Tag: Garvey Classroom

A hub for culturally grounded lessons, reflections, and mindset tools from The Garvey Classroom—where education and liberation walk hand in hand.

  • Black History Every Month: Confidence-Building Lesson Plans from the Garvey Classroom

    Circular logo for The Garvey Classroom featuring Marcus Garvey and the phrase “Confidence is our birthright.”

    Lesson Plans for the Entire School Year

    Summer vacations are never vacations for committed educators. Sure, they may take two weeks to decompress, but many teachers, especially those in the UK, are already preparing for Black History Month, which this year focuses on the theme of “Standing Firm.” Homeschooling parents scan resources for materials that honor our legacy with dignity. Both search for lessons that will matter. Meanwhile, families wonder how to extend these conversations beyond a single month. All face the same challenge: How do we teach Black history as a living, breathing force rather than a seasonal obligation?

    I built the Garvey Classroom to answer that question. I’ve created lesson plans that focus on Garvey because it is my area of specialization. These lesson plans work effectively during Black History Month, yet they refuse to be confined to that month. Throughout the school year, during the transition weeks in March, when curricula shift elsewhere, these units continue to build the confidence our children deserve.

    The Foundation of Story

    Most educational resources mention Marcus Garvey in passing, reducing him to a name for memorization or dates for recall. Rather than engaging students meaningfully, existing lesson plans about Garvey concentrate on the lowest level of Bloom’s taxonomy: remembering dates, memorizing facts, and identifying basic information. My approach differs fundamentally. Beginning with either informational texts or stories, every Garvey Classroom lesson invites students to encounter authentic material first and then explore its deeper meaning.

    This approach transforms learning. When a lesson opens with a story rather than a textbook summary, students connect with the man behind the movement. They hear his passion, sense his urgency, and feel his hope. From this authentic foundation, they explore questions that matter: Who am I in this world? What is my purpose? How do I cultivate a free mind?

    Consider how this works in practice. Instead of reading about Garvey’s belief in Black excellence, students examine his speeches about self-determination. Rather than memorizing facts about the Universal Negro Improvement Association, they grapple with his vision of global unity and compare it to that of equally committed Pan-Africanists, such as W.E.B. Du Bois. They don’t just learn what happened. They discover what remains possible.

    Principles That Guide Every Lesson Plan

    Each resource in The Garvey Classroom operates from core principles that distinguish it from conventional materials. These principles shape every activity, every question, and every moment of learning.

    Story anchors understanding. Narrative and informational passages ground each lesson in real experience.

    Essential questions spark reflection. Rather than surface-level queries, students wrestle with profound challenges: “How do I stand firm in who I am?” “What does freedom look like in my daily life?” These questions connect historical understanding to personal growth.

    Heart and mind work together. I refuse to separate emotional development from academic achievement. The lesson plans incorporate Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) to engage students emotionally in Garvey’s story and Black history. Students need both intellectual understanding and emotional connection to thrive; therefore, every lesson integrates social-emotional learning with rigorous academic content.

    Creativity completes the circle. Students express their understanding through art, reflection, discussion, and creation. Worksheets serve as a means to learn when needed, but they never become the endpoint.

    Lesson Plans for Educators

    The lesson plans of Teachers Pay Teachers are drawn from decades of educational expertise. My six years as a middle school teacher, combined with thirty years as a professor at Miami Dade College, including thirteen years as chairperson of developmental education, taught me how to create developmentally appropriate materials that meet students where they are.

    As an English teacher, through training and practice, I have developed the ability to use stories and texts to engage students meaningfully and effectively. Twenty years of researching and writing about Marcus Garvey as an author, blogger, and activist have given me a deep understanding of his philosophy and its relevance to today’s students. My blog, Geoffrey Philp’s Blog Spot, which has been in existence for over 25 years, contains extensive posts and insights that inform these lesson plans.

    Each lesson plan reflects this foundation. Drawing on Piaget’s developmental stages, I recognize how kindergarten students learn differently from middle school students. By building effective scaffolding, my materials support student growth at every level. Through applying Bloom’s taxonomy, questions move students from basic recall to critical analysis. Years of reviewing countless syllabi at Miami Dade College and creating my own curricula revealed what makes instruction both educationally and psychologically sound.

    Yet practicality never compromises purpose. Each lesson remains student-centered, focused on reflection and expression. Historical accuracy underpins every activity, drawing on primary sources and rigorous research. Students encounter what happened so they can envision what might become possible.

    Every unit offers:

    • Substitute-ready structure: Clear directions, printable materials, easy implementation
    • Classroom-tested design: Built from six years of middle school teaching and thirty years of college-level instruction, refined through real classroom experience
    • Developmentally appropriate content: Designed with an understanding of how students learn at each grade level
    • Student-centered approach: Focused on reflection, expression, and confidence-building
    • Historical accuracy: Sourced from primary texts, decades of Garvey research, and scholarly foundations

    Your Next Steps

    The Garvey Classroom exists for educators, parents, and advocates who build rather than wait. Those who understand that our future depends on how we teach our past and how we claim our present.

    Begin by sharing these resources with your network. Download a free lesson plan and experience it in your own space. Engage students with the essential questions that spark real growth. Discuss Garvey’s ideas as living wisdom that speaks to today’s challenges.

    Most importantly, use these tools as foundations for something larger. Let them become starting points for growth, clarity, and cultural strength that extends far beyond any single month or designated celebration.

    Our children deserve an education that honors their brilliance throughout the year. The Garvey Classroom helps bring that vision to life.

    Explore the full collection: Visit The Garvey Classroom on TPT.

    Related Resources: Marcus Garvey FAQ Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey

    Coming Soon: Lesson Plans for Standing Firm During Black History Month in the UK

    In the next post, I’ll focus on the specific types of lesson plans we’re offering for Black History Month in the UK. Each one is designed to align with the theme of Standing Firm while honoring developmental needs and cultural context. From early years to secondary classrooms, these resources provide tools for confidence-building, critical thinking, and meaningful reflection.

  • The Garvey Classroom Blog

    The Garvey Classroom Blog

    Welcome to The Garvey Classroom Blog—a space where education meets liberation. Here, you’ll find articles, insights, and culturally grounded resources shaped by the teachings of Marcus Garvey.

    Whether you’re a parent, teacher, or community builder, this blog is designed to affirm Black identity, build confidence, and offer practical tools for learning with purpose.

    You can always return to our main page to explore lesson plans, mindset tools, and Marcus Garvey–inspired classroom resources.

    New Course: The Power of the Mind, Purpose, and Perseverance: https://thegarveyclassroom.com/uncategorized/the-power-of-the-mind-purpose-and-perseverance-the-garvey-blueprint-for-liberation/

  • Why Garvey Still Matters:

    Building Confidence in Black Classrooms

    Confident African American girl raising her hand in a classroom
    A young African American girl raises her hand with confidence in a c

    Marcus Garvey’s educational philosophy offers a roadmap for empowering Black children. This article examines how Garvey’s teachings on confidence and cultural pride can transform learning spaces into environments of pride, confidence, and cultural empowerment.

    Marcus Garvey’s Vision Was Always Educational

    Long before culturally responsive teaching became a buzzword, Marcus Garvey was urging Black people worldwide to uplift themselves through knowledge, discipline, and pride. Garvey didn’t just advocate for schools; he called for an educational revolution.

    In his speeches and writings, Garvey insisted that Black children deserved a curriculum that reflected their greatness, not their erasure. He believed that education was foundational to liberation. As Garvey declared, “Education is the medium by which a people are prepared for the creation of their own civilization.”

    The Problem with Traditional Classrooms

    In too many classrooms today, Black history is still reduced to a chapter in February. Lessons often skim the surface with snippets about Malcolm X, Rosa Parks, and Dr. King without context or continuity.

    Rarely do students engage with primary sources or explore the full sweep of the African diaspora. Instead, they are handed sanitized, standardized narratives that fail to reflect the brilliance and complexity of our heritage.

    What Confidence Looks Like in a Culturally Rooted Curriculum

    The Garvey Classroom was created to counter this. Every lesson, card, and unit is designed to affirm Black identity and build student agency. Take My Name is Marcus, my graphic novel which tells the story of Marcus Garvey from his birth in St. Ann to his epic speech in Nova Scotia, Canada in 1937. Or the Wisdom Cards, one of our resources on Teachers Pay Teachers, which uses direct quotes to spark daily reflection. These tools teach history and confidence.

    A Parent’s Role: Bringing Garvey Home

    This work doesn’t end at the classroom door. Parents play a vital role in affirming their children’s purpose and pride. Even small actions matter. Ask your child what they learned about Garvey this week. Watch a video together. Use a Wisdom Card as a dinner conversation starter. Confidence is cultivated through repeated affirmations, both in school and at home.

    Start Where You Are: Tools You Can Use Today

    You don’t have to wait for the perfect moment or the perfect curriculum. Start now. Use our free Growth Mindset lesson or download the 7-Day Personal Power Workbook. Explore our TikTok videos that bring Garvey’s quotes to life. Visit Liberty Hall’s website for deeper historical context. Every step you take plants a seed of freedom in the next generation.

    Marcus Garvey didn’t just speak of liberation. He built tools for it. So must we. Start with your classroom. Start with your child. Start with the truth.