The curated resources linked below are an initial sample of the resources coming from a collaborative and rigorous review process with the EAD Content Curation Task Force.
Students will examine and analyze photographs of, poems by, and documents about American Indians experiences as European Americans migrated across the United States. They will use the knowledge gained through their analysis to write their own songs, poems, and letters. While the unit is intended to take three class periods, it is possible to complete the material in a shorter time frame. For example, you can set up three document centers around the classroom. After being introduced to the necessary analytical skills, the students can be split into three groups and sent to a document center to complete the activities there, switching to a new document center after a designated period of time. This will shorten the three-day unit to two days.
The Roadmap
The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Students will learn about personal identity by discovering who Mabel McKay, a Native Californian basket weaver from the 20th century, was through "The Story of Mabel McKay" video.
The Roadmap
Autry Museum of the American West
Students will use an 1861 map and the Emancipation Proclamation to learn where slavery ended, what states still allowed slavery, and what states did not allow slavery. Follow-up questions will promote higher-level learning by requiring students to recognize cause-and-effect relationships.
The Roadmap
National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
In this four-mystery/lesson unit, students will explore the trade of Africans by Europeans by following the narrative of Kossula Cudjo Lewis and exploring primary sources from the Library of Congress and other sources. Mr. Lewis was an African who was taken prisoner when he was 19 years old and traded by the Dahomey to Americans and enslaved in Alabama. He would gain his freedom at the end of the Civil War and help to found Africatown in Alabama. His narrative is central to all four mysteries/lessons in this unit.
The Roadmap
History's Mysteries Historical Inquiry for Elementary Classrooms
Students learn why and how Texas, California and Oregon became part of the U.S., and about the diverse people who lived in each state.
The Roadmap
Autry Museum of the American West
Thanks to the Disney film, most students know the legend of Pocahontas. But is the story told in the 1995 movie accurate? In this lesson, students use evidence to explore whether Pocahontas actually saved John Smith’s life and practice the ability to source, corroborate, and contextualize historical documents.
The Roadmap
Stanford History Education Group
In this lesson, students practice their sourcing, corroboration and close reading skills by examining two diary entries of Spanish explorers involved in the Portola Expedition. Students are asked to consider the relative strengths and weaknesses in using these diary accounts to understand the purpose of the expedition and life for Native Americans across California in the 18th century.
The Roadmap
Standford History Education Group
The Living History of the Myaamia provides educators with a curriculum for teaching Myaamia (Miami Tribe) history.
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The Myaami Center
Created in collaboration with representatives of the Poarch Band of Creek Indian, this guide highlights the difficult choices faced by Creek people during the Creek War, with emphasis on the ways that colonization, in particular the Federal Road and the "Plan of Civilization," influenced the war.
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David Mathews Center for Civic Life
This lesson opens with three nineteenth-century illustrations of San Francisco. Students analyze the images and consider how depictions of the city changed over time. Next, students read two firsthand accounts and compare these narratives with the illustrations to explore how the Gold Rush affected San Francisco.
Stanford History Education Group
This lesson plan examines the life of Catharine Paine Blaine, missionary, schoolteacher, and women’s rights activist who traveled from Seneca Falls, New York to Washington Territory in the 1850s. Students will examine primary sources and make connections to their own experiences, mapping the route that the Blaines took to reach Seattle from Seneca Falls.
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Washington State Historical Society
"How does water shape our lives?" is a four-mystery/lesson unit on 19th century industry and immigration which uses the story of William Skinner to help students explore primary sources about push and pull factors, the use of water in the development of industry, and the lives of workers in 19th century Holyoke, Massachusetts.