Title: Social Studies Methods: The Primacy of Primary Sources
1Social Studies Methods The Primacy of Primary
Sources
2- Jeni Venker Weidenbenner, MLIS, MAT, PhD Student
- Email MzWeidster_at_aol.com
- Section web site
- http//inquiry.uiuc.edu/bin/unit_update.cgi?comman
dselectxmlfileu14119.xml - Section room 192 Education
3Pair Share
- How has your own past affected your life today?
- Select 1 of the most significant things that has
changed your life. How would your life have been
different if this event hadnt happened?
4Why study history?
- "The first step in liquidating a people is to
erase its memory. Destroy its books, its culture,
its history, Then have somebody write new books,
manufacture a new culture, invent a new history.
Before long the nation will begin to forget what
it is and what it was. The world around it will
forget even faster." - (Source http//www.tntech.edu/history/whystudy.h
tml Attribution Milan Kundera, The Book of
Laughter and Forgetting )
5What questions will help students connect with
history?
- Fundamental historical questions (NCSS, 1994)
- Who am I?
- What happened in the past?
- How am I connected to those in the past?
- How has the world changed and how might it change
in the future? - How do our personal stories reflect varying
points of view and inform contemporary ideas and
actions?
6What are some teaching strategies that can build
knowledge?
- Field trips
- Guest speakers
- Demonstrations
- Lecture/Teacher presentations
- Games
- Role playing and simulations
- Discussions
- Reading/writing activities
- Social Studies kits
- Media
- Learning centers
- Inquiry
- Discrepant events
7What are primary and secondary sources?
- Primary sources
- Firsthand testimony or direct evidence related to
topic of study - Can be in the form of a document or artifact
- Item could be a primary source in one
investigation but a secondary source in another
- Secondary sources
- Accounts or interpretations based on the use of
primary sources - Textbooks are secondary sources but may contain
facsimiles of photographs, documents, etc. that
are primary sources
8Why use primary sources?
- Beyond the Textbook
- Expose history through multiple perspectives and
interpretations - Personal Touch
- Connect students personally with people from the
past - Point of View
- Help students recognize points of view and
biases, including their own, and analyze/evaluate
interpretations
9What types of primary sources are available for
classroom use?
- Personal records
- Birth certificates
- Social security cards
- Passports
- Diaries
- Photographs
- Report cards
- Letters
- Drawings
- Interviews
- Scrapbooks
- Recipes
- Clothes
- Other types of records
- Medical records
- Government records (e.g. census)
- Newspapers
- Artifacts
- Maps
- Sound recordings
- Motion pictures
- Cartoons
- Posters
- Historical landmarks
10What questions can help evaluate sources?
- Who created the source and why?
- Was it a spontaneous or thoughtful creation?
- Was the creator an eyewitness or a voice for
others? - What biases, prejudices, values, opinions, or
interests may have influenced the creator? - Who was the intended audience?
- Did the author wish to inform or persuade?
- Did the author have reasons to be honest or
dishonest? - Was the information recorded during the event,
immediately afterwards, or after some time had
elapsed? - Can the information be corroborated by another
source?
11What instructional techniques can be used with
primary sources?
- Evaluate the documents ask questions to
determine accuracy and reliability - Translate the documents paraphrase, interpret
- Examine unexpected, interesting, confusing events
- List recurring topics and events look for
patterns - Explore the meaning of peculiar vocabulary words
- Create imaginary sources based on the information
found in real sources - Compare the primary source with the information
and views expressed in the textbook - Compare the primary source with the information
and views expressed in childrens trade books
(fiction and non-fiction)
12What historical thinking skills can be taught
with primary sources?
- Chronological thinking
- Historical comprehension
- Historical analysis and interpretation
- Historical research capabilities
- Historical issues-analysis and decision-making
13What kinds of activities can foster chronological
thinking?
- Creating timelines
- Tracing changes in opinions, activities
- Identifying how current tools or resources that
would have changed the historical persons life
(e.g., George Washington with a cell phone) - Matching dates in the document with timelines
14What kinds of activities can promote historical
comprehension?
- Conducting interviews/obtain oral histories of
modern events - Locating historical places, tracing routes on a
map - Writing narratives of the event from various
perspectives - Citing evidence from the source that reveals a
creators side of a conflict
15What kinds of activities encourage analysis and
interpretation?
- Creating Venn diagrams to illustrate comparisons
and contrasts of ideas, attitudes, behaviors - Constructing a poster persuading people to
support a certain viewpoint - Analyzing how the world would be different today
if an event from the past had not happened or
had ended differently
16What kinds of activities strengthen historical
issues-analysis and decision-making?
- Citing evidence from the sources to support a
particular decision, course of action - Identifying causes of conflicts
- Analyzing difficulties faced
- Assessing the alternatives that historical
figures faced - Identifying reasons for peoples actions
- Analyzing impact of events
17Pair Share
- Think of a primary source that you could use in
whatever content area you expect to teach (i.e.
math, science, language arts, health, etc.).
Brainstorm possibilities for using the source in
a middle school classroom to teach each of the 5
thinking skills in the context of your content
area - Chronological thinking
- Historical comprehension
- Historical analysis and interpretation
- Historical research capabilities
- Historical issues-analysis and decision-making
18Primary Sources Resources
- Using Primary Sources on the Web
- http//www.lib.washington.edu/subject/History/RUSA
/ - U.S. Census Bureau
- http//www.census.gov/
- National Archives and Records Administration
(NARA) - http//www.archives.gov/digital_classroom/index.ht
ml - Library of Congress
- http//www.loc.gov/teachers/
- Smithsonian National Museum of American History
- http//americanhistory.si.edu/educators/index.cfm
- Eyewitness to History
- http//www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/