|
Our Changing Voices
Teacher's Guide
These lessons can be amended to focus on any region of the United States.
This project is divided into three lessons. They
may be done individually or as a unit.
Lesson One: Text and Internet Research (2 - 3
days)
Introductory Activity
Begin by asking a variety of questions to assist students in thinking about their own cultural heritage.
- What is the origin of your last name?
- What is your mother's maiden name?
- When did your family come to Nebraska?
- Where did they first settle?
- What were your grandparents' occupations?
Assign students a preliminary family interview.
- Have students interview a parent or grandparent using the Family
Story Assignment from the Learning About Immigration Through
Oral History lesson (AMF 1997) as a guide.
- After the interview, have students share information with one another
and begin to understand their own family journeys.
Background Information
Discuss general facts about immigration to the United States.
- Immigration brainstorm
- What do we know about immigration?
- What are the reasons people come to the United
States?
- Identify these terms and discuss how these
issues affect immigrants:
- quotas
- refugee
- alien
- undesirable
- inclusion
- naturalization
- xenophobia
- emigration
- Laws and immigration waves
- What laws have been passed that have influenced
the flow of immigration?
- What are the areas where immigration laws
have had the most impact?
- Various resources to help you prepare for
discussion include:
Research
- Allow students to choose an ethnic group to research, either based
on their own ethnic heritage or interest level.
- Have students complete the Text and Internet Research
guide.
Lesson Two: Searching American Memory (2 - 3 days)
Background Information
Discuss the Works Progress Administration project which
resulted in the interviews found in American
Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936
- 1940
- What is the brief history of the WPA project?
- Why was the project funded?
- Look at the questions of the interviewers. Why were those questions
important?
- How descriptive were the answers?
- What ideas were supposed to be gathered or taken from these interviews?
Research
Students research and analyze primary sources from American
Memory about selected immigrant groups.
- Pass out the Searching American Memory handout
and review with students.
- Have students complete the handout by researching their selected immigrant
groups chosen in Lesson One.
Resources
Lesson Three: Our Voices (up to 5 days)
Reflecting on Others/Reflecting on Ourselves
Students read and use personal narratives to make connections
between immigration past and immigration present.
- Pass out the Our Voices handout and review
with students.
- Have each student chose a personal narrative from the reading list
on the Our Voices handout or from those found
in your school media center.
- Students read and analyze the personal narratives.
- Next, students look at their own family's immigrant experience.
- Students interview members of their family, preferably from different
generations, using the questions in the Reflecting on Ourselves section
of the Our Voices handout.
Resources
Evaluation
- Final Project: Portfolio/notebook collection
of journals and written assignments based on the readings from American
Memory and books
|