Prepare Your Child to Understand and Shape the World They’re Inheriting.
As a parent, you understand that the world your children will lead looks different from the one you inherited. They’ll face complex challenges around justice, inequality, and civic responsibility—challenges that demand not just knowledge, but critical thinking, moral courage, and historical understanding.
The Life, Death, and Legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. goes far beyond the simplified narratives most children encounter. This comprehensive unit study presents the full story of Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement—including the strategic brilliance of economic boycotts, the violent opposition protesters faced, the FBI’s campaign to destroy King, and the 1999 jury verdict finding government conspiracy in his assassination.
What Makes This Unit Study Essential
Most children learn that Dr. King gave a famous speech and had a dream. This unit study teaches them why his work mattered then and why it matters now. Your child will discover:
- Strategic thinking behind social change: How the Montgomery Bus Boycott used economic pressure to force businesses losing $3,000 daily to abandon segregation policies
- The reality of resistance: How the 1963 Birmingham church bombing killed four young girls, and how violent opposition paradoxically strengthened the movement
- Government surveillance and suppression: How the FBI’s COINTELPRO program targeted King with 17,000 pages of surveillance files and even sent him a letter suggesting suicide
- Hidden history: The 1999 civil trial where a jury found “governmental agencies” guilty of conspiracy in King’s assassination—a verdict most history books ignore
- Unfinished work: How King’s “triple evils” of racism, materialism, and militarism still affect 44% of U.S. children living in poverty today
This is honest history. And honest history is what prepares children to become adults who can think critically, lead courageously, and work for justice.
How This Unit Study Builds Essential Skills
Beyond historical content, this curriculum develops the literacy and cognitive stamina your child needs for academic success:
Daily Reading Practice: Each of the 5 sections features substantive non-fiction reading (15–20 minutes) that challenges your child to process complex ideas, follow multi-paragraph arguments, and build vocabulary in context.
Writing Development: Discussion questions and writing prompts require your child to articulate their understanding, make connections between past and present, and develop their own informed perspectives.
Critical Thinking: Rather than memorizing dates, your child learns to analyze cause and effect, evaluate evidence, compare official narratives with historical records, and understand how economic and political systems work.
Structured for Success: Complete in Just One Week
Each of the 5 sections follows an identical, easy-to-implement format:
- Reading Passage – Engaging, age-appropriate narrative that presents historical facts in compelling context
- Vocabulary Terms – Key concepts defined clearly, building your child’s academic language
- Discussion Questions/Writing Prompts – Thoughtful questions that develop analytical skills and personal connection to the material
- Coloring Sheet – A creative, hands-on activity that reinforces learning and provides a mental break
- Lapbook Activities – Hands on activities to reinforce lesson vocabulary and lessons.
- Audio – A podcast version of the lessons is included with every purchase. (Delivered within 24 hours)
Recommended approach: Complete one section each day. The consistent daily routine of reading and writing builds habits that serve your child across all academic subjects. If a passage requires two days, that’s perfectly fine—depth of understanding matters more than speed.
The Five Sections
Section 1: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Led a Movement for Civil Rights for All People. Your child discovers how King evolved from civil rights leader to revolutionary economic justice advocate, and why the government increasingly saw him as a threat.
Section 2: Violence and Police Brutality Sparked the Civil Rights Movement’s Most Intense Period. Learn how the Birmingham church bombing, Mississippi Summer violence, and police collaboration with racist groups paradoxically strengthened rather than stopped the movement.
Section 3: Dr. King Became a Government Target When He Expanded His Focus to Economic Justice and War. Explore the FBI’s COINTELPRO operation, including 17,000 pages of surveillance, the infamous suicide letter, and why King’s Poor People’s Campaign terrified the government.
Section 4: The United States Government Conspired to Assassinate Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis. Examine evidence from the 1999 civil trial, including military intelligence presence, removed police protection, and the jury’s verdict finding government conspiracy.
Section 5: King’s Vision of Fighting Racism, Materialism, and Militarism Remains Unfinished Today. Connect historical struggles to present-day realities, including why 44% of American children live in poverty and how King’s “triple evils” still shape our world.
Additional Learning Resources Included
- Critical Thinking Questions for Extended Writing: Three comprehensive prompts that encourage deeper reflection and longer-form writing practice
- Comprehension Quiz: 10 multiple-choice questions (plus bonus) to assess understanding and retention
- Answer Key with Discussion Points: Detailed guidance for parents on scoring, reviewing material, and extending learning through conversation
Length: 41 pages
K-5

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