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  • Black Massacres: Untold American History-Why?
    2026/04/23

    "“Avoiding Black massacres fuels campus fragility, deepens division, and blocks the honest dialogue required for real unity and justice, making a mockery of the college mission, vision, and anti‑racism page in courses dealing with race, psychology, education, social work, and other social studies.” Mr. Lucky

    Ask For My PowerPoint: radiotalklr@gmail.com

    Short Lesson Plan: Truth, Fragility, and Historical Accountability

    Lesson Focus:

    How “colorblindness,” fragility, and historical denial prevent unity — using Black Massacres = Today’s Unity as the anchor text.

    Learning Objective 1

    Students will analyze how claims of “colorblindness” function as a form of fragility rather than unity. Example: A student explains how ignoring race on campus erases lived Black experiences and protects the comfort of those who avoid discussing racism.

    Learning Objective 2

    Students will evaluate why confronting historical events such as Black massacres is essential for genuine unity. Example: A student connects a specific massacre (e.g., Tulsa 1921) to modern conversations about racial justice and community healing.

    Learning Outcome 1

    Students will be able to explain why “truth is not divisive” using evidence from historical events. Example: A student states, “Discussing the Colfax Massacre doesn’t divide us — it exposes the roots of inequality so we can address it together.”

    Learning Outcome 2

    Students will compare the ‘stop talking about racism’ mindset to the cancer analogy and articulate why silence is harmful. Example: A student writes, “Ignoring racism is like ignoring cancer — silence allows it to spread.”

    Discussion‑Based Assessment

    Prompt: In small groups, discuss the following: “How does acknowledging painful historical truths create more unity than pretending we are colorblind?” Students must reference:

    • one massacre from the map,
    • the fragility/colorblindness concept, and
    • the cancer analogy.

    The assessment is complete when each student contributes a spoken or written response demonstrating understanding of the lesson’s objectives and outcomes.

    To be a guest on this podcast email: radiotalklr@gmail.com

    Mr. Lucky — Social Studies Teacher, currently completing my second master’s degree in Urban Education

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    12 分
  • BLACK SOCIAL WORKERS: Legacy Built Through Service
    2026/04/30

    Click into the webpage and use one of the codes to redeem my book Relationships: The Power of Illusion. Hurry and claim a code before someone else does. Please do not use more than one code.

    www.iuniverse.com/en/redeem

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    Thesis Statement: Black social workers from 2000–2026 reshaped child welfare, mental health, and justice systems through culturally grounded, equity‑centered practice.

    Learning Objectives (with examples)

    Objective 1: Students will explain how Black social workers influenced child welfare reform. Example: A student describes how Joyce James’ disproportionality model changed CPS decision‑making.

    Objective 2: Students will identify major areas where Black social workers expanded mental health equity. Example: A student explains how Black clinicians increased access to culturally competent therapy during COVID‑19.

    Learning Outcomes (with examples)

    Outcome 1: Students will summarize one policy or practice change led by Black social workers between 2000–2026. Example: A student writes a short paragraph on the rise of kinship care advocacy.

    Outcome 2: Students will connect a modern social issue to a contribution made by Black social workers. Example: A student links school‑based trauma programs to post‑2016 racial justice work.

    5E Learning Model

    Engage

    Show a brief scenario: “A Black family is involved with CPS. What factors should a culturally competent social worker consider?” Students share quick reactions.

    Explore

    Students review short profiles of leaders (e.g., Joyce James, Mit Joyner, NABSW). Small groups identify patterns in their work: equity, cultural grounding, policy reform.

    Explain

    Teacher clarifies key contributions from 2000–2026:

    • Child welfare disproportionality work
    • Mental health equity expansion
    • Reentry and justice reform
    • COVID‑19 community response Students connect these to their earlier observations.

    Elaborate

    Students choose one contribution and apply it to a modern issue (school trauma, policing, mental health access, foster care). They explain how the contribution improves outcomes for Black families.

    Evaluate

    Students complete a short written reflection: “What is one lasting impact Black social workers made between 2000–2026, and why does it matter today?”

    Formative Assessment

    Quick Check (Exit Ticket): Students answer two prompts:

    1. Name one Black social worker or organization and describe their contribution.

    2. Explain how that contribution influences a current social issue.

    This verifies understanding of objectives, outcomes, and application.

    Comments and/or to be a guest call 773-809-8594

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    19 分
  • Black Biologists: Excellence Against Every Barrier
    2026/04/25

    The first 5 people to email will get a copy of my book free.

    radiotalklr@gmail.com

    Black Biologists: Excellence Against Every Barrier

    Lesson Plan: Black Biologists Who Shaped American Science

    Lesson Title

    Black Biologists: Pioneers of Discovery, Excellence, and Scientific Leadership

    Thesis Statement

    Black biologists have shaped the foundations of American science—from cell biology to ecology—despite exclusion from laboratories, universities, and scientific institutions. Their achievements prove that Black excellence is not an exception but a tradition.

    Learning Objectives

    1. Students will identify major contributions of Black biologists across different scientific fields (cell biology, botany, zoology, ecology, neuroscience).

    o Example: Students explain Ernest Everett Just’s breakthroughs in cell fertilization.

    2. Students will analyze how systemic barriers shaped the careers of early Black scientists and how they still achieved excellence.

    o Example: Students compare Roger Arliner Young’s challenges in graduate school with modern STEM barriers.

    Learning Outcomes

    1. Students will create a chronological timeline showing at least five Black biologists and their scientific contributions.

    o Example: Students place Just (1910s), Turner (1920s), Young (1930s), and modern scientists like Angeline Dukes (2020s).

    2. Students will write a short reflection on how one biologist’s journey inspires their own academic or career goals.

    o Example: A student connects Dr. Warren Washington’s climate modeling to their interest in environmental justice.

    5E Learning Model

    Engage

    Show students photos of early 1900s labs and ask: “Who was allowed to do science in these rooms—and who wasn’t?”

    Explore

    Students rotate through stations with short bios of Black biologists and identify each scientist’s field and discovery.

    Explain

    Facilitate a discussion on how these scientists advanced biology despite segregation, underfunding, and exclusion.

    Elaborate

    Students connect each biologist’s work to a modern scientific issue (climate change, genetics, neuroscience, ecology).

    Evaluate

    Students complete a formative assessment (below).

    Assessment Tool (Formative)

    Exit Ticket: Students answer in 3–4 sentences:

    • “Which Black biologist stood out to you and why? How does their work connect to science today?”

    Mr. Lucky — Social Studies Teacher, currently completing my second master’s degree in Urban Education

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    19 分
  • Breaking News: 6,328 Downloads
    2026/04/21

    Click into the webpage and use one of the codes to redeem my book Relationships: The Power of Illusion. Hurry and claim a code before someone else does. Please do not use more than one code.

    www.iuniverse.com/en/redeem

    10600000441446

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    3 分
  • Lies My Teachers Told Me: Blacks American Revolution
    2026/03/10

    See My Book: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/relationships-the-power-of-illusion-lucky/1149325667?ean=9781663277930

    See My Lesson Plan Below

    Comments call: 773-809-8594

    Black Americans: Nothing But the Truth All parents, teachers, and fellow Americans must listen to this episode. Share it with someone—then ask them to share it with someone else. Keep it moving. Keep the truth alive.

    "We were never told the full story about Black Americans and the American Revolution. Pull up images of the Battle of Bunker Hill and Washington’s crossing of the Delaware. Look closely. Find the Black patriots. Learn the truth." Mr. Positive.

    🧭Lesson Plan to Be Used with This Podcast: Reclaiming Black Patriots of the American Revolution

    Presented by the Positive People USA Podcast

    🎯 Learning Objectives (with Examples)

    Students will:

    • Identify and explain the contributions of Black patriots in the Revolutionary War, such as:
      • Wentworth Cheswell, the first Black elected official in U.S. history, who rode north in 1774 to warn of British troop movements.
      • James Armistead Lafayette, a double agent whose intelligence helped secure victory at Yorktown in 1781.
    • Analyze how post-Civil War political forces erased Black contributions from historical narratives, using:
      • David Barton’s claim that Southern Democrats rewrote textbooks between 1870–1890 to support segregation and suppress Black patriotism. "Verbal Presentation."
    • Evaluate primary sources to restore historical truth, including:
      • William Cooper Nell’s 1855 book, The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution, which documents figures like Crispus Attucks and Salem Poor.

    📈 Learning Outcomes

    By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

    • Name and describe at least five Black patriots, including:
      • Peter Salem, who killed British Major Pitcairn at Bunker Hill (June 17, 1775).
      • Phillis Wheatley, who corresponded with George Washington in 1775–76, praising his leadership through poetry.
    • Explain the mechanisms of historical erasure, such as:
      • The removal of Black figures from post-Reconstruction textbooks to justify Jim Crow policies and white supremacy.
    • Create a civic restoration message that reclaims a forgotten legacy, such as:
      • A podcast script honoring Lemuel Haynes, the first Black ordained Protestant minister, who preached liberty and pastored churches in Massachusetts and New York.

    🧪 Assessment

    Formative:

    • Quick write: “Why was Wentworth Cheswell’s election in 1768 historically significant?”
    • Group discussion: Analyze Prince Whipple’s symbolic presence in Washington Crossing the Delaware and its implications for visual legacy.
    • Draw a picture and explain the significance of any part of the podcast that strikes you as important.

    Summative:

    • Civic Restoration Project: Students will produce a mini-podcast script, PSA, or infographic that reclaims one Black patriot’s legacy and critiques the mechanisms of historical erasure.
    • Rubric will assess:
      • Historical accuracy (dates, locations, roles)
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    45 分
  • Practice College Excellence
    2026/04/19

    Order My Book: www.weusoursluckybooks.com

    Lesson Plan: Practicing Black Scholarly Excellence

    Mr. Lucky-Social Studies Teacher

    Thesis Statement: Black Scholarly Excellence is practiced through disciplined habits that strengthen identity, agency, and academic power.

    Learning Objectives (with examples)

    • Students will identify key habits of Black Scholarly Excellence by analyzing the Seven Directives. Example: A student explains how arriving 20 minutes early helps them build rapport with instructors and reduces anxiety before class begins.
    • Students will demonstrate how disciplined behaviors build agency by connecting directives to real situations. Example: A student describes how attending office hours weekly helped them clarify confusing assignments and improve grades.

    Learning Outcomes (with examples)

    • Students will articulate how preparation shapes academic identity, shown through written or verbal responses. Example: A student writes, “Reading before class allows me to lead discussions instead of reacting to them.”
    • Students will apply at least two directives to their own routines, demonstrated through a personal plan. Example: A student commits to rewriting notes within 24 hours and submitting assignments 48 hours early.

    How Students Hold Instructors Accountable

    • Use office hours strategically: Bring specific questions, request clarification, and document responses. Example: “Professor, last week you said the rubric would be updated. Can you confirm when it will be posted?”
    • Request transparency: Ask for clear grading criteria, timelines, and expectations. Example: “Can you show an example of what an ‘excellent’ response looks like for this assignment?”
    • Follow up in writing: Email instructors after conversations to create a record. Example: “Thank you for meeting today. I’m confirming that my revised due date is April 22.”

    5E Learning Model

    Engage

    Students view the Seven Directives poster and respond to: “Which directive would change your academic life the fastest?”

    For the poster email: radiotalklr@gmail.com

    Explore

    Groups analyze short scenarios (e.g., a student who never rewrites notes) and match each scenario with the directive that would improve the outcome.

    Explain

    Students discuss how each directive represents Black Scholarly Excellence—discipline, preparation, and cultural agency. Teacher clarifies how these habits shift academic identity.

    Elaborate

    Students create a two‑directive action plan explaining how each habit will strengthen their academic presence and how they will hold instructors accountable.

    Evaluate (Formative Assessment)

    Students write a one‑paragraph reflection answering: “How will practicing Black Scholarly Excellence change the way I show up and advocate for myself in academic spaces?” Teacher checks for understanding, clarity, and application.

    Comments: radiotalklr@gmail.com or 773-809-8594

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    14 分
  • Thanking: High Schools, Youth Centers, Churches and Other Entities
    2026/04/18

    “As of the date of this episode, we have over four thousand downloads.”

    Order My Book: www.weusoursluckybooks.com

    Lesson Plan: From Classrooms to Community — What I Can Do

    Grade Level: 7–12

    Length: 20–30 minutes

    Theme: Agency, resilience, and self‑determination

    Core Quote: “During struggles, always ask what I can do—never what I can’t do.” — Lucky

    1. Learning Objectives

    Students will be able to:

    • Identify how focusing on “what I can do” builds momentum, confidence, and problem‑solving skills.
    • Apply the “can‑do” mindset to real academic, social, or personal challenges they face.

    2. Learning Outcomes

    By the end of the lesson, students will:

    • Outcome 1: Describe a struggle they’ve experienced and name at least one action they can take to move forward.
      • Example: “I’m behind in math, but I can ask for help after school.”
    • Outcome 2: Demonstrate the ability to reframe negative thinking by turning a “can’t” statement into a “can” statement.
      • Example: “I can’t afford college” becomes “I can explore scholarships, grants, and community programs.”

    3. Mini‑Lesson (Teacher Script – 3 minutes)

    “Struggle is not a sign of weakness. It’s a sign that you’re growing. When challenges hit, most people ask, ‘What can’t I do?’ That question builds walls.

    But when you ask, ‘What can I do?’ you open doors. You activate your power, your creativity, and your next step. This mindset is how students become achievers — in high schools, recreation centers, churches, and every community space that believes in you.”

    4. Activity: “Flip the Script” (10 minutes)

    1. Give students a list of common struggle statements:

    “I can’t pass this class.”

    “I can’t focus.”

    “I can’t see myself in college.”

    “I can’t change my situation.”

    2. Students rewrite each one into a can‑do action:

    “I can ask for tutoring.”

    “I can put my phone away during work time.”

    “I can explore majors that fit me.”

    “I can take one step today.”

    3. Invite 2–3 volunteers to share.

    5. Community Connection (3 minutes)

    Teacher says:

    “High schools, recreation centers, and churches are not just buildings — they are launchpads. They are places where adults invest in you, believe in you, and help you see what you can do. This is why the Metro State Black Student Achievers Podcast exists: to show you real students who chose action over limitation.”

    6. Formative Assessment (Quick Check – 2 minutes)

    Students complete one prompt:

    “One struggle I’m facing is ____. One thing I can do about it is ____.”

    Teacher collects or has students share aloud.

    7. Closing Affirmation (Teacher Reads Aloud)

    “Struggles don’t define you. Your next step does. Ask what you can do — and watch your life move.”

    Contact: 773-809-8594 DO NOT TEXT

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    8 分
  • Not Begging the College for $$ or Anything
    2026/04/16

    Oder my book www.weusoursluckybooks.com

    Lesson Plan: The No‑Handout asking to Validate Black Mindset

    Thesis Statement Excellence requires self‑sufficiency, discipline, and personal responsibility; students who reject dependency and embrace independent effort strengthen their voice, their credibility, and their long‑term success.

    Learning Objectives

    1. Students will explain the concept of a no‑handout mindset Example: A student can describe how self‑funding a project increases ownership and credibility.
    2. Students will identify how freedom of speech protects independent student work Example: A student can point to campus policies that allow student‑run podcasts or organizations to operate without institutional funding.

    Learning Outcomes

    1. Students articulate why independence strengthens academic identity. Example: A student explains how relying on personal discipline rather than external validation builds long‑term confidence.
    2. Students connect historical struggles for free expression to modern student voice. Example: A student references how movements from the American Revolution to the Civil Rights Movement shaped today’s expressive rights.

    Formative Assessment (Research‑Based)

    Quick Reflection Card Students write a 3–4 sentence response to: “How can adopting a no‑handout mindset improve your academic excellence and personal leadership?” Instructor checks for clarity, connection to lesson themes, and evidence of critical thinking.

    To be a guest on the podcast email radiotalklr@gmail.com or call

    773-809-8594

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    7 分