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WWW Lesson Plans

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Title: WWW Lesson Plans


1
WWW Lesson Plans
  • American Heritage Melissa Schreck
  • People in Societies

2
American heritage objectives
  • The student will listen to and reconstruct the
    chronology of an historical narrative.
  • The student will differentiate broad categories
    of historical time.
  • The student will explore placing events on a time
    line.
  • The student will raise questions about the past.
  • These objectives are in accordance with the Ohio
    Model for a Competency-Based Program in Social
    Studies.

3
American heritage
  • Web Pages
  • Library of Congress American Memory
    http//memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpedu/lesson.html
  • Social Studies Site-Teacher Resources
    http//www.ncss.org/resources/
  • History Network-American Westhttp//www.fortunecit
    y.com/victorian/goya/1060/
  • Historical Text Archivehttp//www.geocities.com/At
    hens/Forum/9061/USA/usa.html
  • Yahoo- U.S. Historyhttp//dir.yahoo.com/Arts/Human
    ities/History/U_S__History/
  • Library of Congress
  • http//Lcweb2.loc.gov/learn

4
American Heritage
  • Educational Web Adventures
  • http//www.eduweb.com/adventure.html
  • Teaching With Historic Places
  • http//www.cr.nps.gov/nr/twhp/
  • Discovery Channel School-U.S. Historyhttp//school
    .discovery.com/schoolsearch/results/g1ralls13.html
  • Chinese Americans-Lunar Calendarhttp//ericir.syr.
    edu/Projects/CHCP/calendar.html

5
            Home
6
American heritage lesson plans
  • History FirsthandPrimary Source Research in
    Elementary School Cory Brandt and Monica
    Edinger
  • History Firsthand has been designed to provide
    elementary children with experiences which enable
    them to begin understanding primary sources.
    Students move from personal artifacts to the vast
    American Memory collections and learn how
    archival collections are organized, how to
    interpret artifacts and documents, how to use
    primary sources to tell a real story and how to
    do on-line research.
  • -from the Library of Congress, American Memory
    page

7
American heritage lesson plans
  • Teacher Resource Site
  • A RIVER LOST, a book about The Colville Tribe in
    Washington State has won the 1996 BUMBERSHOOT
    (Seattle's Art Festival) AWARD FOR BEST
    CHILDREN'S PUBLICATION. The story is a historical
    fiction about The Arrow Lake Band of The Colville
    Tribe, and the effect the building of Grand
    Coulee Dam had on them by obliterating their
    river, salmon, towns, and culture. The book is
    beautifully illustrated with culturally accurate
    paintings by tribal member, V. Smoker Marchand. A
    RIVER LOST has been well received by educators
    and fits into curriculums teaching History,
    Native Americans, Environmental Studies, or
    Multi-Cultural Themes. To complete the lesson
    plan, the students will read the story, locate
    the river on a map, and form discussion groups
    about the fate of this tribe.

8
American heritage lesson plans
  • History Network-The American West
  • The occasion marking the transfer of Upper
    Louisiana from Spanish authority to French to the
    United States has been known as "Three Flags
    Day". Actually this took place during a two day
    period, March 9th and 10th 1804. Since St. Louis'
    population at that time was primarily French
    extraction, the French flag, was allowed to fly
    for one day prior to the transfer to the United
    States. Originally the area was first owned by
    France, then came under Spanish rule prior to
    1770, when the Spanish Lt. Governor, Pedro
    Piernas first arrived. Students will read about
    the Louisiana Purchase and Three Flags Day. We
    will eat some cajun-style food, and talk about
    the culture of Louisiana. Then we will create the
    flags that were flown.  

9
American Heritage lesson plans
  • Historical Text Archive
  • Through this site, students will access LycosZone
    for kids to search for information concerning
    African-American leaders who were instrumental in
    our countrys development.

10
American heritage lesson plans
  • The "First Thanksgiving" Facts and Fancies
  • The event we now know as "the First Thanksgiving"
    was in fact neither the first occurrence of our
    modern American holiday, nor was it even a
    'Thanksgiving" in the eyes of the Pilgrims who
    celebrated it. It was instead a traditional
    English harvest celebration to which the
    colonists invited Massasoit, the most important
    sachem among the Wamapanoag. It was only in the
    nineteenth century that this event became
    identified with the American Thanksgiving
    holiday. The students can search for more
    information on Thanksgiving, plan a Thanksgiving
    meal, and dress in colonial-style clothing.

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12
American heritage lesson plans
  • Sample Sources tombstones Primary
  • Write an obituary for a person memorialized on an
    old tombstone. Use information from the epitaph
    and research about the era in which the person
    lived. Research the meaning of stone carvings
    that appear on the tombstone. Study epidemic
    illnesses or other circumstances the might
    explain common causes of death at the time.

13
American heritage lesson plans
  • Gold Fever! Seattle Outfits the Klondike Gold
    Rush (55)
  • Examine how the discovery of gold in the Canada's
    remote Klondike region touched off the last great
    gold rush, creating an economic boom that changed
    the city of Seattle forever

14
American heritage lesson plans
  • The Real American Cowboy
  • What sort of person was the cowboy? A maverick
    loner, a man who was his own boss, the John Wayne
    figure of the movies? Real cowboys were nothing
    like their Hollywood counterparts. Often black,
    Hispanic, even female, the cowboy led a rough and
    lonely life, often left to himself on the
    American plains and responsible for large herds
    of cattle. Yet the cowboy remains an enduringly
    mythical figure to people around the world.
    Students will look up websites about cowboys and
    write a short paragraph with an illustration
    about the information they receive.

15
American heritage lesson plans
  • Avoiding the Dreaded Smallpox
  • A smallpox epidemic has erupted in
    eighteenth-century Virginia. Can you protect your
    family from this dreaded disease? Developed for
    Colonial Williamsburg's Electronic Field Trip
    program. Students may view this site as a class
    to find out more about this electronic field
    trip.

16
American heritage lesson plans
  • The Chinese Lunar Calendar is a yearly calendar
    like the western calendar, except that the start
    of the lunar year is based on the cycles of the
    moon. Thus the beginning of the year can fall
    anywhere between late January and the middle of
    February. Western cultures date the years from
    the birth of Jesus Christ (For example, 1994
    means 1,994 years after the birth of Christ), and
    thus approach the progression of years from a
    linear point of view. In traditional China,
    dating methods were cyclical, meaning that the
    years repeat according to a pattern. The
    repetition is in increments of twelve years. The
    children will compare our traditional calendar to
    that of this culture to further understand the
    heritage of Asian-Americans.

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18
People in societies objectives
  • The student will recognize that citizens of the
    United States today can trace their origins.
  • The student will identify various groups to which
    the learner belongs.
  • The student will recognize that members of the
    community are affected by changes in the
    community that occur over time.
  • These objectives are in accordance with the Ohio
    Model Competency-Based Program for Social Studies.

19
People in societiesWeb site lessons
  • http//www.towson.edu/coe/ssmd/GEOGK3-1.htmgeogk3
    1top
  • Geography K-3rd Students will demonstrate an
    understanding of geographic concepts and
    processes as needed to examine the role of
    culture, technology, and the environment in the
    location and distribution of human activities.
  • http//ofcn.org/cyber.serv/academy/ace/soc/cecsst/
    cecsst058.html
  • PURPOSE This lesson will encourage students to
    use the higher level thinking skills and will
    help them learn to better cooperate with their
    peers. It will also help students develop a
    respect for cultures different from their own
  • gopher//bvsd.k12.co.us/00/Educational_Resources/L
    esson_Plans/Big20Sky/social_studies/CECsst.3909
    092B

20
People in societiesweb sites lessons
  • FAMOUS PERSON -- WHO AM I?
  • PURPOSE The purpose of this activity is to
    review various historical personalities studied.
  • http//pbscyberschool.org/teach/lesson81_1.html
  • This can be used to teach students the skills
    they need to know for travel. It also teaches the
    students tolerance by fostering their knowledge
    and understanding of another country's culture
    and customs.

21
People in societiesweb sites lessons
  • http//pbscyberschool.org/teach/lesson50_1.html
  • This lesson can be used to teach the five themes
    of geography
  • 1. Location
  • 2. Description of place
  • 3. Human-environment interaction
  • 4. Movement
  • 5. Regions
  • http//educate.si.edu/resources/lessons/siyc/eskim
    o/page01.html
  • Identify materials used in several traditional
    cultural objects.
  • Interpret possible functions of several
    traditional cultural objects.
  • Bering Sea Eskimo People

22
People in societiesweb sites and lessons
  • http//www.lessonplanspage.com/SS23.htm
  • After a lesson about Amish Communities, students
    will write a paragraph describing similarities
    and differences between the two communities
  • http//ofcn.org/cyber.serv/academy/ace/soc/cecsst/
    cecsst058.html
  • This lesson will encourage students to use the
    higher level thinking skills and will help them
    learn to better cooperate with their peers. It
    will also help students develop a respect for
    cultures different from their own.
  • http//www.indiana.edu/japan/japan/mdnjapan/LS22.
    html
  • Students will develop a design for their own
    family crest. Students will then make a large
    model crest for their family.

23
People in societiesweb sites lessons
  • http//www.eduplace.com/cgi-bin/searcher
  • Children will identify specific characteristics
    of their own neighborhood and share the
    information with their classmates. This activity
    will enable children to see that other
    neighborhoods can be different from their own,
    but also similar in many ways.

24
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