Team "C" has chosen to create an assessment and a strategy plan that is culturally competent on the character of Walter Lee Younger, from the play "A Raisin in the Sun," by Lorraine Hansberry. Along with the theatrical presentation, the drama has been adapted twice for film. The goal of our team is to prepare a plan that will "help" the fictional Walter Lee Younger, with his social and psychological needs as well as encourage a sense of acceptance. Assessment Walter Lee Younger is an African American male in his early to mid-30’s. He has been married to Ruth for 11 years, and has a son, Travis, who is approximately 10 years old. The Younger family lives on the South side of Chicago, Illinois. Mr. Younger shares an apartment with his wife, his son, his mother, Lena, and his sister, Beneatha; his father, Walter, passed away almost a year ago. The apartment the Younger family lives in has 2 bedrooms, a small kitchen, and a small living room. Two floors of apartments in their building share one community bathroom. Walter is employed as a chauffeur for a white man, a job that makes him feel like a trained monkey (Hansberry, (1959) 2007). This job contributes to his feelings of inadequacy. He yearns for employment where he can make enough money to support his family, and where he can feel a sense of pride. Walter has feelings of bitterness, depression, and anger. He feels oppressed, and believes everyone is trying to keep him from achieving his dream of owning a business. When it seems his dreams will never come true, he becomes very somber and withdrawn, and begins drinking. With a portion of the insurance money, Walter’s mother bought the family a house in a better part of Chicago, which happens to be an all-white neighborhood. His mother gives him the opportunity to be the man of the family when gives him the remaining money from his father’s insurance settlement. Walter feels good that his mother trusts him and wants him to be i