Ohio Northern Lesson Plan: Audio Recording as Primary Sources
- Ohio Standard: State requirement to present a lesson on November 11th (Veterans)
- Grade Level: 5
- Purpose, Background, and Context:
- This is an introductory lesson to Pearl Harbor attached to a Veterans Day lesson or unit. The purpose of the lesson is to allow students to uncover the emotional mindset of America post Pearl Harbor.
- Goals/Objectives/Student Outcomes/Performance Expectations:
- Students will be introduced to the specific events that transpired on December 7, 1941.
- Students will inquire as to the emotional mindset and political views held by a sample of Americans post Pearl Harbor.
- Students will take that knowledge and use it to create a sample primary source document (mock diary) to represent what they’ve learned.
- Materials:
- Keynote Presentation with images of Pearl Harbor.
- Small age appropriate reading that discusses Pearl Harbor.
- Sound recording from the library of Congress: “Man-on-the Street” series.
- Mobile Macbook computer lab “C.O.W.”
- Materials for creating student mock diaries
- Procedure:
- Introduce Pearl Harbor with a series of images used to create discussion and pull out student background knowledge.
- Distribute an age appropriate reading (read in class, read in partners, read groups, individually, etc.)
- Discuss reading together and pull out main ideas. Complete a “TMD” Topic, Main Idea, and Supporting Details graphic organizer and discuss. END DAY ONE
- Divide students into 6 groups and place each group at a station. Each station would have a Macbook with an audio link already pulled up.
- Groups will move from station to station listening to recordings and completing their graphic organizer.
- Where were they when they heard the news about Pearl Harbor?
- How did people feel when they first heard the news? Emotions discussed?
- How do they feel now? Different?
- How do they feel about the war and moving forward?
- Get back together and discuss what we’ve learned (time permitting) If not, move discussion to the next day.
- END DAY TWO
- Review the organizers and discuss the answers students have written. (Could trade a groups organizer with another groups, so that they have an opportunity to compare their work and thoughts with their peers.) OPTIONAL
- Assign mock diary activity.
- Students would create sample diary entry of a fictional person who lived during December of 1941.
- The focus of the entry would be:
- Hearing the news
- How they felt
- Providing some type of commentary on what the country should do now.
- Assessment Outcomes:
- Graphic Organizers
- Mock Diary
- Extension and Adaptations:
- Find a way to bridge the feelings and emotions of the 1941 to the current feelings in the country regarding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.