out the details and the reader/listener must catch them and piece them together as they go. Because I had experienced later books, those pieces stuck out easily to me. The meeting with Inspector Sunderland and the local villagers and neighborhood was fun. There are two murder mysteries that have interesting crossover people and facts. One seems to involve a dead man from the village cricket team whose death was meant to appear like a suicide and then later, the death of a rag-time band trumpeteer that played at the engagement party of the local squire's daughter. A theft is tossed in for good measure. I figured out one of the murders and part of the theft and the second murder, but the ultimate solution took me by surprise. Loved seeing the intrepid Flo able to get in some of her martial arts ability and spend time trailing along as they teased out the solution along side Inspector Sunderland. Elizabeth Knowelden is an absolute gem of a narrator and the voice of this series for me. She laid out the Edwardian country village world, the variety of genders and accents, and kept the pace and tone for this series just right. All in all, I thought this first entry was as fabulous as the later books and do not hesitate to put it out there as a good bet for historical cozy mystery lovers.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2019
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Leond
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Must read!!!!
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
Surprise plot intertwined with story of loss, grief, family and sibling relationships. The book starts off normally and twists and turns. Could not put book down. Great writing and plot development. Can’t wait to read more by this author.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2026
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Josh Mauthe
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 4
A story about what's left behind after death, both emotionally & spiritually - oh, and evil puppets
Format: Kindle
It takes a bit for Grady Hendrix's How to Sell a Haunted House to get to the "haunted" part of that title, but that's okay, really; what Hendrix is interested in here, as much as anything, is haunting in terms of the literal things left behind by death - the traumas that are left for those who survive, the guilt, the shame, the baggage, and all of the other things left behind by those who went before us. And, in the case of Louise and Mark Joyner, puppets. Lots and lots and lots of puppets. Oh, and one of them might be alive and malevolent, turning all of that metaphorical trauma into a very real presence (and, without getting into spoiler territory, all without losing that symbolic weight) - and one that allows Hendrix to bring real horror into the story of an estranged pair of siblings forced back into contact in the weight of their parents' death, and the reckoning that they have to go through as they deal with painful memories and a nightmare puppet. The end result can feel a little cluttered at times (although, by the end, it turns out to be a lot more interconnected and structured than you might realize along the way), and it doesn't help that it features some very fraught family interactions that cross from "painful" to "infuriating" very quickly. But as ever with Hendrix, there's more heart and emotion here than you might expect, and while it's all handled in his usual slightly off-kilter and unique sensibility, it still knows how to deliver the goods both on a horror front and a character one. I'd put it among the weakest of Hendrix's efforts overall, but there's a caveat here, and it's that I don't think anything he's read has ever been anything less than entertaining and solid overall, so even a weaker entry? Still a good time and a good read.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2023

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