the

cultural awareness

project

learning to see

beyond the surface

through

context, history, & impact

Welcome

Welcome to the American frontier of cultural awareness education, where we redefine historical learning for the modern generation. Blending a curriculum approach with primary historical sources builds visionary learning methodologies to unlock previously hidden true history for every participant in the project.

The Cultural Awareness Project explores real histories, lived experiences, and systems that have deeply affected individuals and communities. Some lessons include emotionally challenging themes such as racial injustice, displacement, and cultural erasure. We encourage learners to engage with care, take breaks when needed. Younger learners are encouraged to seek support from a trusted adult or educator. Viewer discretion is advised.

background & relevance

Certain contemporary behaviors can unintentionally echo painful chapters of the past. One reoccurring trend that has recently resurfaced is what sparked this project.

participating in the project

Anyone can participate. Younger learners will benefit from adult guidance.

All parts of the Cultural Awareness Project are important to complete by each participant. The project may be completed individually, in pairs, or as a group.

We all grow up hearing pieces of the story about who we are and how our communities came to be, but most of the bigger picture is left out. The Cultural Awareness Project was created to make that story clear, simple, and easy to follow for anyone ready to learn more. Each lesson is steady, honest, and built to help you understand things in a way that feels real and respectful. Begin with Module 1 and move through the project at your own pace.

Module preview

and

learner outcomes

  • Participants will:

    • Identify what blackface is and describe why it still appears today.

    • Explain the difference between intent and impact in culturally sensitive actions.

    • Recognize early examples of blackface and their role in shaping public perception.

    • Describe how humor, pranks, and caricature can reinforce harmful stereotypes.

    • Explore the emergence of blackface in the 19th century, examining how it became a dominant cultural force and how it shaped public perception of dark‑complected people.

  • Participants will:

    • Explain how laws, policies, and social structures created racial categories and hierarchies.

    • Describe how colorism, segregation, and discriminatory practices shaped social norms.

    • Connect historical policies (e.g., Dawes Act, Racial Integrity Act, Naturalization Act) to long-term cultural outcomes.

    • Analyze how systemic forces made blackface culturally acceptable and widely normalized.

  • Participants will:

    • Summarize key historical events that illustrate the consequences of racial caricature and dehumanization.

    • Explain how blackface contributed to violence, displacement, and cultural erasure.

    • Identify patterns across massacres, redlining, sundown towns, and economic sabotage.

    • Describe how media, entertainment, and policy reinforced racial narratives.

  • Participants will:

    • Recognize the contributions of significant historical and contemporary figures across time.

    • Explain how individuals and communities resisted oppression and built new cultural foundations.

    • Analyze how innovation, creativity, and resilience countered the narratives created by blackface.

    • Connect individual stories to broader historical patterns.

  • Participants will:

    • Examine how historical figures were visually, linguistically, and culturally “whitened” to reinforce racial hierarchy.

    • Analyze primary sources to understand how selective storytelling shapes public memory.

    • Identify patterns in how power influences representation across art, literature, and national mythology.

    • Reflect on how whitewashing distorts identity, erases complexity, and reshapes cultural understanding.

    • Connect whitewashing to earlier modules on minstrelsy, systems, and historical events to see the full continuum of narrative control.

  • Participants will:

    • Apply everything learned across Modules 1–5 to conduct independent research, analysis, and reflection.

    • Explore contemporary and historical accounts of racial caricature, violence, and resistance through articles, documentaries, and first‑hand narratives.

    • Identify modern examples of blackface and analyze their ongoing cultural impact.

    • Examine how blackface contributed to economic sabotage, cultural erasure, stereotypes, psychological conditioning, and justification for destruction.

    • Learn a new term: racial flattening.

    • Recognize patterns of racial flattening, reclassification, and silence in the records across multiple biographies.

    • Reflect on how historical knowledge intersects with personal experience, community memory, and present‑day social dynamics.

    • Synthesize their learning into a cohesive understanding of how blackface shaped, and continues to shape, American society.

  • Participants will:

    • Identify the system behind the patterns observed in Module 6, including racial flattening and the disappearance of Indigenous and mixed ancestry.

    • Examine how racial categories were engineered as administrative tools rather than reflections of lived identity.

    • Analyze how the one‑drop rule and blood quantum functioned as opposite but complementary systems of control.

    • Understand why the historical record looks simple even when identity was complex.

    • Develop the cultural awareness needed to reinterpret historical documents with context, history, and impact in mind.

  • Participants will:

    • Practice applying cultural awareness to real‑world scenarios, relationships, and professional contexts.

    • Reconstruct identity narratives using the tools of context, history, and impact.

    • Learn how to recognize and avoid oversimplification, stereotyping, and misinterpretation.

    • Explore how cultural awareness supports respectful engagement across differences.

    • Identify personal commitments, habits, or practices they will carry forward to sustain cultural awareness as an ongoing skill.

  • Participants will:

    • Remove a key social privilege, like a phone, gaming console, activity, or access to social media, for a specific time period of community service.

    • Choose at least 2 non-profit organizations.

    • Volunteer weekly to experience cultural awareness, support racial justice, and serving a diverse community.

    • Reflect on the experience, connecting the volunteer work to the importance of respecting all members of a community.

  • Participants will:

    • Lead an open and honest discussion on what they have learned about cultural awareness

    • Present the findings from research and the community service experience.

    • Use thought-provoking questions and statements to invite the family or group to discuss how they can collectively be more mindful of their language and actions, support one another in calling out racism and discrimination, and actively promote a more inclusive and respectful environment.

  • Participants will:

    • Wrap up the project with feedback from the experience of completing it.

    • Evaluate their course experience.

    • Recommend improvements to the project.

Praise from recent participants

I have never learned the story told this way before, and it is eye-opening. Wow!
— SD from Winston-Salem, North Carolina
This project earned my angry upvote. I can’t believe I never knew this growing up. I tell everybody about it now whenever a related topic comes up, especially around major holidays.
— TW from Raleigh, North Carolina
The Cultural Awareness Project should be in schools. Period.
— ST from Richmond, Virginia

FAQs

  • While some links do not require any account sign up to view content, others need a free account. Some books may be borrowed online to view the content. Please sign up at archive.org.

  • Yes. Partnering with a fellow participant or researching as a group is encouraged. If this project is completed as a joint or group effort, each participant must individually cover all parts and topics in their submission. However, each topic’s details may be different for each participant. Discussion as a group is encouraged to ensure that each participant covers different aspects of each topic point.

  • While we definitely enjoy our superachievers who sail through and complete the written part of the project in less than 30 days, general feedback from participants indicates an average completion time range of 6-12 months to achieve all parts of the project, including the volunteering and presentation modules, based on achieving 3-5 lessons weekly.

    Here’s how it breaks down:

    For the written modules, participants indicated an average time frame of 3-6 months (at 2-3 lessons per week).

    For the presentation module, participants indicated that they are usually able to schedule and complete this in an average of 1-2 weeks.

    For the volunteering modules, participants indicated an average completion time frame of 8-12 weeks (at about 4-6 hours per week).

  • Please contact our research team, and we will assist you.

  • No. It’s bigger than Black History. It’s about understanding the world our families moved through so the stories we already know finally make sense.