The Library of Congress

America Dreams

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Teachers

red arrowStudents red arrowResources
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red arrowOverview red arrowImplementation red arrowEvaluation and Assessment
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Getting Started

Devise a learning standard:
What do you expect your students to know and be able to do when they have completed this project? Create an assessment rubric for students based on your expectations. This Analytic Rubric may serve as a model for your own.

Decide on the learning product:
It could be a Web page, a multimedia product, a video, or the transformation of your classroom into a Decades Museum. Whatever format the product may take, students will present and defend their ideas.

Create the "hooks" to engage your students:
Meet your students "where they are" by inviting them to begin their inquiry by considering the dreams of today, the dreamers of the present. Next, use the American Memory collections to learn about our cultural heritage and find evidence of the dreamers in our collective history. Finally, ask your students to compare their own dreams to the dreams of those who lived before them. Students should understand that history is the continuing story of human experience, the stories of people like themselves. Help them to understand that as they define and pursue their own dreams, they create the future of our nation and the world.

Organize:
Introduce students to the student pages. Divide your class into learning teams and assign roles and responsibilities. Introduce the team management check list .

Each team will select (or be assigned) a research role (photographer, lawyer, poet, politician, producer, comedian, musician). Each student will choose (or be assigned) a group task and will work as part of their team to bring the project to completion. Remind students that while they each have specific group tasks, all team members pitch in and help one another.

As a class, define the scope of the historical research conducted in this project. Will teams gather material from a specific decade? Will they work with a single American Memory collection? Will research be guided by a theme, such as immigration? Will research be linked to literature the class is reading?

Provide time for students to explore the student and resource pages of the project.

Elements for Success:

  • Student-centered teaching environment
  • Adequate time spent teaching students to analyze primary source documents
  • Rich array of additional materials from your content area to support the project
  • Student choice and accountability
  • Access to the library media center
  • Adequate collaborative planning time with the school librarian
  • Time for students to complete tasks
  • Computer access in the media center or classroom for students and teachers

Phase One of Implementation -- Building Background Knowledge and Skills

Anticipatory Set:
Link to students' prior knowledge and work with them to develop a concept of the traditional "American Dream." Use the "What Is the American Dream?" essay to initiate a discussion (either as a whole class or in team groups).

You may wish to have your students conduct interviews, explore other readings, engage in further class discussions, or hear guest speakers. The Dreamers of Today Web site can provide a context for how others see the "American Dream." Use the Activity 1 worksheet (or create your own introductory activity) to engage your students.

Using the American Memory collections:
Introduce the American Memory collections through the Discovering American Memory Workshop. Assign these learning activities:

Document Analysis:
Before students begin their research, review strategies for analyzing primary source materials. Each student team will work with a set of preselected materials. The document analysis worksheet provides a model to guide older students through the analysis. Younger students may find the analysis guides from the Discovering American Memory Workshop more manageable (Photo Analysis Guide, Listening Guide, Document Guide). Each team will analyze their assigned document. An engaging and effective way to introduce students to their resource (if appropriate for the media involved) is to create a Primary Source Set for each team.

Photographer - Mr. & Mrs. David Vincent and daughter, Martha, by their sod house

Poet - "Dedication," Robert Frost's presidential inaugural poem, 20 January 1961

Politician - "Americanism", Harding, Warren G. (Warren Gamaliel), 1865-1923

Producer - Arrival of immigrants, Ellis Island

Lawyer - Petition for change of venue, 1886 June 10, Evidence from the Haymarket Affair, 1886-1887

Comedian - Katzenjammer Kids: "Policy and pie"

Musician - The old cabin home. H. De Marsan, Publisher, 54 Chatham Street, New York.

Reporter - The Independent gazetteer, or, The chronicle of freedom, 1788

Phase Two of Implementation -- Researching Online and gathering primary resources

Team organization and accountability:
Guide students in developing an action plan (e.g. photographer). The team management check list can provide a model for this task.

The project requires your students to apply their research skills, as well as team planning skills to ensure completion of their product by the set deadline. Keeping a "research log" of work accomplished during each work session can help students stay focused (and can help in the evaluative process).

Review the assessment questions:
Choose just the questions (e.g. photographer) that will provide a focus for the project. Students can use these questions to guide their research.

Gathering primary sources:
As a class, create and continually add to, a list of "tried and true" search terms. Remind students that American Memory is a collection of collections. It is not encyclopedic and it simply does not have "everything." If an initial search does not yield desired results, guide students in how they can narrow or refocus the search.

Your schedule may limit students to visiting only the suggested collections and provided links for each team. As possible, however, encourage them to develop their own, additional links in the American Memory collections and to expand their resources with other Internet sources.

Begin independent team exploration. Supply students with document analysis worksheets to use to record their growing set of evidence. Allow at least two (more preferred) days/class periods for exploration and research.

Phase Three of Implementation -- Creating the Learning Product

Students can produce a variety of products to demonstrate their interpretation of the material, including web pages, multimedia products, video documentaries, oral presentations, creating booklets or newspapers, or even photos of your classroom turned into a museum comprised of print documents, multimedia, and realia.

Creating and refining a final learning product that allows students to represent, present and defend their ideas about the American Dream is the tangible outcome of this project. Allow plenty of time for this vital phase. (Having students add what transpires during this phase of the project to their research log can provide useful insight in the evaluation process.)

Require that proper citation and/or bibliographical entry be used for all collected print material, photos, sound, video, etc.

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Last updated 12/17/2002