Oral History Creating a route map

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Presentation transcript:

Oral History Creating a route map A Forgotten Landscape Oral History Creating a route map This activity will enable students to use oral history audio clips recorded by residents of the lower Severn levels to produce their own map of the area. The follow up activities will allow students to tell stories and use geographical language to describe a route. The slides are designed to be used with students and the notes section acts as a teacher guide and as a lesson planning tool. School Learning Resources

Creating a route map Objectives KS1 Objectives To be able to listen for key information in an oral history. Use oral histories to discover what your area used to look like. Use what you have found out to design a map of what your surroundings looked like in the past. These objectives are based on the key stage 1 objectives from the national curriculum. These could be easily adapted to fit lower key stage 2. Pupils should be taught to: develop pleasure in reading, motivation to read, vocabulary and understanding by:  listening to and discussing a wide range of poems, stories and non-fiction at a level beyond that at which they can read independently  being encouraged to link what they read or hear read to their own experiences By listening frequently to stories, poems and non-fiction that they cannot yet read for themselves, pupils begin to understand how written language can be structured in order, for example, to build surprise in narratives or to present facts in non-fiction. Listening to and discussing information books and other non-fiction establishes the foundations for their learning in other subjects. Pupils should be shown some of the processes for finding out information. Through listening, pupils also start to learn how language sounds and increase their vocabulary and awareness of grammatical structures. In due course, they will be able to draw on such grammar in their own writing. Pupils should understand, through demonstration, the skills and processes essential to writing: that is, thinking aloud as they collect ideas Deliberate steps should be taken to increase pupils’ vocabulary and their awareness of grammar so that they continue to understand the differences between spoken and written language.

Creating a route map Use KS1 You will listen to some people talking about life in this area 60 years ago. You are going to create a map of the Severn estuary and the local area showing landmarks, buildings and places as they were 60 years ago. Click on the audio clips on the website to hear various people talking about their experiences in the forgotten landscape. Each clip is less than 3 minutes long and the title gives an indication of what the people will be talking about. It is possible to complete the tasks having listened to 3 clips, however the more clips the students can listen to the richer their maps will be and the more they will learn about the area. You could listen to a couple of clips and then complete some of the activity then listen to a few more. Some people will tell you about how they travelled from place to place, some people will describe different industries and some people will describe what used to happen in a town.

Creating a route map KS1 Use what the people say to write, draw or stick the key features on the map. This might include the industry in certain areas, important routes that people used in a certain way or the features of the landscape. You can draw on the map, use the pictures or write some key words about what you hear. Students can use the following pictures and words to stick on the map or draw or write their own. They could do this as they hear the information or complete the activity having listened to a few of the audio clips. Encourage students to listen out for different ways that the land is used. It doesn’t matter where they put the different places geographically the idea is they understand that the land has many different uses. To differentiate this activity encourage the more able students to write sentences about what they hear or write their own key words that they can then decide where to put on the map. For students who need more support with their writing use the key word cards provided and ask students to read these words at the beginning of the activity so that they can pick them out as they listen to the clips.

Creating a route map KS1 Use the pictures and photographs to show the places, buildings and landmarks on the map. As a preliminary activity students could be set the task of going out into their local environment to take photographs or draw pictures, either with their parents or as part of a school trip. They could then use the appropriate pictures on the map. As a discussion at the end of the activity students could look at the pictures they weren’t able to put on their map and discuss why. This is probably because these places didn’t exist at the time that the people on the oral histories are talking about. 1960s Aust Ferry by Pete Townsend is licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0

KS1 Print out the map to give to students for them to add to. Ideally this would be printed out on A3, or two pages of A3 and stuck together. Students could work in groups of two or three to complete the activity.

wall river house shop farm beach These should be printed and cut out as a resource for students to add to map. Students should also have their own paper to draw and write their own words to add to the map. wall river house shop farm beach

ferry hotel street orchard road field

Creating a route map KS1 Imagine that you are one of the characters below and plan out a route on the map to get from one place to another. Get ready to tell your class how you would get from place to place. Use words like Left, Right, Straight on North, South, East ,West Before, After, Under, Over first, second, third Some students will be able to talk this task through with a peer or as a small group activity, other students will be able to write a few sentences about their route. Either way they should use the map they have created to plan a route and use descriptive language to explain the different areas in the Forgotten Landscape. A family going to the beach A farmer going to market Children walking to school