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Reading Historical Childrens Letters

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Title: Reading Historical Childrens Letters


1
Reading Historical Childrens Letters Using the
SCIM-C Strategy
To view the entire Learning Experience go to
http//www.primarysourcelearning.org/db/LE/display
.php?pOverviewk4305
2
Model ActivityUnderstanding Goal
  • Words have power.

Investigative Question
How might childrens letters influence adult
actions?
3
Introduction
  • Think of a letter that you wrote as a child. What
    was the purpose of the letter and what was the
    outcome or result?
  • Share with a partner your name and your response
    to 1.
  • Brainstorm three positives ()s and three
    negatives (-)s of communicating through letters
    with your partner.

4
Step 1 Choose an interesting letter
5
Write an Investigative Question
  • Use one of the
  • Investigative Questions from the table
  • or create your own Investigative Question
  • to guide your research.

6
Group by color of folder and letter
  • Find the other people with your folder color and
    letter. For example, all blue As sit together,
    all red Cs sit together.
  • 2. Take out the letter on the left side of your
    folder.
  • 3. Locate a SCIM-C analysis tool.
  • 4. Read and analyze the letter using the SCIM-C
    analysis tool working together as a group. Each
    group member should record on their own tool the
    ideas of the small group.

7
This is the SCIM-C Analysis Tool
1. Start here
2. Then work from the center
The phases of the SCIM-C Strategy should be
viewed as a precise, recursive, and thoughtful
approach to historical inquiry. Peter
Doolittle, David Hicks, and Tom Ewing, 2005
8
Use additional resourcesto think about the letter
  • 1. Take out additional resources from folder and
    an analysis table.
  • 2. Arrange additional resources around the
    letter.
  • 3. Make connections between the resources and the
    letters. Use the bibliographic information.
  • 4. Summarize how the additional resources
    challenge or confirmed your thinking about the
    letter and your Investigative Question.

9
Regroup by folder color and number
  • 1. Regroup so that you are sitting with others
    with the same color and same number of folder.
  • 2. Locate the Step 3 Note Taking Chart.
  • 3. Take turns sharing your Investigative
    Question, letter, and current answer to your
    Investigative Question.
  • 4. Take notes during each persons sharing in
  • one of the boxes on the chart.
  • 5. Summarize thinking about everything that you
    have learned to answer the question, How might
    childrens letters influence adult actions?.

10
Post Reading Formal Assessment
  • Create a movie with Primary Access to communicate
    your research findings.
  • Go to www.PrimarySourceLearning.org.
  • Search the Instructional Materials (green folder)
    for the Learning Experience, Childrens Letters.
  • Transfer the resources from the Learning
    Experience to Primary Access.
  • Make a movie that communicates an answer to your
    Investigative Questions and helps the audience to
    recognize how childrens letters influence adult
    behavior.

11
More examples ofSCIM-C Spiraling Questions
12
SCIM-C Spiraling Questions
  • All questions do not need to be answered at each
    stage.
  • Summary Stage 
  • What type of historical document is it? 
  • What specific information or details does the
    document provide? 
  • What is the subject, audience or purpose of the
    document? 
  • What does it directly tell us? 

13
  • Contextualizing Stage 
  • Who produced the document? 
  • When, why, and where was it produced? 
  • Do we need to find out more about its origins to
    answer this question? 
  • What was happening locally, nationally, and
    globally at the time the document was produced? 

14
  • Inferring Stage 
  • What is suggested by the document? 
  • What conclusions can be drawn from the document? 
  • What biases are indicated in the document? 
  • What contextualizing information, while not
    directly evident, may be suggested from the
    document?

15
  • Monitoring Stage 
  • What is missing from the document in terms of
    evidence that is needed to answer a question.
  • What ideas, images, or terms need further
    defining in order to understand the context or
    period in which the source was created? 
  • How reliable is the source? 
  • What questions from previous stages need to be
    revisited in order to analyze the source
    satisfactorily?

16
  • Corroborating stage
  • What other resources could be found that relate
    to this document?
  • How might these resources confirm or conflict
    with this document?
  • What similarities and differences exist between
    sources?
  • What gaps appear to exist that hinder the final
    interpretation of the source?
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