- Search the web for additional past and present
examples of campaign and suffrage documents and ephemera. The following
links provide helpful information:
America Votes
Project Vote Smart
- Complete a voter registration
form. Forms for each state can be found at Let Freedom Ring. Vote.
- Write a persuasive letter to the local paper
encouraging citizens to vote.
- Hold a post-election party.
- Invite a local
candidate or a speaker from the League of Women Voters to discuss
elections and voting with students.
- As a class, collect items
for and create an election ephemera scrapbook or display.
- Using the American Memory suffrage
timeline, create a suffrage timeline museum to depict major events
in the struggle for womens' suffrage. Divide students into research
groups based on the time periods and categories listed below. Gather
documents and create displays in chronological order. Encourage students
to be creative. Invite other
classes to visit the museum.
1800 - 1849
1850 - 1874
1875 - 1899
1900 - 1920
Current elections
Divide each time period above into the following categories:
Firsts
Historical context
People
Publications
Tip: For current
candidates, focus on their issues, education and personal information (family, hobbies, etc.)
- Use a Venn diagram to compare and contrast past and present strategies used
to win elections.