Teaching Resources

Bring the full chain
into your classroom.

Lesson plans, discussion guides, and primary-source activities designed to connect African and Black history — from pre-colonial civilizations to present-day America — with rigorous, standards-aligned pedagogy.

Classroom ready

Lesson Plans

Each lesson is built around a primary source, a causal question, and a discussion activity. All are free to download and adapt.

Lesson Plan Grades 9–12

Redlining & Housing Inequality: How a Federal Policy Created Today's Wealth Gap

Students examine original HOLC security maps alongside current neighborhood data to trace how 1930s federal mortgage policy continues to determine school quality, health outcomes, and generational wealth today. Includes a primary source analysis activity and structured academic controversy.

Lesson Plan Grades 9–12

The Transatlantic Slave Trade: Scale, System, and Consequence

Using data from the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database, students analyze the scope and economic logic of the trade — and its deliberate destruction of African social structures, families, and accumulated wealth. Includes data visualization activities.

Lesson Plan Grades 9–12

Reconstruction: A Brief Democracy and Its Deliberate Dismantling

Students compare Reconstruction-era constitutional amendments with the Compromise of 1877 and subsequent Black Codes, tracing how a democratic opening was systematically closed and what that meant for the next 150 years of American politics.

Lesson Plan Grades 6–8

Mali & Songhai: Empires of Scholarship, Trade, and Law

An introduction to pre-colonial West Africa through the lens of the Mali and Songhai Empires — including the University of Sankore at Timbuktu, the hajj of Mansa Musa, and sophisticated trans-Saharan trade networks. Designed to establish the baseline of what existed before the slave trade.

Lesson Plan Grades 6–8

Why Six Million People Moved: The Great Migration and What Caused It

Students investigate the causal chain connecting Jim Crow violence, economic exclusion, and the promise of northern cities — and trace why the conditions migrants found in the North were often shaped by the same discriminatory systems they fled.

Lesson Plan Grades 9–12

The GI Bill: How America Built the White Middle Class and Excluded Everyone Else

A close examination of the Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, how its benefits were administered in a racially discriminatory way, and what the compounding effects have been on wealth, homeownership, and educational attainment across generations.

Facilitated inquiry

Discussion Guides

Structured conversation frameworks for classroom, book club, or community use. Each guide includes opening prompts, deeper inquiry questions, and facilitation notes.

Discussion Guide

Connecting History to Contemporary Housing Debates

A structured discussion connecting the federal redlining maps of the 1930s to current debates about housing policy, school funding, and neighborhood investment. Includes opening readings, tiered discussion questions, and a "chain of causation" activity.

Download guide Coming soon
Discussion Guide

The Reparations Debate: History, Arguments, and Evidence

Examines the historical and contemporary arguments around reparations — from Frederick Douglass to H.R. 40 — using primary sources and economic evidence. Designed for structured academic controversy or Socratic seminar.

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Discussion Guide

The Roots of Mass Incarceration: Policy, Poverty, and Race

Traces the historical arc from Reconstruction-era Black Codes through the War on Drugs to the present carceral state. Includes data, firsthand accounts, and comparative policy analysis prompts.

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Discussion Guide

What Was Lost: African Civilizations Before the Slave Trade

An opening-unit discussion guide for orienting students to the civilizations — Mali, Songhai, Kush, Benin, Great Zimbabwe — that existed before European colonization and the slave trade. Challenges common assumptions about Africa's pre-colonial history.

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Discussion Guide

The Achievement Gap Is a Funding Gap: Schools, Zip Codes, and Inequality

Connects property-tax school funding, neighborhood segregation, and educational outcomes to trace why the "achievement gap" is more accurately a resource gap — and how that gap traces back through decades of deliberate policy.

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Discussion Guide

Voting Rights: From the 15th Amendment to Shelby County

Tracks the history of voting rights legislation and restriction — from Reconstruction amendments through the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to the Supreme Court's 2013 decision — and examines what the pattern reveals about how rights are expanded and contracted.

Download guide Coming soon

Curriculum alignment

Standards & Frameworks

All Chain teaching resources are aligned to national and widely-adopted state standards frameworks.

Common Core ELA

All lessons include reading, writing, and evidence-based argumentation tasks that meet CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RH and CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.WHST standards for history/social studies.

C3 Social Studies Framework

Resources are built around the College, Career, and Civic Life (C3) Framework's inquiry arc — compelling questions, supporting questions, sources, and informed action.

AP US History & AP African American Studies

Content aligns with APUSH Period 5 (1844–1877), Period 7 (1890–1945), and Period 8 (1945–1980) themes, and supports the AP African American Studies pilot framework.

State Diversity & Inclusion Standards

Resources support Illinois, California, New Jersey, and New York African American history curriculum mandates, with adaptations available for additional state contexts.