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
This is a fourth grade resource that guides students through the diverse experiences of immigrants that traveled to New York in the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth century. Students will use primary sources to form an argument to answer the question: Did the American Dream come true for immigrants in New York?
The Roadmap
C3 Teachers
This online lesson provides Native perspectives, images, documents, and other sources to help students and teachers understand how the 17th century fur trade brought together two cultures, one Native and the other Dutch, with different values and ideas about exchange. Examine these differences to determine whether the exchange that took place on Manhattan in 1626 was really a land sale or not.
The Roadmap
Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian
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
Why did Germans immigrate to the Upper Midwest in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century? What contributions did they make to the region's cultural heritage? Students use Library of Congress photographs and documents to answer these questions and others while strengthening their German language skills.
The Roadmap
Library of Congress
The Haudenosaunee Guide for Educators is designed to provide a deeper and more integrated understanding of Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) life—past and present.
The Roadmap
Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian
Many people in Central Florida came from somewhere else. Students first analyze life histories from American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1940 to learn oral history techniques. They then interview and photograph these "transplants" and collect their life stories. In the process, students strengthen their communication skills and learn of the diverse experiences of people who now call Central Florida home.
The Roadmap
The Library of Congress
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
The Living History of the Myaamia provides educators with a curriculum for teaching Myaamia (Miami Tribe) history.
The Roadmap
The Myaami Center
This unit helps students learn how archaeologists investigate the ways people lived in the past. The investigation begins by introducing the mystery of ancient seeds that were found by archaeologists. This leads to a study of how archaeologists investigated the mounds found near Minneapolis, Kansas. Students learn what questions the archaeologists asked. They conduct their own investigation of prehistoric agriculture in Kansas. They will practice sorting images found in the student magazine into various categories and reach conclusions about what people ate and the tools they used 5,000 years ago as hunters-gatherers.
The Roadmap
Kansas Historical Society
This lesson begins with the mystery of the bone tool. From this evidence students use primary sources to draw their own conclusions, evaluating the results of in-depth research by archaeologists, historians, ethnographers, and descendants of native peoples. Students are introduced to Virgil Swift, a descendent of the Wichita people. The unit takes students through the step-by-step construction of a grass house, how such a structure was built, from what materials, and by whom. Students complete the unit by learning about the market economy: starting a local business, the benefits and costs of local materials, and building demand through marketing.
The Roadmap
Kansas Historical Society
This is a two-part lesson that demonstrates natural and human impact on an environment by examining changes in a hypothetical river system over time. In part one, students work in groups to solve a problem during one of four different eras; in part two, students present their problems and solutions in chronological order, thus revealing a story of one river over time. Finally, students discuss water pollution issues in their own community and consider possible ways to address those problems.