|
Project Overview
The Grandparent/Elder Project is a major curriculum
unit integrated into the ninth grade Twentieth Century History course
at The Urban School of San Francisco. The Grandparent/Elder Project consists
of five main parts or units:
- Studying the world through the eyes of contemporaries.
- Conducting and recording an interview with
a grandparent or elder.
- Learning to locate primary and secondary sources
to discriminate between the two, and to use them to learn history.
- Writing a four to six page formal history
research paper on a student chosen topic concerning twentieth century
history events .
- Creating timelines of twentieth century history.
Completion of the full curriculum includes the
following:
- Study of five pages from the March 13, 1913,
edition of the New York Times. This exercise engages students
in learning from a contemporary source about events leading up to the
Great War of 1914-19. The purpose of this exercise is to help students
comprehend how "history" is made.
- Access methods for location of primary sources
in the American Memory collections.
- Techniques and procedures for conducting and
recording an interview.
- Study of primary sources in different media
(photographs, sound recordings, documents, films, etc.).
- Research on family life during the Great Depression
as a model of focused research procedures.
- Study of family life in the Great Depression
through the use of primary sources. Comparison of the results of primary
source study with the Depression history found in secondary sources
such as history textbooks.
- Methods for selecting and limiting a research
topic; learning how questions help to maintain focus research.
- Instruction in accessing primary sources for
the selected research topic.
- Research methods and techniques:
-selection of sources;
-writing and revising focused questions about
a topic;
-locating and evaluating potential sources;
-writing a preliminary bibliography;
-taking notes on note cards;
-writing a detailed outline;
-writing an introduction linking the research
topic to the grandparent/elder;
-writing rough and final drafts of the four to
six page history research paper; and
-citing and documenting sources.
-Note: The history research paper encourages,
but does not require, the inclusion of footnotes or endnotes. Teachers
using this curriculum may choose to require footnotes or endnotes.
- Guidance in the methods for effective oral
presentation of historical research to the class. A visual must accompany
the oral presentation.
- Presentation of the results of research to
the class.
- Creation of Web page timelines of twentieth
century history gleaned from the interviews, lives of grandparent/elder,
and research papers.
Specific Skills
See Skills Developed and
Learned during the Grandparent/Elder Project.
Student Materials
Student Introduction.
Each student is required to have a special folder
into which all of the materials, assignments, notes, etc. from this project
will be placed. The teacher may wish to distribute these folders to the
students so that they are all the same type and color. Folders with pockets
are the most useful. Students should put their names (and class, etc.)
in a prominent place on the folder.
Overview |
Teacher's Guide
|