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Native Americans of Ohio

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Title: Native Americans of Ohio


1
Native Americans of Ohio
  • Meredith Broyles
  • ED 417-02

2
Native Americans of Ohio
  • First Grade
  • Experience the culture of Native Americans
  • Storytelling
  • Housing
  • Food
  • Instruments
  • Dance

3
Objectives
  • Students will
  • Gain an understanding of the native people of
    Ohio through literature and discussion
  • Listen to Native American legends and illustrate
    or write their own legend
  • Gain an understanding of the various Ohio Native
    American houses, how they were constructed, the
    materials used as well as create a replica of a
    home
  • Learn how Native Americans obtained food, learn
    about the Three Sisters as well as sample the
    vegetables
  • Discover the significance of music and
    instruments in Native American culture as well as
    create their own gourd rattles
  • Discover the significance of dance in Native
    American Culture, observe Native American dancing
    ceremonies today, and practice dancing to the
    beat of a drum and expressing themselves through
    movement

4
Overview of Ohio Native Americans
  • Timeline Native people lived in Ohio for more
    than 12,000 years.
  • Paleo-Indians lived in Ohio from 13,000 to 7,000
    BC
  • Archaic 8,000 to 500 BC
  • Adena 800 BC to 100 AD.
  • Hopewell 100 BC to 400 AD
  • Woodland 800 BC and 1200 AD
  • Whittlesey and Sandusky (or the late Prehistoric
    peoples) 1000 AD to 1650 AD.
  • Native Americans in Ohio after 1650 AD are known
    as Historic Native people.

5
Overview Continued
  • Between 1650 and 1700, the Iroquois drove out the
    native descendants of the prehistoric Native
    Americans. Following the end of this conflict,
    known as the Beaver Wars, six major groups moved
    into Ohio the Delaware, Miami, Mingo, Ottawa,
    Shawnee, and Wyandot.

6
Overview Continued
Nation Language Location Famous Leader
Delaware Algonquian eastern Ohio White Eyes, Netawatwees
Miami Algonquian western Ohio Little Turtle
Mingo Iroquois eastern, central Ohio Logan
Ottawa Algonquian northern Ohio Pontiac
Shawnee Algonquian southern Ohio Tecumseh, Blue Jacket
Wyandot Iroquois northern Ohio Tarhe
7
Ohios Native People in the 1600-1700s
8
Glyphs
9
Materials
  • Chart paper, markers
  • Nonfiction Literature about Ohio Native Americans
  • Paper bags
  • Native American legends
  • Cooked corn, squash (diced), beans (pole)
  • Paper plates, napkins, forks
  • Small ornamental "spoon" gourds (dried)
  • Paint and brushes
  • Brown clay
  • Construction paper
  • Natural materials (collected by students)
  • Video footage of Native American dance
  • Native American music
  • Drum

10
Introduction
  • Create a K-W-L chart to see what students know
    about Native Americans. Be sure to debunk any
    stereotypes or myths students present during your
    lesson (visit Oyate.org for accurate and
    appropriate books to use with children and a list
    of books to avoid).
  • Introduce nonfiction texts to students about
    Native Americans of Ohio and begin discussing the
    various tribes. Create a chart to keep track of
    your findings (housing, jewelry, customs,
    dancing, songs, story-telling, etc.)
  • Suggested Reading Ohio Native Peoples by Marcia
    Schonberg, Heinemann Library 2003

11
Storytelling
  • Some Native American stories were simply told for
    enjoyment
  • Others told the history of the nation or
    explained their spiritual beliefs, laws, and
    moral beliefs
  • Still, while other stories explained where the
    Native person fit in Creation
  • Children were told stories to teach them rules of
    their society. An example of a story can be
    found at http//www.pbs4549.org/onestate/lp3race
    .htm
  • Bear's Race With Turtle (name
    calling/cleverness)
  • Many stories showed the People's respect for the
    earth. Symbolism was often used. Animals and
    other natural elements were used as characters in
    the stories.

12
Activity 1 Storytelling
  • Read Bear's Race With Turtle or any Native
    American legend of your choosing
  • Discuss the meaning behind the story, what you
    can learn from it
  • Have the students make their own illustrations to
    help them retell their assigned legend and draw
    those onto a piece of brown paper torn to
    resemble a hide. You can display the glyphs
    from the beginning of the presentation as
    inspiration. Share the hides with the class.
  • For advanced writers, have those students develop
    and write their own legend using animals as the
    main characters

13
Housing
  • How Native people built their houses was
    dependent upon the materials they had at hand and
    the weather in which they had to survive.
  • Earliest Native Ohioans- nomads warm weather-
    temporary shelters winter- rock shelters
  • Adena- circular houses (vertical posts in the
    ground, woody materials woven between to make
    walls)
  • Hopewell- square or rectangular houses (arched
    roof made with bark and thatch)
  • Fort Ancient- rectangular houses (wattle and
    daub, made by weaving vines and boughs together
    and packed with mud, made the walls roofs,
    probably thatched)
  • Whittlesey- round houses like the Wigwam
  •  

14
Housing Continued
  • Historic Native Ohioans built many different
    types of houses. The type of house depended on
    the Native nation to which they belonged. Many
    nations had a central large house (Big House)
    for councils and ceremonies.
  • Shawnee- large villages of bark-covered houses
    and plank houses with a central gathering place,
    or a Big House, for meetings and ceremonies
  • Miami- long house with arched roof made of
    saplings and covered with rush or cattail mats
  • Ottawa- Summer lived in domed, bark covered
    homes Fall harvest small hunting camps
  • Wyandotte- long house villages surrounded by
    stockades
  • Mingo- assembled from natural materials
  • Delaware- three types of wigwams round with a
    domed roof, oblong with an arched roof, or oblong
    with a center pole In later years- log cabins

15
Activity 2 Housing
  • Discuss and display pictures of a variety of
    Native American houses. Talk about the materials
    they used and why they constructed the houses in
    the way that they did. Compare the homes with
    the students own houses.
  • Have each student select a tribes house to
    replicate collect natural materials from
    outside grass, sticks, bark, etc.
  • Provide students with a mat (construction paper)
    to construct their house on, brown modeling clay
    (mud), and the materials gathered outside
  • Have the students label (tribe and type of house)
    and display the houses

16
Three Sisters
  • Not only were Native Americans hunters, but also
    farmers. Once they settled in an area, they
    would begin to farm the land for food.
  • Corn, beans and squash are known as the Three
    Sisters because these three crops are often
    grown together. This practice is called
    "companion planting" and has been practiced by
    Native Americans for centuries.
  • The Three Sisters all help one another grow.
    Animals will find it harder to invade the garden
    by interplanting corn, beans, and squash. The
    corn stalk serves as a pole for the beans, the
    beans help to add the nitrogen to the soil that
    the corn needs, and the squash provides a ground
    cover of shade that helps the soil retain
    moisture.

17
Activity 3 Three Sisters
  • Three Sisters Feast
  • Students will sample the three sisters corn,
    squash, and beans (pole)
  • Discuss the significance of farming to the Native
    Americans and compare it to how the students
    receive food discuss the three sisters and why
    they were planted together
  • Create a graph displaying students favorite
    sister

18
Instruments
  • Music was used to accompany dance, to teach
    lessons to children, to make the work day more
    enjoyable, to engage in courtship (dating) and to
    have fun.
  • Some Native American musical instruments are
    still in use today drums, pan pipes, rattles,
    flutes, whistles and bells.
  • The drum was and is still considered to be
    sacred. The instrument is representative of the
    earth. It is said to be the heart beat of
    Mother Earth.
  • The drum is to be played in a two-beat style
    (heart beat), not the "Hollywood" version
    (DA-da-da-da, DA, da, da, da).
  • Drums were never given to children as a toy.

19
Activity 4 Instruments
  • Creating instruments drying and painting of
    gourds to make rattles with small ornamental
    "spoon" gourds
  • For drying instructions visit http//www.pbs4549.
    org/onestate/herroncg.htm
  • Drying must be done prior to painting display
    Native American art, instruments, and
    glyphs/symbols as inspiration for decorating

20
Dance
  • Dance was used for many purposes ceremonial,
    social, the meeting of young people, and the
    commemoration of special occasions in a tribes
    history.
  • Songs and dances served as a way to perform or
    display thanks, to socialize and to tell about
    amazing feats of heroics.
  • Traditional dances the Bread Dance and the Green
    Corn Dance- celebrate agriculture and harvest

21
Activity 5 Dance
  • Brainstorm with the students a list of reasons
    why we sing, make music, and dance today
  • Discuss the purpose of dance and the various
    dance styles
  • Listen to traditional music and watch segments of
    young Native Americans dancing at
    http//www.pbs4549.org/onestate/videoseg.htm
  • Discuss the movements they saw, the sounds they
    heard (the beat of the drum)
  • Have the students practice dancing to the beat of
    a drum. They can shake their painted rattles as
    well.

22
Wrap-up
  • Conclude the lesson by revisiting the K-W-L
    chart the students created at the beginning of
    the lesson
  • Add new learning and make changes to any
    misconceptions or stereotyping
  • Make connections and comparisons between with
    their own lives and cultures and those of the
    Native Americans

23
Websites
  • One State Many Nations Native Americans of
    Ohio offers a vast amount of information about
    the Ohio tribes and their culture. Videos,
    activities, and historical information
  • http//www.pbs4549.org/onestate/index.htm
  • NativeTech Native American Technology and Art
    Planting a Three Sisters Garden information
    about the three sisters crops how to plant your
    own garden
  • http//www.nativetech.org/cornhusk/threesist
    ers.html
  • Oyate- website devoted to ensuring that Native
    American life and culture is portrayed honestly
    offers book lists and stereotyping to avoid a
    great resource for any teacher
  • http//www.oyate.org/
  • Powwow Dance Styles pictures and descriptions of
    dance styles
  • http//library.thinkquest.org/3081/styles.ht
    m
  • Native Americans. COM descriptions and pictures
    of native housing
  • http//www.nativeamericans.com/Wigwams.htm
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