Students like photographs. They’re visual and engaging, so they make great learning tools. Photographs are an excellent way to capture the spirit of an event or idea. However, learning how to interpret photographs can be challenging. These lessons will help students learn to think about photos more deeply.
In addition, the lessons will expand students’ knowledge of social justice issues. They can be used to supplement another lesson or readings, or they can stand alone.
Overarching Objectives
Each lesson in the series builds background knowledge about a particular social justice issue and addresses at least one English language arts skill. The lesson objectives also promote critical thinking skills. Here are some of the issues and skills addressed in the lessons:
- understand that people experience injustices
- understand why and how people take action to address injustice
- recognize how experiences are shaped by membership in groups defined by race, gender, socioeconomic status, culture, ethnicity, ability
- recognize how the historical moment and the social context shape experience
- develop empathy for people whose experiences differ from their own.
They should also help students “read” photographs by getting them to:
- describe what they see in a photograph;
- understand that photographs are not merely reflections of reality, but mediated images that convey many meanings;
- see that photographs have both denotative meanings (those that are literal) and connotative meanings (those that are constructed through individual and collective associations);
- understand the importance of the context in which a photograph was taken, and determine how specific photographs fit into the context in which they were taken;
- identify the mood of a photograph and determine what elements contribute to creating that mood;
- analyze color, light and shadow, and how they contribute to a photograph’s meanings;
- analyze the composition of photographs, including how photographers shape meaning by choosing how to crop images;
- identify a photograph’s point of view.
Essential Questions
- How do photographs convey meaning? How do viewers contribute to constructing that meaning?
- How are photographs similar to and different from other kinds of communication?
- What role can photographs play in revealing injustice? What role can they play in encouraging people to take action against injustice?
- How do photographs show activism and activists?
CLASSROOM ACTIVITIES
THEME 1: Understanding People’s Perspectives
2: Affirming Our Commonalities and Differences
3: Supporting Social Border Crossings
THEME 2: Exposing Injustice
6: Exposing Anti-Immigration Sentiment
7: Exposing Homelessness and Poverty
Theme 3: Confronting Injustice
9: Confronting Unjust Practices
10: Legal Action: The Supreme Court
11: Advertisements Promoting Activism
12: Showcasing Your Understanding
Standards Connections
Activities address the following standards (McREL 4th edition)
Visual Arts
Standard 1.Understands and applies media, techniques, and processes related to the visual arts
Standard 3. Knows a range of subject matter, symbols, and potential ideas in the visual arts
Civics
Standard 14. Understands issues concerning the disparities between ideals and reality in American political and social life
Standard 25. Understands issues regarding personal, political, and economic rights
Historical Understanding
Standard 2. Understands the historical perspective
History: United States
Standard 29. Understands the struggle for racial and gender equality and for the extension of civil liberties
Standard 31. Understands economic, social, and cultural developments in the contemporary United States
Language Arts
Standard 5. Uses the general skills and strategies of the reading process
Standard 9. Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media
Life Skills: Working With Others
Standard 1. Contributes to the overall effort of a group
Standard 4. Displays effective interpersonal communication skills


