Why does Audrey’s mother ask civil rights supporters in the North to send clothes and toys to Birmingham in We’ve Got a Job?
Which excerpt from We’ve Got a Job expresses the author’s viewpoint about segregation in Birmingham?
Read this excerpt from We’ve Got a Job.What they cooked up was a scheme to intensify pressure on the city by increasing both the number of demonstrations and the number of demonstrators. While watching one of these events, Audrey saw an incident that shocked her. "I was standing on the steps of the Sixteenth Street [Baptist] Church, watching an elderly black man walking in the park across the street with other people, two-by-two," she remembered. "A policeman allowed a dog to attack that man—[just] because he was walking. It was unbelievable."At that moment, nine-year-old Audrey made a decision. She would no longer just attend meetings. Somehow, she would act on her own.What makes Audrey decide to “act on her own”?
Read this excerpt from We’ve Got a Job."I want to go to jail," Audrey had told her mother.Which best describes the point(s) of view used in this excerpt?
Read this excerpt from We’ve Got a Job.The Hendricks family abided by the campaign and didn't buy new clothes or toys for months. Instead, when Audrey's mother traveled up north to ask white people who supported civil rights to donate money to ACMHR, she also asked them to send toys and clothes for poor black families in Birmingham for Christmas. By mid-December that year, games, puzzles, train sets, dolls, and stuffed animals filled Audrey's living room.Which of Mrs. Hendricks’s character traits is best highlighted in this excerpt?
Read this excerpt from We’ve Got a Job.No one would have blamed Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks if they had decided to keep quiet about civil rights following the bombing of their friend's home. But Audrey's parents weren't intimidated. The very next day, her father and about fifteen other blacks sat down in the front section of a bus, where only whites were permitted. When the driver demanded they move to the back, Audrey's father politely refused, saying "We [are] comfortable where we are sitting." As a result, Mr. Hendricks was arrested and spent six nights in jail. When he was released, he volunteered to guard the Shuttlesworths’ home.Why do Mr. Hendricks and others sit in a section of the bus where they are not permitted?
Read this excerpt from We’ve Got a Job.Despite such dangers, ACMHR held mass meetings every Monday night in churches around town. And every Monday night from June 1956 to April 1963, Audrey attended with her family and as many as six hundred other people.Which point of view is used in this excerpt?
Why does Audrey’s third-grade teacher become emotional when Audrey tells her of her plans to march in We’ve Got a Job?
Read this excerpt from We’ve Got a Job.On Thursday morning, May 2, 1963, nine-year-old Audrey Faye Hendricks woke up with freedom on her mind. But, before she could be free, there was something important she had to do.Which point(s) of view does this excerpt use?
Which excerpt from We’ve Got a Job best expresses Audrey’s point of view on civil rights activism?
Did you find these answers helpful?