CATCHING FIRE
FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE
A LESSON PLAN FOR HIGH-SCHOOL STUDENTS
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire for Social Justice
HOPE IS STRONGER THAN FEAR
Introduction
The Center for Healthy Teen Relationships, an initiative of the Idaho Coalition Against Sexual Domestic Violence, is
committed to creating Compassionate Communities that empower everyone to thrive and be their best selves by
achieving justice, equity, and respect for all girls and women, boys and men. In that spirit, we ofer the following
lesson plan ideas based on The Hunger Games: Catching Fire.
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is the second in the best-selling series by Suzanne Collins, and a highly-anticipated
movie set for release on November 22, 2013.
Building on both the immense popularity of the Hunger Games triology (outselling the Harry Potter series) and the
frst Hunger Games flm, Catching Fire will be a cultural phenomenon among young people, and a unique opportunity
to engage students in critical conversations about the power of social activism to make a diference in the world.
Movements to challenge injustice can begin when fundamental wrongs are identifed and people organize to
challenge power holders, institutions, and societys norms. A shared passion for promoting new visions of a better
world can transform the way we view our roles in society, our values and priorities, and ultimately the structure of our
society and communities.
The theme of Hunger Games: Catching Fire is two-fold:
1. Encouraging young people to share a vision of hope, and a sense of responsibility for social justice, is critical to our
future societys well-being.
2. Mobilizing youths energy and commitment is essential to achieving a more peaceful world.
The following lesson plans were designed as a jumping-of place for engaging young people in critical conversations
and refections based on these themes. We hope you will be inspired to use them as a means for empowering your
students to see themselves as vital, necessary actors in their communities.
We all face challenges when we commit to justice, equality and hope. Thank you for teaching young people that hope
can conquer fear, and that they have the power to shape their lives and their communities for the better.
Overview of Catching Fire
The Hunger Games series is set in North America after
a long string of natural disasters. Encroaching ocean
tides have changed the face of the continent, and wars
have led to widespread political restructuring. Mexico,
the United States, and Canada have been replaced by
a new country called Panem. The ruling elite of Panem
live luxuriously in the Capitol, a city west of the Rocky
Mountains. Panems other inhabitants struggle to exist
in the Capitols thirteen surrounding districts. Citizens in
Districts 1 through 12 live in service to the Capitol, and
those in District 13 are believed to have been wiped out,
because they rebelled against Panems government.
Life in the districts is focused purely on survival. Each
district has a specifc industry that makes it useful to
the Capitol, and the livelihood of the districts people
depends on their ability to work in that industry. Citizens
have little knowledge of what goes on in neighboring
districts, and cruelly enforced laws ensure their
dependence on the Capitol for food and supplies.
Katniss, the hero of The Hunger Games, is a sixteen-year-
old girl who lives in District 12. In this district, once called
Appalachia and now nicknamed The Seam, coal mining
is the industry; however, Katniss makes her living as an
outlaw. She provides for her family by hunting wild game
outside district boundaries and selling it on the Black
Marketthat is, until shes caught up in the Capitols
most insidious strategy for terrorizing the districts.
Every year, the Capitol forces districts to participate in
a televised event called The Hunger Games. The Games
commemorate the Dark Days, a period of rebellion that
ended with the destruction of District 13. They celebrate
the Capitols complete control over the districts, and
they continue a punishment that has been passed down
for seventy-four years. Each district must provide two
tributes, one boy and one girl, to fght to the death in
an arena match. Out of twenty-four tributes, only one
survives.
Tributes for the Hunger Games are determined through a
drawing of names, called The Reaping. Katniss becomes
a tribute by volunteering; she takes her sisters place after
her sisters name is drawn. Katniss competes in the Games
alongside Peeta, the male tribute from her district. The
two become the frst joint victors in the Games, when a
concocted budding romance between them captures the
hearts of some viewers in the Capitol. Katniss and Peeta
make a suicide pact, so they wont have to fght each
other, and Game organizers are forced to declare them
both winners to avoid audience disapproval.
Catching Fire picks up where The Hunger Games left of.
Katniss victory in the arena has made her a celebrity,
but this carries a tremendous weight. In Catching Fire,
Katniss and Peeta return to the Capitol as victors, and
are subjected to participation in a victory tour of
Panem. President Snow visits Katniss in District 12 after
her victory and threatens her with the consequences
of inciting further rebellion. Once home, Katniss also
encounters two runaways from District 8 who tell her of
other rebellions and their belief that District 13, thought
to have been demolished, still exists. With the upcoming
Hunger Games being the 75th anniversary of the original
Hunger Games, it is then announced that previous victors
will be forced to re-compete, an event known as the
Quarter Quell. Once again in the arena, Katniss and Peeta
soon realize that specifc dangers are triggered each hour.
They form an alliance with other past victors and decide
to create a trap to eliminate two contenders, using the
electricity from the arenas force feld. Katniss directs the
lightning rod, and the shock of the blast knocks her out.
When she awakens, she is on her way to District 13. It is
then revealed to her that there was a plan among most
of the tributes to break out of the arena. They succeeded
in escaping, but Peeta was captured by the Capitol. Gale,
Katnisss best friend from District 12, tells her that, in
retaliation, District 12 was bombed and destroyed but her
family escaped.
Catching Fire and Social Justice
In Catching Fire, we get a deeper understanding of the
ways of the Capitol and how important it is to the leaders
of Panem to ensure no uprisings and rebellions. We learn
about the lengths to which President Snow is willing to
go, changing the rules of the Hunger Games and instilling
fear into the hearts of the citizens of the districts as he
goes, in order to protect his position of power. In this
book, we also witness an awakening: Katniss learns that
CATCHING FIRE FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE:
A LESSON PLAN FOR HIGH-SCHOOL STUDENTS
she is the symbol of brewing revolution. She must come
to terms with what this means, and whether and how
she can protect her family and friends. Ultimately, the
novel is about Katniss deepening her understanding
of responsibility to her community and country as she
embarks on a journey to do the right thing.
Through a discussion of Catching Fires characters, plot,
and setting, high-school students will identify diferences
between just and unjust societies. The overall goal of
this lesson is to teach students to think about social
justice and human rights, and the social structures that
either protect or continue to foster inequality within our
societies.
Encourage young people to speak their mind about
unjust acts and acknowledge that while speaking up
may feel risky, the large majority of what they feel, do,
or say is settling and motivational. Katniss realized that
the Hunger Games were inhumane and by being herself
and engaging in meaningful and challenging tasks, she
realized that she was not alone and that other people
feel that same way about the Capitol. The citizens of the
districts needed someone to validate their feelings about
the oppressive government and someone to model
behavior in response to the oppression. Let students
know that our perspectives and views on the world are
socially and culturally constructed.
Using methods that encourage students to compare
and contrast our society to Panem, and to question
and discuss issues of power and violence, students will
ultimately be asked to consider what they can do to
create more equity and justice.
Learning Objectives
Develop an understanding of social justice and
institutional power.
Understand concepts of human rights, civil rights, and
political resistance.
Identify aspects of social injustice and oppression issues
at play in Catching Fire.
Consider aspects of social injustice and oppression in
our society.
Learn about eforts to address injustice in our society.
Strengthen analytical, and critical thinking, and literacy
skills.
Materials Needed (for all activities)
Flip Chart and Markers (Activities 1 and 2)
APPENDIX A - Social Justice Terms and Defnitions (For
instructor use.)
APPENDIX B - Key Social Justice Themes (For instructor
use.)
APPENDIX C Catch Fire: Social Justice in YOUR World
(Handout)
APPENDIX D Bibliography and Additional Resources
(For instructor use.)
APPENDIX E Evaluation (For instructor use.)
Estimated Time
Activity #1- Social Justice in Panem --- 30 min
Activity #2- Social Justice in the US --- 30 min
Optional Activity #3 and #4- Research Activity as a
supplement to Activities #1 and #2. --- Overnight
homework assignment, or 1-hour research assignment,
with access to the Internet or art supplies
Common Core State Standards
9
th
12
th
Grade
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RH.9-10.2Determine the central ideas
or information of a primary or secondary source; provide
an accurate summary of how key events or ideas develop
over the course of the text.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RH.9-10.4Determine the meaning of
words and phrases as they are used in a text, including
vocabulary describing political, social, or economic
aspects of history/social science.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.9-10.4/11-12.4: Produce clear and
coherent writing in which the development, organization,
and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.9-10.5/11-12.5: Develop and
strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising,
editing, rewriting, or trying a new approach, focusing on
addressing what is most signifcant for a specifc purpose
and audience.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.11-12.3 Write narratives to develop
real or imagined experiences or events using efective
technique, well-chosen details, and well-structured event
sequences.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.11-12.4Produce clear and coherent
writing in which the development, organization, and style
are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.11-12.5Develop and strengthen
writing as needed by planning, revising, editing,
rewriting, or trying a new approach, focusing on
addressing what is most signifcant for a specifc purpose
and audience.
LESSON PLAN ACTIVITIES
Activity #1 Social Justice in Panem
Using commonly recognized characters and plot lines
from Catching Fire, students will be able to identify social
justice themes, and begin to relate those themes to their
own lives and communities. Ask the following questions:
1. What is happening in Panem when the book or movie
starts? Why does President Snow come to Katniss house
at the beginning of the book or movie to intimidate her?
Key Points: He comes to her house to scare her, and
let her know that if she continues to challenge the
Capitol, he will kill her family and loved ones. He does
this because Katniss refusal to play by the rules at the
end of the frst book (threatening to eat the poisonous
berries, denying the Capitol a victor) has incited
uprisings in the districts. Knowing that she is a symbol
of resistance in the Districts and a beacon of hope, he
does not want Katniss example to fuel further unrest.
2. Why are the district residents of Panem rising up
against the Capitol? What are their lives like?
Key Points: Steer the discussion toward the concept
of rights. The residents of Panem lack some basic
rights, including the right to free speech, the right to
move from place to place, the right to work where
and how they chose, to be free from violence, etc.
They are oppressed and exploited by the Capitol to
produce things in their districts, and their lives are
closely controlled by the Capitol the Hunger Games
are a perfect example of their lack of control the
consequences of refusing to follow the Capitols rules
are severe and violent.
Discuss the signifcance of hunger in the books. Why
the series is title the The Hunger Games? Why is the
second in the series called Catching Fire? Why is that
important?
What are the lives of the citizens of the district like?
What rights do people have? What does oppression (the
mistreatment or exploitation) demonstrated by Panem
as the dominant group in society over the citizens of the
districts look like, feel like and sound like? List the student
responses on a piece of paper and post on the wall.
Draw out the following concepts: 1. Hunger; 2. Ordinary
district citizens versus capitol elites, and 3. Use of
Violence. These themes will re-emerge in Activity 2.
See APPENDIX B for quotes and discussion points from
the text, which demonstrate these issues. With more time,
these can serve as discussion starters with the students
broken into small groups.
3. How are violence and threats used to oppress the
people of Panem?
4. What do you think social justice means? How would
you describe a socially just society? Write their answers to
each question on fip-chart paper, and post on the wall.
Key Points: There is not one correct answer to this, but
here is a working defnition: Social justice is justice
exercised within a society. A socially just society values
human rights, as well as recognizing the dignity of
every human being. Social justice is the view that
everyone deserves equal economic, political and social
rights and opportunities.
Activity #2- Social Justice in the United States
Having discussed the fctional country of Panem, the
students will begin to be comfortable questioning and
discussing concepts of oppression and social justice. In
this activity, they will begin to understand how these
concepts apply to their lives and their communities. See
APPENDIX B for some points. Post a blank piece of fip-
chart paper next to the one about Panem and write their
answers to the following questions:
1. Take a look at the list (responses to question 2 above)
of conditions in Panem. Are there similar problems in our
own society? What examples of injustice or oppression
do you see in our world?
2. What are examples of social justice in your life and
community?
3. When/Why/How does Katniss recognize her role in
achieving social justice for her family and country?
4. What do people do to address social justice issues
like hunger, economic injustice and violence in our
communities today? Can you describe any activities you
or your family has been involved in to promote social
justice? Think about activities at school, place of worship,
or in your community.
Optional Activity #3 Catch Fire: Social Justice in
YOUR World
This activity asks students to research issues relating
to power and privilege, and how these issues impact
peoples lives in their neighborhoods, communities,
and region. They can report back to their peers on
political rulings that have impacted human rights locally,
nationally and abroad. This activity provides students an
opportunity to identify groups of people living under
conditions of injustice or oppression and to explore the
impact of that on their safety, health, and well-being.
Give the students APPENDIX C and ask them to fll it out
and be prepared to share their fndings with the rest of
the group.
Optional Activity #4 Catching Fire: Symbols of Social
Justice Movements
Students who are creative and like an artistic challenge
can research symbols of other social justice causes
like the Mockingjay image of the pin Katniss wore that
became a symbol for the rebellion or the hand gesture as
part of the rebellion in Catching Fire.
Ask students to discuss or write about the role of images
in social justice movements. Students can also design a
symbol for the social justice movement they most want
to make a diference in.
Closure to Lesson
Suzanne Collinss Catching Fire illustrates issues of
oppression and injustice afecting young people
in a fctional country. This lesson plan provides an
opportunity for students to understand oppression and
how violence and threats are used to control people in
an unjust society. By identifying examples of injustice
and oppression and of social justice initiatives in their
own communities, students become more aware and
motivated to create a more just and equitable society. For
more resources, please see APPENDIX D.
For more information, contact the Center for Healthy
Teen Relationships, an initiative of the Idaho Coalition
Against Sexual & Domestic Violence contact kelly@
engagingvoices.org or
[email protected].
Thank you to Eesha Pandit, MA, for developing the
Catching Fire for Social Justice lesson plan and to Barri
Rosenbluth, LCSW, Expect Respect Program Director, Safe
Place, Patrick Brady, MA, and Josie Fretwell, MA and the
Idaho Coalition teen interns for their guidance.
For more information on the Idaho Coalition Against
Sexual & Domestic Violence or the Center for Healthy
Teen Relationships go to www.engagingvoices.org.
This document was developed under grant numbers 2012-WR-AX-0009 and 2011-TA-AX-K055 from the Ofce on Violence Against Women of the U.S. Department of Justice.
The opinions and views expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the ofcial position or policies of the Ofce on Violence Against Women, U.S. Department of Justice.
Idaho
Coalition
Against Sexual &
Domestic Violence
Engaging Voices, Creating Change
APPENDIX A
Social Justice Working Terms and Defnitions for
Instructor
Dominant/Privileged/Agent group: Members that are
granted benefts or social rewards (e.g., money, status,
fame) that provide them with the power to create and
shape social norms that separate them from other
disadvantaged groups. Individuals that are in dominant/
privileged groups are often granted these benefts either
through birth or acquisition and either knowingly or
unknowingly exploit their privilege over less fortunate
groups.
Empowerment: an interactive process that encourages,
motivates, and inspires individuals to take action and
become involved in making a diference about an issue
they defne as important.
Features of Oppression: Oppression occurs when
members of the dominant group use their privilege to
exercise power, control, and authority to mistreat or
exploit less dominant groups or individuals.
Pervasiveness: Oppression exists throughout our
environment and continues to foster social inequalities
based of of personal biases, bigotry, and social
prejudice.
Restricting: Oppression places severe restrictions on a
person or groups abilities or opportunities to succeed
and create equality with dominate groups.
Hierarchical: Oppression occurs when dominant groups
utilize their privilege to beneft, often unknowingly, to
further separate themselves from the less fortunate/
dominant groups
Complex, multiple, cross-cutting relationships:
Power and privilege are relative and group
memberships vary, often resulting in experiences of
privilege or disadvantage in diferent contexts. For
example, a female African American executive of
an organization may experience the benefts of the
status and economic success, but still may experience
disadvantage by not experiencing the same outcomes
of a white, male executive.
Internalized: Oppressive beliefs are internalized by
victims as well as benefactors. Because oppression is
so pervasive, individuals in both dominant and less
fortunate groups internalize the inequality as the norm.
The oppressor doesnt have to exert any more pressure,
because we now do it to ourselves and each other.
Divide and conquer works.
Social Group memberships: Individuals identify
themselves as someone who belongs to a certain group
(either dominant or target group), as a result of shared
beliefs or values. identity based groups that one belongs
to that may be a part of the dominant or the target group.
Social Justice: Describes the view that everyone
deserves equal economic, political, and social rights and
opportunism to ensure that all members are physically
and psychologically safe and secure.
Social Power: Access to resources that enhance ones
chances of getting what one needs or infuencing others
in order to lead a safe, productive, fulflling life.
Subordinated/Targeted group: less fortunate groups
that are exploited and victimized in a variety of ways by
the oppressor and the oppressors system or institutions.
APPENDIX B
Catching Fire for Social Justice
Key Social Justice Themes
Hunger
The overabundance of food and peoples wastefulness
are especially clear in Catching Fire in which it is revealed
that citizens of the Capitol drink a liquid that makes
them throw up, efectively emptying their bellies, so
that they can continue to gorge on delicacies provided
at a feast. As Katniss witnesses this spectacle, she thinks,
all I can think of is the emaciated bodies of the children
on our kitchen table as my mother prescribes what
the parents cant give. More food (p. 80). The irony of
starving children lying on the kitchen table, a place
associated with bounty and reserved for meals, is not lost
on the reader and adds to the horror of the image while
magnifying the wastefulness of the Capitol.
Suzanne Collins revealed in an interview, the
sociopolitical overtones of The Hunger Games were very
intentionally created to characterize current and past
world events, including the use of hunger as a weapon
to control populations (Blasingame & Collins, 2009, p.
726). If we look at patterns of wastefulness in the United
States, we are more closely associated with the Capitol,
the bad guys, than with the districts. According to the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (2012), in 2010
approximately 34 million tons of food was thrown away.
According to the Food and Agriculture Organization
(2000), 792 million people worldwide, and 20% of the
population in developing countries, sufer from chronic
food defcits. In 2004, Timothy Jones, an anthropologist,
concluded a 10-year study that showed that an average
individual U.S. household wastes 14% of food purchases
(William Reed Business Media, Nov. 25, 2004), supporting
our nickname as the throw-away generation. The
USDA reports that more than one in fve children in the
United States are living in a food insecure household or a
household where the members are unable to consistently
access the adequate amount of nutritious food necessary
for a healthy life. Households with children experience
food insecurity at signifcantly higher rates than the
population. This is seen in the most recent report from
USDA regarding food insecurity which showed that
20% of households with children are characterized as
food insecure versus less than 15% of all households
(Coleman-Jensen et al. 2011).
Involuntary Labor and Economic Injustice
After Gale is found hunting in the woods to supplement
his poor wages, he is brutally whipped for the crime. This
brutality keeps the population dependent on the mines
for its sole means of survival.
Brutality is further highlighted when Katniss meets two
runaways from District 8 named Bonnie and Twill. Katniss
describes District 8 as a place stinking of industrial
fumes, the people housed in run-down tenements (p.
142). Bonnie and Twill tell Katniss of the uprising in their
district, giving an account of how citizens were required
to work in factories, make goods for the Capitol, and
live in squalor. When the workers rebelled, there was
a lockdown. No food, no coal, everyone forbidden to
leave their homes. The only time the television showed
anything but static was when suspected instigators
were hanged in the square. Then one night, as the whole
district was on the brink of starvation, came the order to
return to business as usual. (p. 145)
In real life, the situation is similar for many victims. The
International Labor Organization (as cited by the U.S.
Department of State, 2006) reported that at least 12.3
million people around the world are trapped in various
forms of forced labor, from sweatshops to farm work.
Approximately $20 billion in wages is stolen from these
workers, leaving them in debt bondage or poverty.
More than16 million childrenin the United States
23% of all children live in families with incomes below
thefederal poverty level $23,550 a year for a family of
four
1
. Research shows that, on average, families need an
income of about twice that level to cover basic expenses
2
.
Using this standard, 45% of children live inlow-income
families.
Violence
Forcing children into violent situations that require them
to kill or be killed is the major theme of The Hunger
Games series. As punishment for the districts rebellion to
the Capitols rule, the Capitol created the Hunger Games
to remind the districts of its power. Katniss describes the
games in this way:
Taking the kids from our districts, forcing them to kill
one another while we watchthis is the Capitols way of
reminding us how totally we are at their mercy. How little
chance we would stand of surviving another rebellion.
Whatever words they use, the real message is clear. Look
how we take your children and sacrifce them and theres
__________________________________________________________________
1 Annie E. Casey Foundation. (2013). Kids Count Data Book. Baltimore: MD. Retrieved from http://datacenter.kidscount.org/fles/2013KIDSCOUNTDataBook.pdf
2 Addy, S., Engelhardt, W. & Skinner, C. (2013). Basic facts about low-income children: Children under 18 years, 2011. National Center for Children in Poverty.
Retrieved from http://www.nccp.org/publications/pub_1074.html.
nothing you can do. If you lift a fnger, we will destroy
every last one of you. (The Hunger Games, p.76)
In Catching Fire, Annie, Finnicks wife and a former tribute,
illustrates the lasting emotional, mental, and social efects
of witnessing and participating in violence. Because she
saw the beheading of District 4s male tribute she cannot
stand arguing, loud noises, or any talk that references
violence or the Hunger Games. Her tragic past experience
has debilitated her capacity to function in a normal
community. Annies response is not unusual for anyone
who is exposed to violence from children and young
people to adults who are exposed to domestic violence
or are in abusive relationships or sexually assaulted to
have a response like post-traumatic stress disorder or
experience other harmful efects.
As demonstrated by many of the victors, who turn to
alcohol and drug abuse (Haymitch and the morphlings),
its clear that their experience as tributes in the Hunger
Games left them aficted with emotional scars that will
be prevalent throughout their adult lives. Witnessing
the impact of the games on the tributes impacts life
throughout the districts and ultimately sown the seeds of
fear in the hearts of many.
In real life, at some time during adolescence, most youth
will have their frst dating or intimate relationship and
some will have many, learning and experimenting with
new roles of boyfriend and girlfriend. Of these, nearly
1 in 10 will experience physical violence from a dating
partner and 1 in 12 will be forced to have sex against
their will.
3
Even more pervasive is digital abuse, with
41% of youth experiencing some form of hurtful or
controlling behavior online, through social media outlets
and electronic text.
4
The consequences of victimization
can be serious and long term. Teens that experience
dating violence are at increased risk for substance abuse,
depression, poor school performance, suicidal ideation,
risky sexual behavior, and future victimization.
5
More recently, a November 2011 report from the U.S.
Department of Justice and the Centers for Disease
Control found that 1 in 5 women and nearly 1 in 7 men
who experienced rape, physical violence, and/or stalking
by an intimate partner, frst experienced some form of
violence between 11 and 17 years of age (2011, p. 49).
Almost half of all female victims who have been raped
experienced their frst rape before age 18 (30% between
11 and 17) (CDC, 2011).
__________________________________________________________________
3 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, MMWR/June 8, 2012/ Vol. 61/ No. 4
4 Associated Press and MTV. 2011. AP-MTV Digital Abuse Study. Available at http://www.athinline.org
5 Exner-Cortens D, Eckenrode J, Rothman E. 2013. Longitudinal Associations Between Dating Violence Victimization and Adverse Childhood Experiences.
Pediatrics. 131(1):71-78. Banyard VL, Cross C. 2008. Consequences of Teen Dating Violence: Understanding Intervening Variables in Ecological Context. Violence
Against Women. 14:998-1013, Silverman, J, Raj A, et al. 2001. Dating Violence Against Adolescent Girls and Associated Substance Use, Unhealthy Weight Control,
Sexual Risk Behavior, Pregnancy, and Suicidality. JAMA. 286:572-579. Available at http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/reprint/286/5/572
APPENDIX C
Catch Fire: Social Justice in YOUR World
Now, its time to take what you learned about social justice and apply it to your life and community. Answer the
following questions and be prepared to share your fndings with the group.
Social Justice Issue:
Choose one of the social justice issues discussed in
the class. Choose one that you are most interested
in learning more about (i.e. hunger, poverty, and
violence).
Provide a detailed description of the issue youve
chosen.
1. Who does it afect?
2. Where does it happen?
3. Why is it a problem?
Research your issue:
What are some organizations working on this issue
around the country? Look up their websites and list
3-4 organizations.
1.
2.
3.
4.
What do they do? Describe their work:
Are there any organizations in your town/city working
on this issue?
List them here:
Refection - Answer each of the following prompts:
This makes me think .
This makes me feel .
I feel this way because.
Action Plan:
Think about ideas you have that would make a diference in your school or community If you were to create an action
plan to implement your ideas, who would you contact? What would you do?
What kinds of things have other people done to help bring about change?
List three things I can do to address this problem? Brainstorm some ideas: