For this U.S. History activity, you are going to create and design a baseball card featuring an important individual from unit 4.The sport of baseball was becoming the National Pastime during this time period and became a major feature of many American lives. Your task in creating your Baseball Card will need to contain these requirements.

On the front side of your baseball card, you will create a design including these requirements

  • Your individual’s name
  • 1 large picture of your individual
  • 1 small picture of your individual
  • What was your individual known for…actor, soldier, athlete, politician, musician, artist, author, etc?

On the back side of your baseball card, you will create a design and must include these “stats.”

  • Your individual’s name
  • 1picture of your individual
  • 3 interesting facts about your individual that are important during this time period.
  • 1 major accomplishment and its impact in history that your individual was involved in
  • Why was your individual important during this time?

Individuals that will be used for the Unit 4 Baseball Card project

  1. Babe Ruth
  2. Woodrow Wilson
  3. Henry Ford
  4. Charlie Chaplin
  5. Louis Armstrong
  6. Rudolph Valentino
  7. Warren G. Harding
  8. Calvin Coolidge
  9. Herbert Hoover
  10. Knute Rockne
  11. Al Capone
  12. Charles Lindbergh

Baseball Card Rubric / 6 / 5-4 / 3-2 / 1-0
Meets Basic Requirements / Student’s project follows all instruction points. / Student’s project is missing a minor requirement from instructions / Student’s project is missing a major requirement / Student’s project does not conform to more than one major requirement
Organization & Preparation / The baseball card is of excellent quality & it’s apparent that the student spent time preparing it. / The baseball card is of good quality and it is apparent that the student spent some time. / The baseball card is of fair quality and seems rushed. / The baseball card appears to have been hastily created and appears messy or disorganized.
Knowledge & Concept of the Topic / The baseball card demonstrates higher level understanding of an issue. / The baseball card demonstrates an understanding of an issue. / The baseball card demonstrates recognition of an issue but not a clear understanding. / The baseball card demonstrates that the student is still struggling to understand the issue.
Creativity of the Product / The baseball card’s style, color, & impact align perfectly w/the students’ ideas. / The baseball card’s style, color, and impact align well with the students ideas. / The baseball card’s style, color, and impact do not align well with the students ideas. / The baseball card’s style, color, and impact seem disjointed and rushed.
Visual Expression of Ideas / The baseball card is rich with symbolism. The message goes beyond a statement and reflects an in-depth opinion answering all of the “questions to answer.” / The baseball card is rich with symbolism. The message goes beyond a statement and reflects an in-depth opinion answering one of the “questions to answer.” / The baseball card demonstrates little symbolism. The message does not really go beyond a statement and does not reflect an in-depth opinion answering more than one of the “questions to answer.” / The baseball card demonstrates little to no symbolism. The message does not really go beyond a statement and does not reflect an in-depth opinion.

Point Breakdown=50 Points

30 Points=Individual student’s baseball card project

20 Points=Completion of part II of project (trading baseball cards & completion of handout)

Unit 4 Baseball Card Project—Part II

Your next task is to trade your baseball card with 10 other individuals in your class. You will examine your classmate’s baseball card and hopefully learn a little more about their individual. You will need to complete this handout by adding the individual’s name and two significant facts written in complete sentences as well.

Unit 4 Individuals / Significant Fact #1 / Significant Fact #2
Example:
Alice Paul / Leader of the National Woman's party that campaigned for an equal rights amendment to the Constitution. / She opposed legislation protecting women workers because such laws implied women's inferiority.