Title: Group: MSH Phil Dowgiert, Chris Lajoie Dennis Kelly
1Group MSHPhil Dowgiert, Chris LajoieDennis
Kelly
Group Project Presentation INT509 Foundations
of Instructional Technology Fall 2005
2Project ThemeDisease as a Weapon in the
Colonization of America
3Order of presenters
- Phil Dowgiert
- Chris Lajoie
- Dennis Kelly
4Overview of Theme
- Europeans introduced new diseases to the New
World in the 16th century. - How could our group (MSH) develop lessons that
were linked under this theme and address areas of
interest in technology (mindtools) that we as
teachers thought would support our lessons in
this project?
5Mindtools
- Phil Hypermedia
- Chris Access
- Dennis Excel
6Members proposed
- Building lessons that reflected our interests.
- Using a specific mindtool to support and enhance
that learning plan.
7Therefore
- We have chosen to present 3 lessons that support
the theme Disease as a Weapon in the
Colonization of America. - These are a NOT a complete treatment of the
theme, but 3 possible ways to address the theme
in what could be regarded as a Thematic UNIT.
8Three approaches and their mindtools
- Phil Research Project Microsoft FrontPage and
the World Wide Web. - Chris Research Project Microsoft Access and
the World Wide Web. - Dennis Research Project Microsoft Excel and
World Wide Web.
9Lesson 1 Phil
- Theories behaviorist, constructivist
- The instruction is designed in 2 phases.
10Phase One
- To first focus student attention on the issues of
disease, migration and societal damage inflicted
by Europeans onto the native American populations
in the 17th century. - The case study of General Jeffery Amherst is used
to illustrate an historical and controversial
example.
11- The general concepts are laid out in an
introductory lecture (teacher-centered
behaviorist) designed to frame the questions and
inform the ensuing exploratory tasks to be
accomplished by the students themselves
(student-centered constructivist). - Students are also tasked with reading chapters 3,
11 and 18 of Jared Diamonds Pulitzer Prize
winning book Guns, Germs and Steel The Fates of
Human Societies. These chapters outline the role
of germs in human societies and the historical
clash of American and Eurasian populations.
12Case Study
- The case of British General Jeffery Amherst is
then introduced and students are tasked to
attempt to answer questions through reading and
analysis.
13Amherst Overview
- Commanding general of British forces in North
America during the final battles of French
Indian war (1754-1763) . - The British were fighting Pontiac's Rebellion.
- Name became tarnished by stories of
smallpox-infected blankets used as germ warfare
against American Indians .
14Amherst
- extirpate them root and branch
- ... it would be happy for the Provinces there
was not an Indian settlement within a thousand
Miles - Some people assert that the infected blankets
were not intentionally distributed to the
Indians, or that Lord Jeff himself is not to
blame for the germ warfare tactic.
15Questions for Research
- What physical and cultural effects did European
diseases have on native American populations
between 1600 and 1675? - Which diseases were introduced that caused
problems for native Americans, when did they
appear in the native populations and which were
most harmful to which Indian populations?
16- Is there evidence in the historical record that
Europeans used disease as a weapon to remove
native Americans from their land in order to gain
possession of it? - Why were these diseases so devastating to native
American populations? What differences in the
biology of Indians and Europeans played a role in
making certain diseases so deadly to Indians and
not Europeans?
17Phase Two
- Students will then be required to formulate a
response through research and analysis to the
question - Is Jeffery Amherst guilty of using germ warfare
in the form of diseased blankets to intentionally
destroy the local Indian populations in conflict
with the British in 1673?
18Students will have to address 3 sub categories of
research
- What role did Amherst play in the destruction of
local populations? - What populations were reputedly devastated by
Amherst? - What biological processes were at work destroying
the Indian populations?
19Students will be required to use
- 3 online sources
- 3 print sources
- MLA writing format
20Goals
- To challenge students to look into the historical
record to determine if Europeans exploited
disease as a weapon. - To engage student with mindtools to analyze
critically the data acquired through research. - To help students draw conclusions about the role
of disease in intercultural contact. - To elicit deeper student interest generated from
the original research. - Help student formulate analytical responses to
the research question.
21Instructional processes
- Initial lecture.
- Reading assignment with questions
- Exam on reading and questions.
- Students divided into 3 working groups, each
assigned a sub category to research. - Oral presentations of group-generated research to
class. - Each group will contribute the result of their
research and analysis to a class Web site. - Web site is to be constructed by students using
Microsoft Frontpage.
22The Web pages will be graded according to the
following rubric
- Sources cited
- Sub categories addressed
- Pages ready on deadline
- Content analyzes the the research question and
draws conclusions supported by cited evidence - Student analysis of historical data is used to
support their position on Amherst
23Instructional materials
- Guns, Germs and Steel the Fates of Human
Societies, Jared Diamond - Student generated Internet Web research resources
- Student generated print resources
- Microsoft FrontPage
- School Internet resources
- School Webserver space
- Microsoft PowerPoint
- Student generated Website
24Formative evaluations
- Reading questions
- Group project analysis using mindtools assigned
- PowerPoint presentations
- Final Web pages
25Summative Evaluation
- Group presentations are coherent and informative
- Sources are cited and presented as evidence of
literature research - Analysis of sources provides basis for
conclusions drawn about Amhersts responsibility
in the diseased blanket episode
26Technology for instruction
- Hypermedia
- World Wide Web
- PowerPoint
27Massachusetts History Curriculum Frameworks and
ISTE technology standards
28A. Massachusetts Social Science and History
Curriculum Frameworks
- Explain how a cause and effect relationship is
different from a sequence or correlation of
events. (H, C, E) - Distinguish between long-term and short-term
cause and effect relationships. (H, G, C, E) - Explain the early relationship of the English
settlers to the indigenous peoples, or Indians,
in North America, including the differing views
on ownership or use of land and the conflicts
between them (e.g., the Pequot and King Philips
Wars in New England). (H, G, E)
29B. ISTE standards
- TL-III.A. Facilitate technology-enhanced
experiences that address content standards and
student technology standards. - TL-III.B. Use technology to support
learner-centered strategies that address the
diverse needs of students. - TL-III.C. Apply technology to demonstrate
students' higher order skills and creativity.
30End of MSH part 1