Zoom-In Inquiry Using Primary Sources to help focus instruction.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pueblo Native Americans The Pueblos are a group of different tribes who are all much alike, so much alike we group them together.
Advertisements

The First New Mexicans.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
American Indians in Texas
Lee, R. (1942). Children at the FSA (Farm Security Administration) Camelback Farms inspect the photographer's camera, Phoenix, Arizona. Library of Congress:
Hopi Of the Southwest SS4H1 The student will describe how early Native American cultures developed in North America. Locate where Native Americans settled.
THE GREAT DEPRESSION OF THE 1930’S
Zoom-In Inquiry Using Primary Sources to help focus instruction.
Sensing Something Slide Show Assessment. Is information being shared between these people remotely, through direct contact, or both ways? What information.
American Indians USI.3 4/22/2017.
Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI Collection, [reproduction number, e.g., LC- USF C] Zoom-In Investigation.
THE GREAT DEPRESSION OF THE 1930’S “Brother can you spare a dime?”
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Native American Tribes Part III: The Hopi (Southwest Desert)
Pre-Columbian Native Americans Ch 1. Mayas Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, Mexico Built Temples & Pyramids Had their own form of hand writing Calendars Corn.
123 Can you count with me? Boyd Jones doing his arithmetic lesson at the blackboard in the Alexander Community School in Greene County, Georgia. America.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Understanding Goal American flags of the past have similarities and differences to our flag today.
Economics Zoom-In Look carefully at the primary source clues. Determine what you see and what questions you might ask to get the “big picture.”
Chapter 11 Section 1. Bering Strait: a land bridge between Asia (Russia) and North America (Alaska); groups of hunters/gatherers crossed over, following.
Peopling of the Americas Development of Native American Culture.
Chapter 1: The First Americans Section 1-2: Early Americans Focus Question: How did geography influence the development of cultures in North America?
Zoom In Inquiry! It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
TThese places receive little rainfalls. DDays are hot and nights are cold. TThere are fewer trees and plants. TThey often have extreme temperatures.
Photo Analysis Migrant Worker Photos from American Memory/Arizona Memory Projects.
Library of Congress The Great Depression. Florida Folklife from the WPA Collections orida/title_sound_recordingC.htm.
Wetlands People, plants, and animals all adapt to their habitat.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Urban Changes Assessment Slide Show. What other types of buildings and services are needed by people who lived in these “neighborhoods?” In what ways.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Legacy of the Dust Bowl Dust Storm Media 1930s. Prowers County, Colorado. Dust storm Courtesy of the Library of Congress America from the Great Depression.
Eye Spy - Colonial Architecture What architectural details can you find in these images?
Jumanos The Jumanos lived in the Mountains and Basins Region.
Pueblo Native Americans
Zoom-In: A Mystery Adventure. DIRECTIONS In this adventure you will be shown several “clues” to help you solve the mystery of the “big picture.” Get your.
A Zoom in Inquiry Children at the FSA (Farm Security Administration) Camelback Farms inspect the photographer's camera, Phoenix, Arizona Library of Congress.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Economics Zoom-In Look carefully at the primary source clues. Determine what you see and what questions you might ask to get the “big picture.”
What are American Values?. Hard work calls for good food and plenty of it. The harder we work, the greater the need for nourishing food. This farmer can.
What might primary sources tell us about exploration and trade? Determine what you see and what questions you might ask to get the big picture.
What do you see in this picture?. Have you changed your mind about the picture? Who is in this picture?
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
MAKING ASSUMPTIONS UNDERSTANDING OTHERS. Where does this woman live?
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
The Earliest Americans Native Americans and the New World.
Zoom In Inquiry Daytona Beach, Florida. Bethune-Cookman College. Students using microscopes Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph.
Understanding Goal American flags of the past have similarities and differences to our flag today.
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division
Zoom In Inquiry.
THE GREAT DEPRESSION OF THE 1930’S
Pueblo Native Americans
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division
Populating the Americas
What do we measure?.
Pueblo Native Americans
Jumano (hoo-MAH-nohz) Indians
Pueblo.
Pueblo Native Americans
6X Monday North American Societies
Giving Thanks by Chief Jake Swamp
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division
Tenant Farming and Sharecropping in the Post-Civil War South
American Indian Cultural Regions
Zoom-In Inquiry Lee, R. (1942). Children at the FSA (Farm Security Administration) Camelback Farms inspect the photographer's camera, Phoenix, Arizona. Library.
THE GREAT DEPRESSION OF THE 1930’S
A Native American Cultural Group
Presentation transcript:

Zoom-In Inquiry Using Primary Sources to help focus instruction

How can primary sources help us investigate how early Pueblo cultures met their basic needs?

Describe what you see. Is this a natural formation or man-made?

What is this made of? Where could it be?

What are these used for? Are they a modern invention?

Who do you think uses these? Describe their lifestyle.

Do these buildings look similar to modern buildings? How are the same? How are they different?

Taos Pueblo, New Mexico Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph Collection Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, DC 20540

These are Hornos or ovens. They are used for baking bread. What do you think this tells you about the Pueblo lifestyle? How did the Pueblo get their food?

The Pueblo people often farmed. Crops included cotton, beans, squash and corn.

These are examples of adobe dwellings. How long do you think it would take to build these? How long do you think people lived in these dwellings? After looking at these dwellings, do you think these people were nomadic or not?

The Pueblo met their basic needs with:

food

The Pueblo met their basic needs with: food

The Pueblo met their basic needs with: food shelter

The Pueblo met their basic needs with: food shelter

The Pueblo met their basic needs with: food shelter What else do they need?

Water

Collier, J. (1941). It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope at beautiful New England, Savoy Mountains area near North Adams, Massachusetts. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, FSA/OWI - Black and White Negatives.It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope at beautiful New England, Savoy Mountains area near North Adams, Massachusetts. Curtis, E. (1900). Nunipayo decorating pottery. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Edward S Curtis Collection.Nunipayo decorating pottery. Curtis, E. S. (1905). A Nambe girl. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Edward S Curtis Collection.A Nambe girl. Duckwall, D.T. (c1902). Indian playmates. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs.Indian playmates. Hollem, H. R. (1942). Agricultural. Mexican cotton pickers. Surrounded by the soft white cotton blossoms whose harvesting is essential to America's war effort, this Mexican girl takes a moment's rest from her strenuous picking job. She's one of hundreds of Good Neighbors who gave a helping hand to the farmers near Corpus Christi, Texas, by harvesting the summer. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection.Agricultural. Mexican cotton pickers. Surrounded by the soft white cotton blossoms whose harvesting is essential to America's war effort, this Mexican girl takes a moment's rest from her strenuous picking job. She's one of hundreds of Good Neighbors who gave a helping hand to the farmers near Corpus Christi, Texas, by harvesting the summer.

Horydczak, T. ( ). Corn blossoms. Closeup of corn blossoms I. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Horydczak Collection.Corn blossoms. Closeup of corn blossoms I. Rothstein, A. (1936). Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection.Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Rothstein, A. (1936). Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Library of Congress: American Memory, America from the Great Depression to World War II: Photographs from the FSA and OWI, ca Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Rothstein, A. (1936). Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Rio de Taos in foreground. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs, Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection.Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Rio de Taos in foreground. unknown (1917). Cliff Palace. Library of Congress: Prints & Photographs.Cliff Palace.