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Janine Lodico

09 Project Summary

Elmira City Schools


1.  General Overview of the Proposed Project:

In this project I propose to use historical fiction from the time period we are studying comparing it to the text book representation of the same events. 

 

2.  Clear Purpose and Objective:

By comparing the two examples, students will gain an understanding of the need to read expository text in a different manner than a novel is read.  We will also explore point of view, and literary license.  This should begin to develop the students’ ability to differentiate fact and opinion, and how history can be slanted to the author’s purpose.

 

3.  Stakeholders: grade level, who will benefit, who will participate in this project.

I will teach this unit to the seventeen students in my fifth grade class.  They will be the participants._

 

4.  U.S. History Content Area

I will focus on the revolutionary War time period.

 

5.  Outline Describing Content

   I.  American Revolution

          A.  British Viewpoint

          B.  American Viewpoint

II.  Slant or perspective of historical reporting

          A.  Non-fiction

          B.  Historical fiction

6.  Software to be used, internet materials, contacts, etc.

None identified at this point.

 

 

7.  Level of Student Involvement

Students will be highly involved by reading different accounts of the same events.  In groups they will compare and contrast the media.  Conclusion will be creating a newspaper to report the event.__

 

 

8.  Evaluation process (include students when possible)

Students will create a newspaper portraying the event including:  news, opinion, and political cartoon. Using a rubric, they will assess the effectiveness of their papers.

 

 

9.  Timeline: how you envision the project being carried out between start up and  conclusion

We will begin by reading the novel together.  Then the topic will be presented in a historical non-fiction genre.  If possible we will then search some Internet sites for verification.  Then the comparisons will be developed.  Finally, the newspaper will be created and assessed.  Total time, one month._

 


TAH Project Proposal

 

Submitted by Janine Lodico

 

Elmira City School District

 

Purpose: The purpose of this project is to compare a work of historical fiction with primary sources of the same event to substantiate the story that was read.  In doing this research the students will see that historical fiction is based in fact, but also is a work of fiction and not to be used exclusively to obtain information about a time period.

 

Stakeholders: This project will be completed by students in the fifth grade of a public elementary school.  This class is made up of students with a wide variety of backgrounds and ability levels.

 

U.S. History Content: The content will be the Oregon Trail and westward expansion of the United States.

 

Outline Describing Content:  Logistics suggested minor changes from my initial project.  This is the project as it was conducted.

 

·        Prior to presenting the project to the students, a novel was selected.  This was an extensive search as there are many books to choose from.  The book selected had to cover an event in our curriculum, be at grade level, and be a sufficient length to provide enough material for the project.  I selected the book Bound for Oregon  by Jean Van Leeuwen.

·        After selecting the book, the topic was presented to the class to give a background of the time period.  The background was supplied by our history text,  The United States, published by Scott Foresman. 2005.

·        Students were each given a copy of the novel and a notepad to keep the notes together.

·        I read the book orally to the students as they followed along and took notes of items they were curious about.  The story was discussed after each chapter, and we also discussed what things could be validated through research.

·        Several times throughout the project the students went online to find primary sources to document events, people, and artifacts mentioned in the book.

·        At the culmination of the book’s reading, the students made scrapbooks of the journey using primary documents found on the web.

·        These scrapbooks were then presented to the class for discussion.

 

Software: none used, however Google search engine was of great use.

 

Student Involvement:  Once the book was selected, the students were involved in every step.  They decided what to research.  They chose the research materials and which items they wanted to use for their final project.

 

Evaluation: Students were evaluated on their notes, use of time and effectiveness on the computer, and final project.  Some of the evaluation was self correcting as the students learned that without proper notes they were not effective in their research, and without active research they would not be able to document their summaries in their scrapbook.  Final evaluation of the scrapbook was based on the connection between the story and what documents were chosen to support the events.

 

Timeline:  Once the book was chosen the project took 10 days of class time.  Research was interspersed through out the reading of the novel.  This resulted in better research as students honed their skill in identifying what could be researched and how to locate the sources.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reflections on the Process

 

          The first step in the process was to select the novel to use.  I was very pleased with the amount of literature available.  There are many first rate authors that write historical fiction, and a search under historical fiction, elementary produced a great selection.  I decided on Bound for Oregon largely because of its topic, where it fit in the year’s curriculum, and the reading level.  It was a great choice as the students, boys and girls, really enjoyed reading it, and it was closely tied to history including the family that took the journey.

 

          During the reading of the novel I had the students take notes on what they could research.  After the first few sections I realized that I needed to be more specific, and we began to take note of people, places, events, and some artifacts.  This focused their attention to things that they would be able to document.

 

          After the first research session, we needed to take a refresher course in primary documents as the students were finding lovely pictures of artifacts to be purchased at Target.  Doing this project really drove home the reason behind using primary documents in research.

 

          Most of the students were able to find many appropriate documents but mainly used photographs.  In future years I will organize this part of the project to include different types of documents so that letters, genealogy charts, maps, and artifacts are all used, as well as photographs and paintings.

 

Once the research was completed the students made their scrapbooks.  They really enjoyed putting these together.  I will, in the future, help them with organization a little more so that the books have more direction to them instead of the random presentation that some students finished with.

 

This project was very successful.  It engaged the students in their learning so that they developed discernment in reading historical novels, computer research skills, and presentation skills as well.  Using primary documents in this way helped the students to not only find the documents, but to see the importance of these documents in understanding our history.  An additional bonus was increase in vocabulary as students explored documentation of words that were new to them such as wagon tongue, corduroy road, and heifer.  The exciting part was that they were the ones initiating the search for meaning.  It was a very profitable venture and I will include it in my plans in the future.

 

TAH Project

Elmira City School District

Oregon Trail 5th Grade

2008-2009

 

 

 
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Jamestown Public Schools

197 Martin Road

Jamestown, NY 14701

Project Director: Paul Benson
716.483.7112
Fax: 716.483.7104

Web Design and  Research Team:
 
Paul Benson
 
Pam Brown
 
Rick Bates
 
Carol Shick
 
Rick Walters
 Mike Swanson


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