Forced to Move in More Ways than One

Author: Sara Chavarria

Editor: Stephanie Nardei

Time: / 6 class periods
Preparation Time: / Photocopy group sets of Handout 1.
Photocopy Handouts 2 and 3 for 1/3 the class size
Materials: / Handout 1 – Outlines for research
Handout 2 – Removal act notes
Handout 3 – Dawes Act notes
Overhead 1 – Venn diagram

Abstract

This lesson introduces students to three episodes of Native American movement:

The first is the Indian Removal Act of 1830.

The second is the Dawes Act of 1887.

The third is the Indian Boarding Schools beginning in 1879.

Students will Explore and Explain these moments in history through group research culminating in project poster using a Venn diagram.

Purpose - For students to explore the differences between these episodes of movement to identify if forced migration played a role in any of them.

Objectives

Students will be able to:

  1. Identify reasons for a particular episode of Indian movement by conducting individual research and writing a report.
  2. Create a Venn diagram using group research materials.

National Council for History in the Schools:

Historical Thinking Standards

  • Standard 2A: Reconstruct the literal meaning of a historical passage.
  • Standard 2D: Evidence historical perspectives.
  • Standard 3J: Hypothesize the influence of the past.
  • Standard 4B: Obtain historical data.
  • Standard 4C: Interrogate historical data.
  • Standard 5A: Identify issues and problems in the past.
  • Standard 5E: Formulate a position or course of action on an issue.

United States History Standards

  • Era 4 Standard 1: United States territorial expansion between 1801 and 1861, and how it affected relations with external powers and Native Americans.
  • Era 6 Standard 2: Massive immigration after 1870 and how new social patterns, conflicts, and ideas of national unity developed amid growing cultural diversity.
  • Era 6 Standard 4: Federal Indian policy and United States foreign policy after the Civil War.

Teacher Background

Teacher is recommended to review their understanding of the Indian Removal Act, the Dawes Act, and Indian Reservation systems in the late 1800s.

Related and Resource Websites

Indian Removal Act:

Indian removal 1814 - 1858:

Andrew Jackson Speaks: Indian Removal

Refer to Part III only of this site:

Treaty with the Cherokee, 1791Treaty of Holston:

Treat with the Choctaw, 1830:Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek:

Dawes Act

American Legal History on Dawes Act:

PBS On Dawes Act:

Native American Lands Sold Under Dawes Act:

Historic Allotment Legislation:

Boarding Schools

  • Indian Treaties:Their Ongoing Importance to Michigan Residents:
  • Carlise Indiand Industrial School:

Activity

Day 1

  1. Begin by writing the question from the previous day:

Were Native Americans forced to move into designated lands like reservations? Discuss.

  1. Students will explore this idea by conducting investigative research into three different incidents of U.S. Government policy that led to Native people being moved around to other locales as well as within their own reservations.
  2. Introduce the three Government policies to be investigated:
  3. The Indian Removal Act of 1830
  4. The Dawes Act of 1887
  5. The Indian Boarding School Experiment beginning in 1879
  6. Put students into groups of three. Each student will investigate one of the topics. They will compile a list of information for their policy. Handout 1 outlines the information they are responsible for with hyperlinks to search for information.
  7. Before conducting internet research they will look in their textbooks for topic resources.

Day 2-3

  1. Internet research – One day should be sufficient.
  2. When done with research each student must type a report communicating their findings. (one day)

Day 4

  1. Ask students to share their interpretations of the three topics. Begin by asking the students who conducted research on the Removal Act what their answer was to the last research question: Was this a forced movement or migration episode? Explain.
  2. Repeat with students who researched the Dawes Act.
  3. Repeat with students whp researched the Boarding School Experiment. On the board or overhead list the student opinions and reasons.

Day 5

  1. Students will now meet with their group and share compiled information from their notes. They will put together a Venn diagram spotlighting the three research topics. Display Overhead 1 with the example they will follow in their Venn diagram.
  2. The Venn diagram will be created on larger sheets of paper to be displayed in the room.

Closure

Day 6

  1. Follow-up discussion: Using the Venn diagrams hold a discussion addressing similarities and differences of all three incidents. Try to arrive at a class consensus if there are differing opinions by having groups defend their answers. Included in their notes should be the following terms:
  • Assimilation
  • Relocation
  • Forced
  • Land takeovers
  • Government policies

Embedded Assessment

Individual reports can be assessed for content and accuracy.

The Venn diagrams can be assessed for completion and content.

Oral discussions can be assessed through student participation.

Homework

If applicable