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1 5 th Grade Social Studies Unit Based on Ohio’s Model Competency-Based Program Chuck Helmandollar, Elaine Koenig, and Mistie Manicho
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2 American Heritageslide 3 –Activitiesslides 4-6 –Websitesslide 7 People in Societiesslide 8 –Activitiesslide 9-11 –Websitesslide 12 World Interactionsslide 13 –Activitiesslide 14-17 –Websitesslide 18-19 Decision Making and Resourcesslide 20 –Activitiesslides 21-23 –Websitesslide 24 Democratic Processslide 25 –Activitiesslides 26-28 –Websitesslide 29 Citizenship Rights and Responsibilitiesslide 30 –Activitiesslides 31-33 –Websitesslide 34 Science, Technology, and Societyslide 35 –Activitiesslides 36-37 –Websitesslide 38
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3 American Heritage
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4 Activities The students will use the World Wide Web to research Civil War Generals and the contributions they made to the Civil War and its impact on the United States. Students will select one Union and one Confederate General to research. A 10- minute oral report on the information found will be presented to the class. The students will read Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe in order to gain an awareness of “the times” in which the Underground Railroad was in operation
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5 Activities (Continued) Students will browse “The Civil War Interactive Cookbook” web site and see which recipes are still being used today. Students will write a report describing if and how technology has changed the way the recipes are prepared today. Students will volunteer to make one of the recipes and bring it in and share with the class. The teacher will read “Read Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt” by D. Hopkinson and “Follow the Drinking Gourd” by J. Winter aloud to the class so they may see how ordinary people influenced history. Students will then design their own quilt or create their own song that could also be used to give the route to the underground railroad
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6 Activities (Continued) Students will browse “The Civil War Interactive Cookbook” web site and see which recipes are still being used today. Students will write a report describing if and how technology has changed the way the recipes are prepared today. Students will volunteer to make one of the recipes and bring it in and share with the class.
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7 Websites http://www.cwc.lsu.edu/cwc/links/links9.htm http://members.aol.com/teachpdlaw/civilwar.htm http://www.bragi.com/classics/s/hbs1811/utomc01.shtml http://www.civilwarinteractive.com/cookbook.htm www.historyplace.com/civilwar/
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8 People In Societies
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9 Activities The students will research different ethnic groups living in the U.S. at the time of the Civil War and how they contributed to the war effort. The students will read A House Divided by Kathy Dowd. They will then do the questions concerning the play/story that is included. They will discuss how and why this or any family can have a differences of opinions concerning the Civil War and how this play visually represents this.
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10 Activities (Continued) The students will read, then write a summary of each of the following selections. Afterward a class discussion on the viewpoints of slavery during the war. A Pro-Slavery Argument (1850) by Eric L. McKitrick, ed., Slavery Defended- The Views of the Old South. NJ, Printice Hall Inc., 1963. pp. 34-50. Frederick Douglass Speech on July 4, 1852 from Diane Ravitch, ed., The American Reader- Words That Moved A Nation., pp. 114-118.
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11 Activities (Continued) The students will compare the war as it was fought in the East with the way the war was fought in the American West. The students will identify and summarize the different major religions in the U.S. at the time of the Civil War.
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12 Websites http://curry.edschool.virginia.edu/curry/class/edis/ 590s4/Dowd/A_divi~1.htmhttp://curry.edschool.virginia.edu/curry/class/edis/ 590s4/Dowd/A_divi~1.htm http://www.cwc.lsu.edu/cwc/links/links10.htm - ethnichttp://www.cwc.lsu.edu/cwc/links/links10.htm - ethnic http://www.civilwar.com/ http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/neh.html http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/
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13 World Interaction
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14 Activities The students will use map skill to identify major cities during the Civil War when given latitudes and longitudes (Worksheet). The students will use various map skills and other information to track troop movement/patterns (both Confederate and Union) during the Civil War. Students will be placed into groups. Each group will draw troop movement on a map using a color scheme or other schemes they can come up. The teacher will select a map or two and that group will be asked to come up and describe their map and tell about the troop movement.
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15 Activities (Continued) The students will use map skill to determine which states were part of the Union and which states were part of the Confederacy. The students will use map skills to identify free states that stayed in the Union, which slave states that stayed in the Union, slave states that left the Union, and Territories.
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16 Activities (Continued) The students will use map skills and Civil War Battle maps to determine the unique characteristics of Sherman’s command. The students will use maps skills and a classroom map to locate the Mississippi River and determine how many miles of the Mississippi flow through the former Confederate states.
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17 Activities (Continued) Using maps, atlas, etc. take a look at the eastern coastline. Which side of the war – the North or the South –do you think had the most shipyards and seaports? What difference do you think this made in the war? Write a paragraph that answers these questions.
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18 Websites United States Thematic Maps - Agriculture http://oseda.missouri.edu/graphics/us/agric/index0.html Maps on Demand (U.S.) http://rockyweb.cr.usgs.gov/mod/index.html Topographical Maps (U.S.) http://mcmcweb.er.usgs.gov/topomaps/ National Forest and Grassland Maps (U.S.) http://rockyweb.cr.usgs.gov/forestservice/
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19 Websites (Continued) Relief Map (U.S.) http://www.nationalatlas.gov/relief.html www.randmcnally.com www.nationalgeographic.com/maps http://www.yourchildlearns.com/megamaps.htm http://atlas.dhs.org/RealWorld/Applicatio/WorldAtlas http://worldatlas.com/aatlas/world.htm
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20 Decision Making and Resources
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21 Activities The students will use the internet to research the reasons why the South chose to succeed from the U.S and the process of succession. The students will use the internet research and write a paper comparing and contrasting the lives of Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis before, during and after the Civil War.
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22 Activities (Continued) The students will use maps and resources to locate and map the natural resources and industries of the North and South. The students will research, then write a paper analyzing the economic differences between the North and South and the role these differences played during the war.
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23 Activities (Continued) Splitting the class into 2 groups, one group will research the Union generals and the other group will research the Confederate generals. After the research is completed they will then debate the effectiveness and leadership of these people and their contributions to the war.
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24 Websites http://sunsite.utk.edu/civil-war/generals.html http://www.bartleby.com/people/LincolnA.html http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~pjdavis/jdp.htm http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cwphtml/cwphome.html http://smplanet.com/civilwar/civilwar.html
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25 Democratic Processes
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26 Activities The students will use a map to follow the states in order of their secession from the United States leading to the Civil War. Students will watch a film, Abraham and Mary Lincoln: A House Divided. Students will discuss why their house was divided and how this effected their marriage and their families.
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27 Activities (Continued) Students will choose a general from either army that they feel had a major impact on the political activities of the war. They will use a variety of resources and research and write about the general. Students will answer questions to a worksheet about the branches of the U.S government during this time. Questions are about the major political issues among the citizens of the North and South, they may use the internet and their textbooks to find the answers.
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28 Activities (Continued) Students will use a Venn diagram to compare and contrast the different characteristics of the government that was taking place in the Union and Confederates. Explaining which type of government or democracy was taking place.
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29 Websites http://www.womenandthecivilwar.org http://www.americancivilwar.com/women/ib.html http://www.confederate.net http://www.nava.gov/publications/prologue/franklin.htm http://members.tripod.com/~greatamerican.storg/gr0300 0.htmhttp://members.tripod.com/~greatamerican.storg/gr0300 0.htm
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30 Citizenship Rights and Responsibilities
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31 Activities Students will use the internet or other source to gather information from all three perspectives, a Union soldier, a Confederate soldier and a southern slave. Next students will be assigned one perspective and will debate that viewpoint and try to convince the other students the importance of their point of view of the war
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32 Activities (Continued) From the knowledge acquired on the Civil War, as a class a T-chart will be used with one side labeled The Union, and the other The Confederates; students will brainstorm ideas and ways of how these conflicts between the North and South could have been resolved without going to war in a fair and justice process. Students will explore the rights or no rights the slaves had during the war and their impact and role on the war in a class discussion.
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33 Activities (Continued) Students will write a brief description and impact of the Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation. Students will research and choose one woman who made a difference during the Civil War and write a report
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34 Websites http://www.richmond.edu/~ed344/webquests/civilwar/w ebthecivir.htmhttp://www.richmond.edu/~ed344/webquests/civilwar/w ebthecivir.htm http://www.abrahamlincoln.cc http://www.homepages.dsu.edu/jankej/civilwar/civilwar. htmhttp://www.homepages.dsu.edu/jankej/civilwar/civilwar. htm http://sunsite.utk.edu/civil-war/generals.html http://www.dsu.edu/~jankej/civilwar.html
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35 Science, Technology, and Society
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36 Activities Students will add to the classroom web page an area for the Civil War and post their projects to it. Students will cruise the internet and look at historical pictures taken during the Civil War. Students will use the internet to research what forms of media existed during the Civil War and try to find actually examples (i.e. Newspapers). Class will discuss the differences of media used during the Civil War and that of today.
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37 Activities (Continued) Students will use the internet to research artillery used during the Civil War and compare it to artillery used today. Students will use the internet to plan a vacation to learn more about the Civil War (i.e. battle sites, museums, etc). An itinerary and map should be included. Students will take a virtual tour of The Culpeper Museum to learn of its role in the Civil War.
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38 Websites http://www.culpepermuseum.com/ http://www.cwartillery.org/artillery.html http://www.mapquest.com http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cwphtml/cwphome.html http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/vshadow/newspapers.html
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