At the end of this week-long
project you will be able to:
- analyze historical images;
- create an original argument using primary
sources;
- pose historical questions after analyzing
and reflecting on primary sources;
- employ search strategies to obtain primary
historical data from targeted collections of sources;
- put in historical context the developments
of race and ethnicity in America;
- practice cooperative decision making and discussion
skills; and
- demonstrate proper bibliographic citation
of electronic resources.
Lesson Procedure
Introduction
- Watch a few baseball video clips chosen by
your teacher. Note that the players are from different backgrounds and
social classes. As you watch the clips, write down your observations
and comments. Discuss your observations with your classmates.
- Get ready to use observation, analysis, and
evaluation of primary sources to learn more about race and ethnicity
in America.
- Before you begin, view the rubrics on Evaluation
of Discussion and Evaluation of Final
Product to see how the assignment will be evaluated.
- Review these primary document images of baseball
in the nineteenth century.
- Share your observations about these images
with a partner. Try to answer the following questions:
- What do you see?
- What do you these primary sources tell
you about baseball in early America?
- What do the sources tell you about U.S.
culture in the late eighteenth and early nineteeth century? Why?
Research
- Your group will be assigned one of the following
time periods: 1860-1879, 1880-1899, 1900-1919, 1920-1939, 1940-1959.
As a group, investigate your time period. By examining sources about
baseball, you are trying to capture U.S. ideas regarding race and ethnicity
during your assigned time period.
- You may investigate sources
from these American Memory collections:
- Searching
Hints. Use these resources to help you search for
images and documents:
- In noting information about
each primary source you examine, consider the following questions for
each type of source:
- From the American Memory collections,
each group member is to find two sources for the assigned time period:
one visual image and one textual document that characterizes
or captures American's idea of race and ethnicity during your time period.
Therefore, at the end of your research, each group will be reviewing
their collection of images and documents.
Roundtable Discussion
- Assign these roles to group members:
| Researcher
|
Discussion
Leader |
Recorder
|
- You must identify and explain important
events, people, and patterns during this time period.
- You may reference your notes, your
text, or American Memory collections.
- Ultimately, your job is to set
the historical context for the discussion.
|
- You must keep
the discussion on track and focused.
- You must ensure
that all members' ideas are shared.
- Remember that you are trying to
characterize or capture the developments regarding race
and ethnicity in America during this time period.
|
- You must take notes and try to
capture the group's discussion.
- Focus on why
group members selected the sources that best represent the
changes or challenges of race and ethnicity during your
time period.
- Include comments
from each member including yourself.
|
Note: All members
are responsible for contributing to the discussion. You will
be asked to evaluate the quality of this discussion using the criteria
in Evaluation of Discussion.
- Examine the primary sources
(images and documents) selected by your group. List ideas from the sources
that provide insight on how they reflect American attitudes regarding
race.
- Decide which one
image and one textual document best
capture your era.
Final Product
Based on one image and one document
that best represent the development of race and ethnicity during
your assigned time period, complete the final newspaper page:
- Create a "newspaper" column or editorial
that makes an argument that tries to characterize the tensions, challenges,
changes, or reforms regarding race and ethnicity during that period
as evidenced through your baseball primary sources. The article must
refer specifically to the sources.
- Compile a newspaper page that includes:
- a creative title;
- city, state, date (from
your assigned time period);
- your group's selected
image;
- your group's selected
document;
- an editorial analyzing
how Americans' ideas about race and ethnicity are illustrated in
the group's baseball sources; and
- a bibliography with proper
citation format.
- Before you begin, see the
Evaluation of Final Product rubric.
- You may also look at an example
of a newspaper created by other students.
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