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The Grandparent/Elder Project Grandparent/Elder Project Image Montage

Teacher's Guide

The Grandparent/Elder Project consists of five main parts or units:

  1. Using World War I and the Great Depression as the topic, students learn to locate primary and secondary sources, discriminate between the two types of sources, and use them to study history.
  2. Students conduct and record an interview with a grandparent or elder.
  3. Students select a topic concerning twentieth century history events and perform research on the topic using primary and secondary sources.
  4. Students write a four to six page formal history research paper and make an oral presentation of their research.
  5. Students use material that they have researched to create timelines of twentieth century American History.

Procedure

Project Overview

Introducing the Grandparent/Elder Project

  1. Direct the students to read the Student Introduction to the Grandparent/Elder Project.
  2. Discuss the project that your students will undertake.
  3. Discuss the concept of each person being significant in history/herstory.
  4. Provide this definition of "elder" for the purposes of the project:
Elder--Person who lived during an earlier period. One who is older and whose age and experience confers a special dignity upon him or her. For this project, the student should select a relative or friend who was born before 1940.

Unit I: Through the Eyes of Contemporaries, 1900-1919

Students study the presentation of events both in a newspaper of the early twentieth century and in a contemporary newspaper to learn the process by which events are written down and become history. Students locate materials in the American Memory collections to further explore primary source materials, and then study secondary resources to enrich their background in twentieth century American History.

Unit II: Interviewing a Grandparent/Elder

Students are introduced to the Grandparent/Elder Project and the concept that each individual creates and contributes to history. They study the transcript of an interview, learn how to conduct an interview, and conduct and record the interview with his or her grandparent or elder.

Unit III: Gathering Information from Primary Sources

Students learn to discriminate between primary sources and secondary sources and how to use them to learn history. Students research family life during the Great Depression as a model for focused research. This unit can be used independently.

Unit IV: Conducting and Presenting Research

Students learn how to choose and limit a research paper topic, perform research, write a formal outline, write drafts of the research paper, and document their sources. They also make an oral presentation of their topic to the class.

Unit V: Creating Web Page Timelines

Students learn how to compile and organize information, develop timelines, and create Web pages.

 

Evaluation

Newspaper Project

  • Students working in groups create topical charts based on information found in the 1913 New York Times and supported by research in secondary sources.
  • Students working in groups create topical charts based on information found in a current newspaper and supported by research in secondary sources.
  • Each student creates a secondary source, writing a letter explaining what s/he would like her/his grandchildren to know about this day in history.

Interview

  • Students conduct an interview with a grandparent/elder, asking the questions assigned, and taking extensive notes.
  • Students type a minimum four-page transcript of the interview.
  • If the interview is extremely long, this requirement may be limited to a major section of the interview. If only a section of the interview is transcribed, the student must hand in the notes or tape from the entire interview.

Focused Research on Gees Bend and the Great Depression
  • Students research the town of Gees Bend, Alabama, using primary and secondary sources, and create oral presentations ten to fifteen minutes long modeled after the segments of the television program 60 Minutes. These presentations may be done as videotapes to simulate the television program.
  • Students write a five-paragraph essay about family life in the Great Depression, using information gathered from documents, photographs, and sound recordings.

Focused Research History Paper
  • Students produce a four to six page focused research paper. Students are expected to formulate their thesis as a question, rather than as a statement, and to support their thesis using material on family life in the Great Depression gathered from primary and secondary sources.
  • The topic should relate to the grandparent/elder's role in history and the influence of that history on the grandparent/elder's life.

Oral Presentation
  • Students create and present oral reports based on their focused research papers.
  • Oral presentations must include a visual.

Web Page Timeline
  • Students create Web page timelines on a common topic including important events in the lives of the grandparents/elders and in their own lives, as well as important events and people from the research projects. A timeline index page with links to the theme timelines should unite the timelines created by the class groups.

Student Assessment
  • Students complete and turn in a self-assessment sheet.

 

Extension

The lesson may be further extended by creating a class archive of transcripts, history research papers, and visuals. For example, students may:

  1. Create a file or a Web site of the interview transcripts.
  2. Photograph the posters or models created by students as visuals for the oral presentations and add them to the archive.
  3. Use a digital camera or scan photographs of the visuals, and add them to the Web site archive.
  4. Prepare a presentation or display for "Grandparents' Day," in your school, using the archive of transcripts, history research papers, and visuals.

Overview  |  Teacher's Guide

 
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Last updated 09/26/2002