Answer and Explanation:
The Mississippi Freedom Summer Project of 1964 was project sponsored by civil rights organizations (which included CORE—the Congress on Racial Equality—and SNCC—the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee), black Mississippians, and many white volunteers. The goal of the Mississippi Freedom Summer Project was to increase the number of black voters that could be registered in Mississippi.
The civil rights march from Selma (Alabama) to Montgomery (Alabama) were three marches that organized by nonviolent activists in 1965 in order to highlight the challenges faced by African American voters, and express their interest to participate more in voting. The goal of the civil rights march was to create and raise awareness of the factors affecting black voters in electoral processes, and press for a national Voting Rights Act.
The outcomes of the Freedom Summer Project and civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery had a positive impact on the course of the Civil Rights Movement because they both helped to break down decades of repression and isolation of black voters and civil rights workers. Together, the two events helped lead to the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.