Respuesta :

Answer:While the 13th Amendment ended slavery in the United States, it did not define what freedom for formerly enslaved Americans would actually mean. The debate over the meaning of freedom for freedpeople is one of the primary conflicts in the history of the Reconstruction era. Centered on Defining Freedom, Part Two of Facing History's video series about Reconstruction, and enhanced with readings and activities, this lesson will help to illuminate the choices and aspirations of freedpeople, and the methods in which the government defined and sought to protect freedpeople's newly acquired rights. Students will consider the concept of freedom, what it means to be free, and what role freedom plays in their own lives. They will also begin to reflect on the question of whether or not someone who is excluded from full and equal membership in society is truly free.

This lesson is part of Facing History’s work on the Reconstruction era, and part of a series of video-based web lessons. Use this lesson towards the beginning of a Reconstruction unit and engage students in a discussion about the meaning of freedom and how freedpeople sought to define freedom after Emancipation. In addition to the suggestions below, see Lesson 3 in The Reconstruction Era & the Fragility of Democracy for more resources and background information about the ways that freedpeople and the federal government sought to define the meaning of freedom after Emancipation.

Materials

Video: Defining Freedom

Reading: Changing Names

Reading: Savannah Freedpeople Express Their Aspirations for Freedom

Reading: What the Black Man Wants

Reading: Letter from Jourdon Anderson: A Freedman Writes His Former Master

Reading: South Carolina Freedpeople Demand Education

Explanation:

It is important that history is taught right because:

  • it helps us know how our society was formed
  • it shows us how best to respond to certain situations

There is a theory that believes that whatever happens today has happened in one form or another in the past.

For this reason, historical accuracy is important because:

  • humans need to know what happened in the past in order to be able to apply it to the current.
  • humans need to know how society was formed and what happened when certain scenarios were implemented that could have harmed society.

We would be unable to do the above if the information we got was inaccurate and we would end up applying the wrong things to our lives.

In conclusion, it is important that the history we are taught is correct as history imparts both our current lives and our future.

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