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The Grandparent/Elder Project Grandparent/Elder Project Image Montage

Overview

Learning history from real people involved in real events brings life to history. The Grandparent/Elder Project provides a means to learn about the twentieth century from real people and primary sources. A 1913 New York Times newspaper provides a view of the world on the brink of a World War. An interview with a grandparent or significant elder provides a human face for life in the twentieth century. Through researching primary and secondary sources, students become conversant with significant aspects of twentieth century history.


Objectives Students will learn:
  • that each person, no matter how seemingly insignificant, contributes to the world's story;
  • how to differentiate between primary and secondary sources and how to assess the relative importance of each in the study of history;
  • how to access, interpret, analyze, and evaluate primary sources of various kinds;
  • how to conduct an interview;
  • effective use of questions in doing research;
  • techniques and skills of research;
  • the importance of accuracy and honesty in research;
  • how to "write history" clearly so that it communicates to others;
  • how to teach others the topic on which one has become an expert;
  • how to gain self-confidence and learning techniques for effective oral presentations; and
  • specific skills related to the activities.
Time Required 8-10 weeks for the entire project. "Gathering Information from Primary Sources" (Unit III) may be used independently (1-2 weeks).
Recommended Grade Level 9th grade; may be modified for grades 7-12.
Curriculum Fit American History, Social Studies, English, and Public Speaking.
Standards

McREL 4th Edition Standards & Benchmarks

Historical Understanding
Standard 2. Understands the historical perspective

Language Arts
Standard 4. Gathers and uses information for research purposes
Standard 8. Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes
Standard 9. Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media

Resources See Resources Page

Overview  |   Teacher's Guide

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Last updated 09/26/2002