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Analyzing First Person Historic Documents With information from the Library of Congress.

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Presentation on theme: "Analyzing First Person Historic Documents With information from the Library of Congress."— Presentation transcript:

1 Analyzing First Person Historic Documents With information from the Library of Congress

2 Finding documents Evaluating documents for use Planning lessons/Activities Student evaluation of documents Assessment First Person Historical Documents

3 Finding First Person Documents Internet Library of Congress Local Library Magazines Books Purchased Sets

4 What Order? Source-Based – have resources first, build lesson around them. Topic-Based – have lesson, find resources to support.

5 Evaluating Documents for Use Interest Reading Level Length Points of View Variety of Sources Location

6 Which of these sources would you use your classroom and how would you use them? Finding and Choosing Sources

7 Planning Lessons/Activities To organize the use of primary sources in your classroom, consider the following: Activity Types Classroom Management Time Assessment

8 Different Ways to Use Documents Focus – sparking interest Inquiry – finding out more Application – using what you know Assessment – showing what you know

9 Focus Activities For focus activities, choose primary sources that: present a puzzle; challenge a stereotype or conventional wisdom; present a contradiction; offer an insight (or aha! experience); promote empathy (through a human interest story); Present focus activities using the following techniques: Generate one or two well-crafted questions about the sources. Use the questions to spark a class discussion or as a task for pairs of students to answer. After reviewing one or two primary sources, have small groups of students generate a list of questions about the upcoming topic of instruction.

10 Inquiry Activities To develop an inquiry approach, provide students with a set of primary sources on a topic, concept, or time period. Students can use the Internet and other research tools to assemble sets of primary sources for themselves. Student inquiry can range from working exclusively with primary source documents to using selected primary sources to supplement the student textbook and other instructional materials.

11 Application Activities Have students expand or alter textbook explanations of history based on primary sources they study. Present a set of primary sources in sequence. How does each new documents support or challenge information and understanding garnered from previous documents? Have students refine or revise conclusions.

12 Explain how the source supports or challenges a commonly accepted conclusion about a time in history. Based on analysis of several primary sources, prepare an oral presentation taking a stand on an issue in history. Select primary source documents to create a museum display about an historical topic. Write captions for the items and justify the documents that were selected. Write a response to a primary source (speech, news article, sermon), taking the position of someone who lived at the time the source was created. Ideas for Activities

13 Student Evaluation of Documents OPVL Origin Purpose Value Limitation

14 Document-Based Questions How is this document a good/bad example of historical event X? Document-Based Questions are about analysis, not identification. For evaluation activities, select either sources from the historical era under study or choose contemporary sources related to the historical topic. Projects Museum Curator: Create a museum display about an historical topic. Choose the best examples of documents, write captions for the items and justify the documents that were selected. Magazine Editor: Prepare a visual display (poster, magazine cover, illustrated timeline) that highlights the most important points to be gained from the primary sources under study. Assessment

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