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Booker T. Washington National MonumentCostumed volunteers dressed as slaves.
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Booker T. Washington National Monument
Curriculum Materials
 
 
Graphic.  Image of adult Washington in sky and child Washington carrying a bucket of water and a drinking gourd from the kitchen cabin.
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Cover of Monumental Education Interactive Teacher Materials CD.
 

Monumental Education is the curriculum-based program at Booker T. Washington National Monumental. The program consists of five education programs addressing different phases of Washington's dynamic life.  Students will be engaged to compare Washington's life as a slave to their lives today while they are in preschool through first grade. In the second and third grades, the students will examine Washington transition from slave to educator. The impact of the American Civil War is the focus of our fourth and fifth grade program. How Washington dealt with the challenges of the post-Reconstruction South is discussed with sixth through eighth graders. While, 11th graders are challenged to analyze the philosophies of Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois. 

Sheep grazing at the park.
To Be a Slave
Kindergarten and 1st Grade Program
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The Lifting the Veil of Ignorance Statue at Tuskegee University.
Lifting the Veil
2nd and 3rd Grade Program
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Union Soldier reading a document.
War on the Home Front
4th and 5th Grade Program
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Park Ranger giving a tour.
Cast Down Your Bucket
6th through 8th Grade Program
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Photo of National Park Service with visitors at Liberty Bell  

Did You Know?
An old broken bell, imperfect, yet one of the most powerful symbols of liberty in the world, the Liberty Bell bears a timeless message, “Proclaim LIBERTY Throughout All the Land Unto All the Inhabitants Thereof” (Leviticus, 25:10)

Last Updated: August 26, 2006 at 12:01 EST