Doing the Decades: Group Investigations
in Twentieth Century U. S. History
William R. Fernekes and Harlene Rosenberg
This unit provides a flexible investigative
structure for the study of selected themes in U.S. history and culture using the American Memory collections and related resources. Core goals are the development of relationships between selected themes and resources, refinement of student skills in interpretation, analysis, and evaluation of primary sources, and the creation of multimedia projects drawing upon different modes of expression.
Objectives |
Through participation in this unit, students will:
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demonstrate an understanding of patterns of change and continuity in the history
of the United States;
- identify the unique qualities of different types of primary sources;
- interpret, analyze, and evaluate primary and secondary sources related to core historical themes and topics;
- create questions for investigation related to core historical themes and specific time periods;
- develop original conclusions which illustrate connections between core historical themes and topics; and
- refine writing and presentation skills using oral and visual communication tools and techniques.
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Time Required |
This unit is a long-term investigation. Students should receive an introduction to the unit early in the course, pursue completion of project components throughout the course, and share final projects with peers and the teacher towards the end of the course. A Sample Project Timeline provides a guideline for adaptation to individual school settings. |
Recommended Grade Level | Grades 9-12 (adaptable for middle school or higher education) |
Curriculum Fit |
This unit can be used in U. S. history, social studies, American studies, integrated language arts/social studies, anthropology, or sociology. |
Standards |
McREL 4th Edition Standards & Benchmarks
Historical Understanding
Standard 1. Understands and knows how to analyze chronological relationships and patterns
Standard 2. Understands the historical perspective
Language Arts
Standard 4. Gathers and uses information for research purposes
Standard 7. Uses reading skills and strategies to understand and interpret a variety of informational texts
Standard 9. Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media |
Resources Used |
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American Memory collections
- Electronic New Jersey Project
- Clark, Judith Freeman. America's Gilded Age. New York: Facts On
File, 1992.
- Dodds, John Wendell. Everyday Life in Twentieth Century America. New York: Putnam, 1966.
- Great Artists of the Western World. London: Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 1988.
- Katz, William Loren. From the Progressive Era to the Great Depression,
1900-1929. New York: Watts, 1974.
- Link, Arthur Stanley. The Progressive Era and the First World War, 1900-1920.
4th edition. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, distributed by Random House, 1973. 973.91 LIN
- McCutcheon, Marc. The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in the 1800s. Cincinnati Ohio: Writer's Digest Books, 1993.
- Schlereth, Thomas J. Victorian America. New York: HarperCollins, 1991.
- Shifflett, Crandall A. Victorian America, 1876 to 1913. New York: Facts on File, 1996.
- Time-Life Books. This Fabulous Century. New York: Time-Life Books, 1969-70.
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Materials
See Sample Project Timeline for an overview and links to handouts associated with each phase of the project.
Procedure
Week One:
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Introduce the course-length project focus by posing the Essential Question, which frames the investigation:
What patterns of change affected the lives of individuals and groups in the United States between 1890 and 1941?
Tell students that they will be engaging in an intensive study of the Essential Question for the balance of the course, using a wide
variety of resources, posing important questions about specific historical themes, and examining selected topics related to those themes.
- Distribute Core Historical Themes and Topics, which will form the framework for the development of connections between major patterns of historical change and continuity and student projects. Using selected secondary sources (i. e., course textbook, videotapes, other resources), examine aspects of Core Historical Themes during 1890-1941. This broad overview will provide students with a context for their investigation.
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Form student teams for the investigation. Assign no more than 6 students to a group, with each student examining a minimum of one theme within the focus of the Essential Question. Each group will address all six themes within one decade from 1890 to 1941. Either assign a decade to each group or allow students to choose their decade.
Once students have chosen their focus theme(s), emphasize that the final project must provide an answer to the Essential Question by demonstrating understanding of how each theme was represented in the daily life of people from their assigned/chosen decade. In the final project presentation, individual students will demonstrate understanding by developing a biography for a person from the decade assigned/chosen and give their portion of the group's presentation with this persona.
- Use Brief Guide to the Library of Congress
to acquaint students with the Library's on line resources.
- Demonstrate the identification, analysis, and evaluation of selected primary sources within the American Memory collections. Photographs from Touring Turn-of-the-Century America, 1880-1920 provide good examples of detail-rich images, with bibliographic information, and additional subject headings for additional research. Use other media formats such as documents, maps, and audio recordings. Motion pictures downloaded ahead of time can also be demonstrated.
- Students then select a primary source item and complete the worksheet, Using Primary Sources: What Can They Reveal to Us about the Past? Individual students or small groups can complete this worksheet, and then share findings in small and large group discussions.
NOTE: This activity will facilitate an introduction to search strategies using
the American Memory collections for all students. See Search Help for background information.
Week Two:
- Return to the American Memory collections. Student teams should investigate the collections with the purpose of developing a series of Questions for Investigation about their core historical theme. For example: Students working with Theme 2 (What were the processes and consequences of migration for the peopling of the United States?) might identify three questions. One question might be, "Who migrated to the United States during {my assigned/chosen decade} and where did they settle?"
If students are developing questions that do not seem to be central to the theme, the teacher should provide
some questions and help students refine their own.
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As students locate sources in American Memory, the teacher should monitor source identification, analysis, and evaluation, providing feedback on the relevance and meaning of sources. Once students are engaged in
the selection process, introduce Core Topics of Core Historical Themes and Topics. Tell students that this list contains topics that MUST be represented in the selection of sources for their theme(s). Not all Core
Topics will be addressed by all students; but all Topics must be addressed by each group. A minimum number per student should be determined by the teacher so that students can focus their source selection process efficiently.
Week Three:
- Once students have demonstrated success in identifying relevant, meaningful sources for their themes, and the teacher has provided feedback to help them build a portfolio of useful sources linked to their Core Historical Themes and Topics, the groups should identify the project format or its Mode of Expression.
- Distribute Project Details, which describes general requirements, the project schedule, and evaluation. Also distribute the relevant Mode of Expression Project Requirements for:
- Students develop a work plan for their project.
- From Concept to Completion will help students define and assign responsibility for products that comprise their project.
- Group Process Timeline assists in time management of the development of the final project, with appropriate "checkpoints" for teacher review of student progress.
At this point, facilitate exchange of ideas between individuals within groups and among different groups about:
- how project development is proceeding,
- sources that appear useful for various projects, and
- problem-solving at different stages of project development.
Week Four
Students continue to acquire sources and begin to map how they will construct relationships between the sources and their Core Theme(s) and Questions for Investigation and their Core Topic(s)
Week Five
Students develop a Preliminary Bibliography for their projects. Project-specific storyboards, outlines, or other structural frameworks for the final project are done in first draft form.
Week Six
Students review/critique first drafts of final projects of class members using a Peer Review Form. The teacher also critiques project first drafts. Students assume historical roles in preparation for their group presentations and develop a Historical Biography.
Group findings can be shared in various ways: class discussion, small groups using a jigsaw technique, or via email.
Week Seven
Final preparation for project presentations takes place. Each group devises a Strategy for Sharing their findings related to the Essential Question.
Week Eight
Group presentations occur. Students complete Making Sense of What We've Studied as they view and interact with each presentation. Peer critiques and teacher evaluations (see Oral Presentation Evaluation) are done. Groups revise projects prior to public display (optional).
Week Nine
Teacher conducts summative evaluation (see Assessment Rubric) of the class based on project findings concerning the Essential Question. Student Project Evaluations are gathered and discussed. Recommendations for improvement of the project are developed and shared with students.
Evaluation and Extension
Evaluation in this unit is both diagnostic and summative.
Diagnostic evaluation is ongoing, encompassing assessment of:
- Using Primary Sources: What Can They Reveal to Us about the Past?;
- Student work products as they build their portfolios of sources (each related to a specific Mode
of Expression);
- Teacher
and Peer Review of project first drafts;
- Discussion contributions in small and large group settings; and
- Processes used to build final projects (again, related to the specific requirements for particular Modes of Expression used by students).
See Project Details for project requirements, a schedule of work products and due dates, and point values for the work products.
Summative evaluation can use an Assessment Rubric
of the group project, which should have both individual and group accountability components.
Sharing strategies to help all students in the class demonstrate understanding of the key ideas from each group project is critical. For example:
- Have each group create a series of 5 questions about their final project focused on key ideas that other students must answer while examining the group's work.
- Have each group create an abstract of their key ideas that the teacher could use as the basis for exam questions.
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