"Making the World Better" Curriculum
The Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities and the Tsongas Industrial
History Center at UMass/Lowell have just reprinted the curriculum packet,
"Making the World Better: The Struggle for Equality in 19th-Century
America," developed as part of the State House Women's Leadership Project. The centerpiece of the project is a new work of public art, permanently
installed in the State House in October 1999, that honors six women who made
significant contributions to public life in Massachusetts.
Designed for
middle and high school students, the curriculum focuses on two of these
women: abolitionist and suffrage leader Lucy Stone (1818-1893) and
African-American abolitionist Sarah Parker Remond (1824-1894). It includes a
folder with biographical information and a time line, a selection of edited
primary source documents, and a Teacher's Guide with learning activities and
resources.
Making the World Better is available, free of charge, to
classroom teachers and home school parents. To order a copy, please call
(617) 923-1678 or e mail MTWB@mfh.org. An electronic version is posted on
the Foundation's website, www.mfh.org/specialprojects/shwlp/site/curriculum.