It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Civil Rights Movement. What is the Civil Rights Movement?
Advertisements

AGENDA History Log Standard Bullets 8.2 Notes Key Terms History Log: If you were a teen in the 1960s would you have joined the Civil Rights movement?
Children at the FSA (Farm Security Administration) Camelback Farms inspect the photographer's camera, Phoenix, Arizona Library of Congress Prints and Photographs.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Zoom In Inquiry Earthquake Destruction. Foot of Market Street, showing earthquake upheaval, San Francisco, Cal. digital file from intermediary roll film.
Civil Rights.
Desegregating the Army, Randolph and threat of ‘March on Washington’ 26 July 1948 Exec Orders on desegregating the army and FEP in Fed Govt.
Zoom In Inquiry Old man looking through spyglass Library of Congress Prints and 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.
Fighting Segregation In the mid-1900s, the civil rights movement began to make major progress in correcting the national problem of racial segregation.
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court Social Studies Lesson By Tori Carr Gunston Elementary School 3 rd Grade.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
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.
What might primary sources tell us about the way things were?
Zoom In Inquiry Old man looking through spyglass Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.
Gas ration stamps being printed, Bureau of Engraving & Printing Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress Zoom In Inquiry.
Zoom-In: Boxer Rebellion Directions: Keeping in mind the idea that “ Photographs offer a perspective of an event and its impact on history, ” examine the.
Neck chamers for the artillery. A battery commander telescope expert checking its azimuth circle. Fine instruments are as necessary a part of production.
Zoom In Inquiry Parks, G. (1943). Daytona Beach, Florida. Bethune-Cookman College. Students using microscopes. Library of Congress: Prints and Photographs.
Zoom In Inquiry Examine primary source clues carefully. Determine what you see and what questions you might ask to “get the big picture.”
Examine the primary source clues and think about what you see. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Theodor Horydczak Collection (reproduction.
Background Personalities in the Case ArgumentsThe Facts Constitutional Precedents The Aftermath $200 $400 $600 $800 $200 $400 $600 $800 $200 $400 $600.
Sailors looking at paintings by Thomas Benton at the fine arts building. This is a part of the "Long Voyage Home" exhibit. San Diego, California Library.
Zoom-In Inquiry Draw conclusions during a careful examination of a single primary source image. Assayers, created and published between 1880 and 1910.
Gas ration stamps being printed, Bureau of Engraving & Printing Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress 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.
The Civil Rights Era 1954 – 1975 Objectives: Why efforts to gain civil rights created an effective movement for change How the Civil Rights movement led.
What do you think is going on here? What do you think this is?
Zoom In Inquiry Native American Food What might we learn about Native Americans? Look at clues, and use them to figure out what is happening in the picture.
Zoom In Inquiry Daytona Beach, Florida. Bethune-Cookman College. Students using microscopes Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph.
Zoom In Inquiry Uncle Sam Recruiting Poster Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.
Look at this primary source image piece by piece. Answer the questions you see on each slide.
Zoom In-- Virginia History. Tell what you see and what questions will you ask to get the big picture? What might primary resources tell us about Virginia.
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.
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.
Zoom In Inquiry Examine primary source clues carefully. Determine what you see and what questions you might ask to “get the big picture”.
Children at the FSA (Farm Security Administration) Camelback Farms inspect the photographer's camera, Phoenix, Arizona Library of Congress Prints and Photographs.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Zoom-In on Rules. What do this image tell us about rules and government? Examine the painting carefully. Determine what you see and what questions you.
It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry.
Zoom In Inquiry Parks, G. (1943). Daytona Beach, Florida. Bethune-Cookman College. Students using microscopes. Library of Congress: Prints and Photographs.
What might primary sources tell us about the way things were?
Zoom In Inquiry “I Spy” Geometry in Primary Sources.
Irresistible Invitations to Thinking Rhonda Bondie Fordham University
“THE BROWN DECISION” By Christina Adams. 7 year old Linda Brown was not permitted to attend an all white school near her home. Her family sued and lost.
Zoom In Inquiry Daytona Beach, Florida. Bethune-Cookman College. Students using microscopes Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph.
Chapter 23 Review US Civil Rights Movement
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS.
What does primary source analysis tell us about history?
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division
Zoom In Inquiry.
Remember the Supreme Court Interprets and Reviews the Law
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division
The Civil Rights Movement
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS.
Civil Rights Movement Notes #1: Reconstruction at Last?
Zoom-In Inquiry Students should have prior knowledge of the
Zoom-In: Boxer Rebellion
You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question.
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division
Follow Up Answer “Analysis Questions” #’s 9-13 on pg. 15 or your workbook. Skip question 12.
Tenant Farming and Sharecropping in the Post-Civil War South
Focus Question: What role did the federal government play in the Civil Rights Movement? Do Now: Answer questions 1-2 on today’s handout.
Zoom-In Inquiry Lee, R. (1942). Children at the FSA (Farm Security Administration) Camelback Farms inspect the photographer's camera, Phoenix, Arizona. Library.
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS.
Presentation transcript:

It costs a dime to look through this Bausch and Lomb high power telescope Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Zoom In Inquiry

What might we learn about American history from primary sources? Determine what you see and what questions you might ask to get the big picture.

Describe what you see in this image.

What new things do you see?

Make a hypothesis about what is happening in this picture.

Does this image represent the Reconstruction & Industrialization period or the Post War period?

Post War How do we know this image is from the Post War time period? List specific evidence that you see.

Click to show some answers. What other evidence do you see? The Magazine Date The style of dress of the men. The Vietnam War was in the Post War Period The “March on Washington” (part of the Civil Rights Movement) was in the Post War Period Ralph Abernathy was a leader in the Civil Rights Movement during the Post War Period.

Who might these men be and why might they be marching?

Unkown (1963). Life Magazine, September 6, Library of Congress: Exhibitions: “With an Even hand” Brown v. Board at Fifty.Life Magazine, September 6, 1963Exhibitions: “With an Even hand” Brown v. Board at Fifty.

What is the “big picture?” How does the interaction of cultures lead to change?

Examine these primary sources to determine how they help us further understand how minority groups helped shape the life of Post War America. Green, W. C. (1961). [Willie Mays, standing, with his arm around Roy Campanella]. Library of Congress: American Memory, African American Odyssey.[Willie Mays, standing, with his arm around Roy Campanella]. African American Odyssey Little Richard (1950). “Here’s Little Richard.” Library of Congress: Exhibitions, John Bull & Uncle Sam: Four Centuries of British-American Relations.“Here’s Little Richard.” John Bull & Uncle Sam: Four Centuries of British-American Relations New York World-Telegram and Sun Photograph Collection. (1954). “George E.C. Hayes, Thurgood Marshall, and James Nabrit, congratulating each other, following Supreme Court decision declaring segregation unconstitutional, 1954.” Library of Congress: American Memory, African American Odyssey.“George E.C. Hayes, Thurgood Marshall, and James Nabrit, congratulating each other, following Supreme Court decision declaring segregation unconstitutional, 1954.”African American Odyssey