Breakout Workshops Session 1

Curriculum Sharing

Room 338: For Elementary Teachers

Slavery as Forced Immigration: Strategies and Resources for Teaching about the Slave Trade

-Helen Sellers, KillamElementary School, Reading

RoomTBA: For Middle & High School Teachers

Teaching with Hollywood: Strategies for Working with Feature Film in the U.S. History Classroom

- Pamela Foss, DanversHigh School

Using Wikis in the U.S. History Classroom

- Dan Hanlon, LowellHigh School

Room 339: For Middle & High School Teachers

The Culture of the Dine: Examining the Navajo in the Context of Westward Expansion

- Caroline Allison, ReadingMemorialHigh School

Slavery and the Fugitive Slave Law: Opposing Viewpoints

- Kathryn Jones, NorthReadingMiddle School

Classroom Connections Workshop

Immigration and Massachusetts

- TsongasIndustrialHistoryCenter

Using the words and feelings of actual immigrants to Lowell, Massachusetts, the Immigration programexplores themes common to immigrants: the decision to leave; the journey over;initial hardships; preserving culture; and becoming an “American.” Teachers will work with primarysource excerpts from oral histories to examine the immigrant experience.

To register

- Contact Kara Gleason, Project Director,Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History

Email:

Phone: 781-670-2892

- Provide your name, district, school, email address, and subject and grade level taught.

The Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History Annual Conference is a free event. Teachers should register for the conference as soon as possible as space is limited. Substitute coverage will be reimbursed for teachers from the partner districts of Danvers, Lowell, North Reading, and Reading through the Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History grant.

Breakfast and lunch will be provided.

Encounters and Exchanges in U.S. History

YEAR THREE

Encounters & Exchanges in U.S. History

Teaching American History Grant

Annual Conference

2009

Immigration, Migration, and Race Relations

April 17, 2009

ReadingMemorialHigh School

Reading, MA

Funded by the U.S. Department of Education

Award #: U215X060073

Encounters & Exchanges in U.S. History

Annual Conference Introduction

The annual conference provides a pathway for American history teachers to enrich their knowledge of history and the use of primary sources. Historians, museum educators, and teacher fellows will conduct lectures and model instructional strategies in their areas of expertise. The annual conference is suited for teachers of Grades 3 - 12.

Project goals

  • Improve teachers’ content knowledge in American history.
  • Strengthen American history programs in the partner districts of Danvers, Lowell, North Reading, and Reading.
  • To help teachers meet the Historical Thinking Benchmarks of the American Historical Association.
  • To improve student knowledge of American history.

Annual Conference Agenda

Time / Location / Content
8:15 a.m. -8:30 a.m. / Main Street / Arrival and Breakfast
8:30 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. / Distance Learning Lab, Room 413 / Arrival, Registration, Introductions, & Welcome
Kara Gleason, Project Director
9:00 a.m. -10:15 a.m. / Distance Learning Lab, Room 413 / Keynote Address
James Green, Professor of History, University of Massachusetts at Boston
10:15 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. / Break
10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. / Room 338
Room 339
Room TBA / Breakout Workshops Session 1: Teacher Fellows
11:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. / Cafeteria / Lunch
12:30 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. / Distance Learning Lab, Room 413 / TsongasIndustrialHistoryCenter Workshop:
Immigration to Massachusetts
1:30 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. / Break
1:45 p.m. - 2:45 p.m. / Distance Learning Lab, Room 413 / Performance
The Promised Land

Keynote Address

James Green, Professor of History, University of Massachusetts at Boston

Historian James Green, Professor of History at UMass Boston and author of Death in the Haymarket: A Story of Chicago, the First Labor Movement, and the Bombing that Divided Gilded Age America,will discuss theHaymarket tragedyas a case study in looking atkey ideas regarding labor, work, capitalism, immigration, and ethnic relations in the United States in the late 19th century and early 20th century.By means of historicalnarrative, historical context, and a variety of primary sources, Professor Green will examine important themes, events, and eras in U.S. history.

Performance

Promised Land: Music of the Immigrant Experience

Young Audiences of Massachusetts

Promised Land celebrates diversity in America, and validates the uniqueness of each individual by weaving a rich tapestry of personal stories and songs from many cultures represented in today’s world. Trace the story of immigrants who left the "Old World" to search for a life in America. Sing along and listen to the odysseys of people who found themselves on a new continent, faced with overwhelming challenges and opportunities. Hear the sounds of many instruments, including the mandocello, tambourine, string bass, recorder, penny whistle, fiddle, Native American flute and spoons.