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African American History: Origins of Hip-Hop
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Lesson Plan and activities for a class on Origins of Hip-Hop. Links to resources, Google Docs, PDF activity download.Journal entry warm-upGoogleSlides on the history of hip-hop and prominent figures in the movementGroup/individual activity on Grandmaster Flash's "The Message"Extension activity with online links for students to create their own beats

Subject:
American History
History/Social Sciences
Music
Social Sciences
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lecture Notes
Lesson
Author:
Haley Taylor
Date Added:
07/27/2022
Art and Go Seek | The Creative Corner
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CC BY
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Join Lauren Paullin as she conducts a scavenger hunt around her house to find all kinds of things that can be used to make pictures, prints, paints, and even musical instruments! Learn how to make a mixed media collage and print it with fruits and vegetables. Learn from New Orleans-based musician, artist, and cultural diplomat Charles Burchell how to turn ordinary objects like glasses, wood, plastic, and even paper into musical instruments. Developed for grades 4 through adults. 

Subject:
Music
STEM/STEAM
Scientific and Engineering Practices
Visual Art
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson
Visual Media
Author:
Trish Reed
Date Added:
05/27/2021
Book 4, Fragmentation. Chapter 9, Lesson 1: The Historical Roots of Hip Hop
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In this lesson, students will examine raw documentary footage, demographic charts, television news stories, and song lyrics to connect the sounds of early Hip Hop to the substandard living conditions in American inner cities in the late 1970s, particularly the Bronx in New York City. Students will compose their own verses to Grandmaster Flash's "The Message," to be followed up with a research-driven writing assignment to further explore the urban environment depicted in the landmark song.

Subject:
American History
Cross-Curricular
Fine Arts
History/Social Sciences
Music
Material Type:
Full Course
Provider:
TeachRock
Date Added:
10/22/2019
Book 4, Fragmentation. Chapter 9. Lesson 2: Divergent Paths in the 1990s: Gangsta Rap and Conscious Hip Hop
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Gangsta Rap grew in part out of the social and political climate on the West Coast, where cities such as Compton, California, became engulfed in gang violence fueled by the crack cocaine epidemic. Longstanding tensions between the African-American community and the police came to a head in the Rodney King case and the announcement of its verdict. Gangsta rappers began to write explicitly about inner city violence. Songs were marked by a liberal use of profanity and images of the gun-toting toughs who lived amidst the brutality of the inner city. Gangsta Rap often overlapped with the East Coast-based "Mafioso Rap," whose practicioners cultivated personas of high-living, power-wielding gangsters who drove fancy cars, drank champagne, and sported intimidating weapons all while promoting a strong sense of kinship. Fiction seemed to become fact when rappers Tupac Shakur and Notorious B.I.G. were victims of unsolved, highly public murders. Soon enough, a countermovement some called "Conscious Hip Hop€" began to emerge, primarily on the East Coast. Many fans saw it as an answer to the often violent and controversial lyrics common in Gangsta Rap. Though in many ways responding to the same conditions to which Gangsta Rap reacted, this subgenre sought to inspire positivity through its lyrics, much like some of the earliest Hip Hop music. Lyrics were intended to challenge and inspire while also questioning the social and political status quo.

Subject:
American History
Cross-Curricular
Fine Arts
History/Social Sciences
Music
Material Type:
Full Course
Provider:
TeachRock
Date Added:
10/22/2019
Instructional Plan: Connecting Shakespeare & Hip Hop/Spoken Word Poetry
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Students will learn historical facts about William Shakespeare and apply those facts to hip hop music/spoken word. Students will identify contemporary grammar and vocabulary influenced by Shakespeare.  Students will create an original spoken word expressional/rap final performance. 

Subject:
Fine Arts
Theater
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
VDOE Fine Arts
Date Added:
08/31/2022
PBS Soundbreaking, Lesson 15: Sampling: The Foundation of Hip Hop
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In this lesson students explore the creative concepts and technological practices on which Hip Hop music was constructed, investigating what it means to "sample" from another style, who has used sampling and how. Then, students experience the technology first hand using the Soundbreaking Sampler TechTool. Students will follow patterns of Caribbean immigration and the musical practices that came to New York City as a result of those patterns, finally considering the ways in which Hip Hop reflects them. Moving forward to the late 1980s and early 90s, what some consider Hip Hop's "Golden Age," this lesson explores how sampling might demonstrate a powerful creative expression of influence or even a social or political statement. Finally, this lesson encourages students to consider the conceptual hurdle Hip Hop asked listeners to make by presenting new music made from old sounds.

Subject:
American History
Cross-Curricular
Fine Arts
History/Social Sciences
Music
Material Type:
Full Course
Provider:
TeachRock
Date Added:
10/22/2019
PBS Soundbreaking, Lesson 16: The Ethics of Sampling
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In this lesson, students use examples from visual art as well as rap to enter into a "structured academic controversy" that explores the concept of originality.

Subject:
American History
Cross-Curricular
Fine Arts
History/Social Sciences
Music
Material Type:
Full Course
Provider:
TeachRock
Date Added:
10/22/2019