0 of 12 Questions completed
Questions:
You have already completed the learning before. Hence you can not start it again.
You must sign in or sign up to start the learning.
You must first complete the following:
Learning complete. Results are being recorded.
Show Question
1
Show Question
2
Show Question
3
Show Question
4
Show Question
5
Show Question
6
Show Question
7
Show Question
8
Show Question
9
Show Question
10
Show Question
11
Show Question
12
Review
Answered
Correct
Incorrect
Question 1 of 12
Why do you think the Black Panther Party’s involvement in the disability rights movement is so little taught? What other surprising solidarity movements come to mind?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 2 of 12
Who are some other lionized historical figures that you are surprised to learn aren’t all that righteous? What’s the point of uplifting these fellows?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 3 of 12
Do you think Woodrow Wilson was the worst president ever? Why or why not? If not, who is worse, and why?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 4 of 12
Can you think of other traditions that show a linkage between the three Abrahamic religions?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 5 of 12
What are five awful stereotypes, images, or games that defile Native Americans, and which were a “normal” part of your growing-up experience?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 6 of 12
What other SCOTUS decisions concerning race do you know of that have had a negative effect on people?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 7 of 12
Where do you recognize yourself having absorbed “myths” about disability, race, religion, or Indigeneity that now feel untenable, and what helped those myths begin to crack?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 8 of 12
How does learning about cross-movement solidarities (e.g., Black Panthers and disability rights, Filipino and Mexican farmworkers, Muslims in Black religious history) shift your understanding of how social change actually happens?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 9 of 12
What role does language (e.g., “pioneer,” “settler,” “Caucasian”) play in shaping your gut feelings about whose lives matter, and what words do you now feel called to retire or replace in your own speech?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 10 of 12
Which examples of erasure in this document (Native representation, Islamic roots of Black culture, sanitized presidential legacies) most unsettled you, and why do you think those particular stories had been kept from you?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 11 of 12
The text insists that “these are not just stories, these were people.” How does that reframing change the way you hold historical grief, and what responsibility does it awaken in you now?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.
Question 12 of 12
Where, in your own work or community, might you be unintentionally reproducing “representation without us is representation done to us,” and what concrete steps could you take to move toward representation with and by affected communities?
This response will be reviewed and graded after submission.