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Resources
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Helpful Web Sites
- The African American Mosaic - a Library of Congress exhibit and resource guide for the study of black history and culture
- The African American Odyssey - a special presentation of the Library of Congress exhibition, The African American Odyssey: A Quest for Full Citizenship
- African American Perspectives - audio clips, samples of text, and historical facts relating to pamphlets written by African-American authors between 1818-1907
- Africans in America - companion site to the series, offering hundreds of primary source documents, scholarly essays and stories from the series
- American Slave Narratives - narratives of former slaves, documented from 1936-1938
- The Anacostia Museum Online - a community based and constituency focused museum that increases public awareness of the Black experience through research, programs and exhibitions
- Black History: Exploring African-American Issues on the Web - specific strategies for integrating the Web into learning
- The Martin Luther King, Jr. Papers Project - secondary documents written about King as well as primary documents written during King's life
- Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture -national research library devoted to collecting, preserving and providing access to resources documenting the experiences of peoples of African descent throughout the world
- Stamp on Black History - U.S. Postal Service web site uses research behind its commemorative stamp program to offer information, related activities, and curriculum connections
- Teaching Tolerance - a collection of ready-to-use ideas and strategies
- Universal Black Pages - comprehensive listing of African-diaspora-related Web pages
- The United States Constitution - offers the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and a way to navigate through the U.S. Constitution
- The Valley of the Shadow - transcripts of original slave narratives from libraries and local archives and links to other primary documents.
Disclaimer: Teachers and other school personnel should review all web sites before student use. Due to the constantly changing nature of the internet environment, the Black History Task Force and the Arkansas Department of Education do not take responsibility for irrelevant or inappropriate information appearing on the web sites listed above.
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