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Images are visual documents that record history. A picture captures
a moment in time, but can be worth a thousand words to the viewer.
Every image meant something to the person who created it. Learning
how to unlock the meaning of images can provide students with a
broader understanding of events, objects, and people. The American
Memory collections are filled with fascinating photos and prints
that have stories to tell about holidays and traditions. Begin by
having students analyze this New
Year's Day photograph. Study the visual details using the three-step
process – observe, think, and ask. Use these guiding questions
or create your own. Students can use a graphic
organizer to record their observations.
Observe: Have students carefully study the image.
What people or objects can be seen? How are they arranged? Describe
the boys in the photograph. How are they dressed? What are they
doing? What is the expression on their faces? What is the physical
setting? Describe the buildings in the background? What other details
can be seen? Use descriptive terms so that someone who has not seen
the image might visualize it.
Think: Read the caption for clues. When was this photo
taken? Where was it taken? What occasion was being celebrated? Use
these clues to draw upon students' prior knowledge. What do they
already know about the time in which the picture was taken? What
do they know about New York City? Why do they think the photographer
took the photo? Was the photo posed or candid? What might have happened
a minute before this photograph was taken? What might happen a minute
after? Does anything in this image relate to the students' personal
experience?
Ask: After studying the image, reading the caption,
making careful observations, and drawing on prior knowledge, what
questions remain? What would students like to know to help them
better understand the photograph. What resources can help them find
out about New York City in the 1940s? Where is Bleeker Street? Who
was the photographer? How might this photograph been published?
Are there related photographs in the American Memory collections?
What other primary source documents might help them place this photo
into historical context?
Visual analysis becomes easier with practice. Using images can make
history come alive for students. Model this process by analyzing
one image with the entire class. Then divide students into pairs
or small groups to practice this technique on their own. Construct
and use a Primary
Source Toolkit to add authenticity to this activity. Follow
the links on the left for a sampling of holiday-related photographs
and images from the American Memory collections. Search
for more images using specific holiday names, seasons (winter),
people 's names (presidents, Martin Luther King), activities (skating,
skiing, sledding), or related terms.
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