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Primer » Classroom Applications
Classroom Applications - Alec's Primer
When Mistress Gouldin comes upon Zephie teaching Alec to read, she shouts, “You
know it is against the law to teach slaves to read.” In anger she tries
to wrench the primer from his hands.
This dramatic moment turns on the fact that literacy held the potential to
erode the slave owner’s power. Teaching a slave to read violated
a basic mechanism in the system of control.
In today’s world everyone is expected to be able to read, and achieving
universal literacy is a fundamental goal of our education system.
Alec’s
Primer offers an opportunity step back for a moment to reflect
on why this is so and to consider the central role that literacy
plays in our everyday lives. Here are some thoughts on ways in
which you and your students can explore the importance of being
able to read.
- As a class create a master list of times during the day when you need
to be able to read.
- As a class, talk about how being able to read makes you independent.
If you couldn’t read, how would you need other people’s
help?
- Think together about how reading helps people make important
decisions. What kinds of decisions would be harder to make
if you couldn’t
read?
- Could you get a job if you couldn’t read? Can you think
of a job where you wouldn’t need to be able to read?
- What does reading have to do with having fun? Do you need to
be able to read in order to do any of the things you like
to do?
- Think together about other ways (besides reading) that people
get information.
- Back in the time when slaves weren’t permitted to learn
to read, how do you think they learned to do new things?
How did they find out about the world outside their towns?
- Ask people you know how they learned to read. Did they learn
in school or from a friend or family member? Was any part
of learning particularly difficult? Do they remember the first “chapter” book
they were able to read by themselves for pleasure?
- With radio, television, and the internet, do you think reading
is still important? Why or why not?
- Visit a class of younger students and help them with their
reading.
The foremost spokesman for literacy as empowerment in the lives of slaves
was Frederick Douglass, whose Narrative of the Life
of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave includes the chapter “Learning to Read and Write.”
A brief account of Douglass’s learning to read is available in
the online text of Sandra Thomas’s A Biography
of the Life of Frederick Douglass.
http://www.history.rochester.edu/class/douglass/part1.html
The Great Books Foundation site has an online discussion guide for
Douglass’s Narrative of the Life of Frederick
Douglass, an American Slave which in its introduction explores Douglass’s thoughts on
the ways in which learning to read and write changed his life.
http://www.penguinputnam.com/static/rguides/us/narrative_life_of_
frederick_douglass.html