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.
This learning resource uses geospatial technology to help students understand the many components of the Pearl Harbor Attacks. Guided by inquiry, students will use the ArcGIS map to investigate the how the Japanese executed this attack and how the positioning of the U.S. in Oahu made the perfect target.
The Roadmap
Esri
Students use primary sources focused on baseball to explore the American experience regarding race and ethnicity.
The Roadmap
The Library of Congress
This lesson will help students examine historical primary source documents and compare and contrast the lives of immigrant children in the early 20th century with those of today. By focusing on the lives of children, students will better be able to develop an understanding of and empathy for the immigrant experience.
The Roadmap
Emerging America - Collaborative for Educational Services
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
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
This two-day lesson is based on students acquiring a better understanding of the effects the Great Depression had on migrant workers and their children as portrayed in the novel: Esperanza Rising. The use of photographs, as primary sources, will support understanding of this time period, as well as provoking oral discussion among English Language Learner students.
The Roadmap
Emerging America - Collaborative for Educational Services
This unit plan highlights how patterns of immigration are both similar and different for immigrant groups coming to America, using a diagram and PowerPoint Presentation that details the progression of the immigrant experience that serves as a model for a variety of immigrant groups. Included in the set is a Universal Design for Learning chart and an extensive annotated list of primary source documents from the Library of Congress provide a visual reinforcement of the immigrant journey both before, during, and after their arrival in the United States.
The Roadmap
Emerging America - Collaborative for Educational Services
This unit introduces students to skills of analyzing historical images and documents. They will explore images and documents related to why immigrants came to the United States and Iowa.
The Roadmap
State Historical Society of Iowa
Students investigate barriers to citizenship for immigrants, highlighting how disability was at the core of exclusionary policy from 1882 forward.
The Roadmap
Emerging America - Collaborative for Educational Services
Using the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul as a landmark, students will analyze the structure as the primary source for learning about its significance. The lesson will combine writing, art, and historical context.
The Roadmap
Historical Society of Pennsylvania
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
Meet Mary Fields, a trailblazer of the American West. She was formerly enslaved, tough-as-nails and eventually became the first African American woman stagecoach driver in 1895, when, in her 60s, she beat out all the cowboys who wanted the job by being the fastest to hitch a team of six horses. Fields excelled and opened the door for other women and people of color to become stagecoach drivers and postal workers.