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MLK and the FBI: Civil Rights, Surveillance & the Civil Rights Act of 1964 | Learn English Through American History (B1–B2)
Description
🎧This episode of the Learn English Podcast teaches American English vocabulary through the story of Martin Luther King Jr. in the months after his I Have a Dream speech. English learners at the B1–B2 level will discover how the FBI illegally spied on Dr. King, how the Birmingham church bombing changed the nation, how President Kennedy's assassination threatened the Civil Rights Bill, and how the Civil Rights Act of 1964 finally passed — all explained clearly in natural American English with vocabulary taught in context.
Learning English through American history gives intermediate learners access to some of the most powerful and important stories in the English language. This episode covers essential vocabulary including surveillance, segregation, legislation, filibuster, assassination, eulogy, voter registration, and nonviolent protest — all explained naturally through the story so B1–B2 ESL and EFL learners can build both vocabulary and listening comprehension simultaneously.
This is Part 3 of the Learn English Podcast series on Martin Luther King Jr. Listeners who want the complete story can find Parts 1 and 2 in the podcast feed. This episode is ideal for intermediate English learners who want to improve their listening comprehension, build advanced American English vocabulary, and develop a deeper understanding of American history and culture through natural, context-based learning.
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📝 Vocabulary list:
1) activism: actions taken to create social or political change
2) civil rights: basic rights that protect people from unfair treatment by the government
3) surveillance: the act of watching someone closely, often in secret
4) spy on: to secretly watch or gather information about someone
5) legislation: laws that are created or changed by a government
6) discrimination: unfair treatment of people based on race, gender, or other characteristics
7) eulogy: a speech given to honor someone who has died
8) assassination: the killing of an important political or public figure
9) voter registration: the process of signing up to be allowed to vote
10) intimidation: threats or actions meant to scare people into not acting
11) discredit: to damage someone’s reputation so people stop trusting them
12) anonymous: without a name or identity attached