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10,276 Human rights Lesson Plans
Showing 71 - 80 of 10,276
- Grade Range
- 11th
- Rating

Students explore the Aboriginal peoples of Canada. students research and brainstorm ideas on how to fix the problem of equal human rights for all. Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 9th - 11th
- Rating

Students investigate how governments work to protect their citizens in an age of terrorism. They study how governments respect human rights and rule of law while protecting the citizens. Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 11th - 12th
- Rating

Students read and analyze three major documents in European history related to articulation of human rights, noting key principles, identify significant similarities and new concepts, and discuss application to contemporary issues in role play of authors of documents. Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 5th
- Rating

Students create a KWL chart on discrimination and human rights. While reading different stories, they take notes on each character in the books. To end the lesson, they discuss the forms of discrimination today and how African Americans gained more rights during the Civil Rights movement. Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 9th - 12th
- Rating

Students read firsthand accounts of refugees, take a Child Labor Quiz from UNICEF's "Voices of Youth" Web site, study about the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. They write a radio news report on the signing of the declaration and research human rights issues. Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 6th - Higher Ed
- Rating

Students draft and edit a letter regarding human rights. They work in groups to select a cause, follow basic letter writing guidelines and draft a persuasive letter expressing their concerns. Students can also send the letters to a newspaper for publication or to a related government. Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 12th - Higher Ed
- Rating

Students create a time line that includes personal, national, and international human rights events. The lesson is very personal and encourages students to understand themselves and others within the community. Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 5th - Higher Ed
- Rating

Students, in groups, draw a life-size outline of a person on paper. They then place each article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on a part of the body, writing the number of the article in the appropriate place (e.g., Article 26, Right to Education, might be written on the head.) Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 6th - Higher Ed
- Rating

Students create a human machine to represent a concept related to human rights such as opression, liberation, justice. They make one machine per group, adding one person with a repeating sound and motion at a time. Full Review »
- Grade Range
- 6th - Higher Ed
- Rating

Students describe a time when they played different roles regarding human rights. They are divided into small groups and assigned roles of "Perpetrator," "Victim," "Bystander," and "Healer." Individual students give an example of a time they played this role. Full Review »

