Paper Trail Anonymous (not verified) Wed, 12/17/2008 - 15:32
Description

Tukufu Zuberi of PBS's History Detectives gives tips on how to follow a trail of primary documents to uncover reliable historical information.

Genealogical Research Anonymous (not verified) Wed, 12/17/2008 - 15:26
Description

Tukufu Zuberi of PBS's History Detectives outlines methods for conducting genealogical research and finding primary sources on family history.

Integrating History and Maps Anonymous (not verified) Tue, 08/04/2009 - 15:55
Video Overview
Terri Ruyter and Michele Yokell discuss their experiences with the Becoming Historians TAH Grant project, in which they sought creative ways to help urban New York City students understand the natural landscape traversed by colonists and pioneers.
Video Clip Name
LL_Terri1.mov
LL_Terri3.mov
LL_Terri2.mov
LL_Terri4.mov
Video Clip Title
Mapping Western Expansion
Integrating History and Maps
Mapping Colonial New York
Learning Outside the Classroom
Video Clip Duration
3:45
3:37
1:54
1:46
Transcript Text

We work with a Teaching American History Grant called Becoming Historians. It's working with elementary school kids, and one of the units of study in the New York City curriculum for 5th grade is this idea of westward expansion, and we came up with this—we realized that we had a bit of a stumbling block because when you're talking westward expansion, it's a pretty traditional model and teachers are doing Oregon Trail. And our kids who live in New York City have no conceptual knowledge of what a plain is or a mountain or a mountain pass. They have very little understanding, even, of what happens upriver. So while we were getting ready to do this work around westward expansion and what's out there, we wanted to help the kids make pictures in their minds to really have good empathy and historical imagination of what's going on. We realized we needed to do some foundational work on mapping.

. . . when you're talking westward expansion, it's a pretty traditional model and teachers are doing Oregon Trail. And our kids who live in New York City have no conceptual knowledge of what a plain is or a mountain or a mountain pass.

So I contacted an elementary-school/middle-school teacher at Bank Street College of Education, Sam Brian, who's done a lot of work on geography teaching and young children. And he does this terrain model map and it's a generic model with mountains and valleys and you flood it and you can see how islands are formed from mountains that are connected to the land, but then they become submerged. So the kids can see all this stuff actually happening.

So they're getting that kind of general vocabulary, but then they're also getting specific vocabulary about mountains and peaks and passes and ranges and river valleys and estuaries and all that other kind of language that our children need.

So we had Sam work with us on the terrain models, and then the idea is you go from the terrain model to a map that the children draw, a two-dimensional map the children draw, of the terrain model.

They look at maps of the actual physical world and they trace river routes and they figure out where the Continental Divide is, because you have rivers draining into one ocean or the other, and so there must be something high up in between that's causing the water to flow downhill. So: "Aha! Those must be mountains." So then you draw in the mountains and then you label all the places. So there's a lot of really rich background work that takes place.

And from that point we went into maps of the Oregon Trail, historic maps from 1843 that we found on the Library of Congress website. And so the kids are doing critical map reading because now they have the knowledge to say, “Oh, it's a pass. It's a butte. It's a bluff.” They're reading those labels on the map and it means something to them because they've seen pictures of it and a three-dimensional model of it. Because it's hard for us in the city to take our kids to places that represent these things.

They're reading those labels on the map and it means something to them because they've seen pictures of it and a three-dimensional model of it.

So then we looked at the Oregon Trail maps and talked about those maps and used the NARA forms to analyze the map: Who is the author? What was the purpose? What was happening at the time? And then we took diaries of peoples' westward journeys and traced those journeys along the maps so the kids could start making the connection between, "Oh, on June first, July second, we passed Independence Rock." And on, "We went through Devil's Gate." And all those places are labeled on the maps, so the kids are then tracing the progression of the individual who wrote the diary along the map and trying to get in their head what it's all about.

Rethinking the Oregon Trail

Terri: We had a plan for the content, but it was kind of vague. And then coming out of conversations with teachers and making observations in classrooms and figuring out what resources we could pull together, we—like, my original idea for westward expansion was not to do the Oregon Trail, it was to crack it open and do stuff about black pioneers and Exodusters and stuff, but all the teachers are doing this Oregon Trail thing. So I decided to, like, put my desires aside, and then focus on the Oregon Trail thing to think about: How can we make this a more rich experience? How can we enhance what they're already doing in the classroom, so that they're not, like, tossing the baby out with the bathwater? To start with something totally new, or just going to my workshop and learning about the Exodusters and then filing it away and continuing on with their Oregon Trail stuff.

I mean, that's what—the resources in their classroom are largely Oregon Trail, which is why it's taught. So we use that to retool it and then we brought in this idea of mapping and that came from talking with teachers about what their kids needed and me trying to think about what resources I knew were in the city and how could we make this more engaging, more interesting.

Preventing Learning Fragmentation

We're really working on mapping the curriculum to see how it spirals up, so that you're introducing this idea of a grid maybe in 3rd or 4th grade, and then in 5th grade you're starting to introduce the ideas of latitude and longitude. When you're looking at the Oregon Trail maps, the grid becomes not "A, B, C, 1, 2, 3," it's "degrees north and south" that the kids are actually using to orient themselves on the map.

So it's a way of, you know—they understand the idea of grid, and then they go into the more complicated thing of latitude and longitude. And then we're trying to think about—break it apart. What's on the maps, the historic maps that they're actually using, and then how do we scaffold that so that it aligns with the history curriculum and the geography curriculum so that the kids are not doing the geography unit and then it's, like, done with that, knock that one off the list, let's go to history now.

. . . the kids are not doing the geography unit and then it's, like, done with that, knock that one off the list, let's go to history now.

'Cause Sam's been doing this work since the early mid-90s, I think, and he says that that's the one thing that he's consistently struggling with teachers to get them to do is to make that transition between the work that you do with the terrain models and the imaginary land maps, and then taking it back into social studies and having the teachers actually use it and have the kids apply the information and the ideas that they've gotten from the first part of the work. And so that's really what we're trying to make a little bit more obvious and to make it more articulate.

Michele: To give the teachers the knowledge, the actual content knowledge, to reinforce that because it's not just their field. You know, you have to really study up on it and know what you're teaching and know it in depth so that you actually understand yourself what you're teaching the kids and not be afraid to go a little bit further. We know how to do this very well in the language arts, because that's what New York City has been really focusing on, and understandably. But now it's time to put that focus into history, into geography, and to integrate it.

Terri: The Wildlife Conservation Society has a very cool project happening using historic maps to determine what New York City, Manhattan in particular, looked like in 1609 when Henry Hudson sailed up for the first time.

So Sam came and did the same work with the 4th-grade teachers. Instead of focusing on interior landforms, they focused on coastal landforms. So they thought about peninsulas and coves and bays and the river systems, so that that's all very immediately transferred to New York City and New York State geography, and it leads the kids very nicely into 5th grade. And then they did—they looked at historic maps of early colonial New Amsterdam and New York.

Bringing History Home

Michele: Kids are working in partnerships, we put transparencies over the flat version and then we actually go over where the rivers were, where the bluffs were, where the canyons are, where the coast is, so that they get a three-dimensional view on this flat map of what it was like before the skyscrapers, and also where our school is, where their houses are in relation to this. And then we look at it next to Manhattan now. Like: what’s happening now, what happened then.

Terri: Right. And since you did it on transparency, you can take this—

Michele: Right.

Terri: And lay it on top, and you can see how the shape of Manhattan has changed over time. 'Cause you can see that all the hills that were down on the Lower East Side are flattened and the marshes are filled in and the coastline has changed and the rivers are paved over, and you can see all that stuff on the map.

Michele: Along with the mapping, the idea of taking them on trips that reinforce what they're learning two-dimensionally.

Terri:: There's a living museum along the Hudson River called Philipsburg Manor, and it interprets colonial New York history from an enslaved person's perspective. So we thought of, like, taking the train up along the Hudson. You get to see the width of the Hudson. You see the Palisades on the New Jersey side. You can see that there are hills on the New York side, so that there's stuff you can see to, like, "Oh, right. That's a river. And there's a really long bridge going over that river. A couple of them."

Michelle: And also even when we got there, there are, like, sort of culverts where you see that the—go underneath the sidewalks. I mean, you can actually tell that there was water under there, you know? And when you look at these huge expanses of land, except for Central Park, we don't really have huge expanses of land. So—

Terri: Right. And all our rivers are—all of the rivers that are on these British headquarter maps are all gone.

I think that when you do tie together these 3D models and you actually have them make their own maps and you have them take the trips and then tie in the history that goes with it, it gives a much better experience than just trying to read a standard text. . .

Michele: I think that when you do tie together these 3D models and you actually have them make their own maps and you have them take the trips and then tie in the history that goes with it, it gives a much better experience than just trying to read a standard text, which really is what people failed with. And because of this previous failure, I think teachers shied away. And now we're really giving alternatives to text, which are much better.

Thanksgiving: The Real Backstory

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cartoon, plimoth plantation
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Is there a real first Thanksgiving?

According to resources from the Library of Congress, the Plymouth colonists were latecomers to the scene. The Library's Wise Guide explains that Spanish explorer Francisco Vasquez de Coronado and 1,500 men gave thanks in 1541 in the present-day Texas Panhandle. French Huguenot colonists celebrated in Florida in 1564, and Jamestown settlers gave thanks in 1610—in fact, many actually consider this the first Thanksgiving. Visit the American Memory Learning Page and search for Thanksgiving to gather resources, timelines, and primary source sets on Thanksgiving in American Memory.

Historians at Plimoth Plantation are adamant that the harvest celebration held in 1621, often called the First Thanksgiving, wasn't. Instead, they place the first observance in Massachusetts in mid-July, 1623, after a Day of Humiliation and Fasting, during which these early colonists sought prayerful relief from a series of misfortunes threatening the settlement. (Visit Plimoth Plantation's interactive exercise emphasizing historical thinking: You are the Historian: Investigating the First Thanksgiving—especially excellent for elementary and middle school.)

The National Park Service helps us move us quickly to the indisputable date of 1863 as the establishment of the holiday as an annual event—the date when President Lincoln issued his Thanksgiving Day Proclamation. Technically, his proclamation only affected the District of Columbia and federal employees, but governors throughout the Union followed suit. (Note, however, that the Park Service advocates 1621 as the first Thanksgiving!) Check the White House website during the week of November 22, 2009, to read this year's Presidential Proclamation.

If an actual Pilgrim came to Thanksgiving dinner today, chances are, he'd be stunned!

Backstory with the American History Guys takes a lively look at solid historical evidence about the history of Thanksgiving. The three historians who host this radio program talk among themselves and with guests about how holiday traditions and celebrations have changed since those first days of thanksgiving. As American as Pumpkin Pie: A History of Thanksgiving points out that "when we sit down to Thanksgiving dinner, we think we know what we’re commemorating. But if an actual Pilgrim were to attend your Thanksgiving, chances are he’d be stunned, and a little disgusted, by what he saw."

Listen to historian James McWilliams discussing why the Puritans would have turned up their noses at our traditional Thanksgiving foods, religion scholar Anne Blue Wills explaining the 19th-century origins of our modern holiday, and legendary NFL quarterback Roger Staubach describing what it was like to spend every Thanksgiving on the football field—about a century after the first Thanksgiving Day championship playoff in 1876. Read how the the industrial revolution and large-scale migration and immigration in the 19th-century turned Thanksgiving into a holiday of family homecoming.

Wills's discussion is accompanied by an audio slideshow of primary sources, and you'll find links to a wealth of other primary and secondary materials: the timeline of thanksgiving celebrations from the Library of Congress, an article on the agricultural challenges of Europeans in the New World, a translation of an Iroquois prayer of Thanksgiving, and more.

Check resources on the Clearinghouse site.

On the Clearinghouse site, test yourself with the weekly quiz, Thanksgiving Dinner in 1943, and visit the Ask-a-Historian archive , to find the answer to the question, "At the first Thanksgiving did the Pilgrims/Native Americans eat roasted kernels of corn or popped corn, or was there no corn served in that matter at all?" (Note that our Clearinghouse historian doesn't pinpoint a date!)

And Happy Thanksgiving!

Primary and Secondary Sources through Video

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Historical Thinking video thumbnail
Question

I need a streaming video explaining primary vs. secondary resources. Please help!

Answer

You’ve come to the right place! Here are several high-quality online videos that teach about primary and secondary sources—and historical thinking more broadly—to get you started.

Watch Teachinghistory.org's introductory video on historical thinking to learn about primary sources and strategies for analyzing them.

Historians and educators working through the University of Wisconsin, Whitewater, have created materials on teaching historical thinking, including an introductory video that explores strategies for analyzing historical evidence and learning about the past. The video shows these strategies in action in elementary and middle-school classrooms.

Print Resources

If you are looking for visuals or print materials, why not start by downloading Teachinghistory.org's free historical thinking poster?

Click image to enlarge
Other Resources

Explore Teachinghistory.org for more resources, including a recent blog on Historical Thinking or resources for analyzing or teaching with primary sources.

Or try watching examples of historical thinking or Teaching in Action in classrooms around the country.

Teaching the Cuban Missile Crisis

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Kennedy Khrushchev political cartoon
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The 47th anniversary of the Cuban missile crisis passed with little public notice this year—except for an occasional reference to the U.S.-Iranian nuclear dispute as "the Cuban Missile crisis in slow motion."

Nonetheless, "No event during the Cold War has generated more popular and scholarly attention . . . it has become perhaps the most studied international confrontation of the twentieth century, " according to the editors of the Cuban Missile Crisis 1962 Documents Reader. And no wonder. In October 1962, The United States looked down "the gun barrel of nuclear war," according to Kennedy speechwriter Theodore Sorenson.

In the aftermath of the Cold War, the declassification of top secret records introduced new interpretations.

Since 1987, scholars and archivists have used the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), to obtain, consolidate, and archive documents across the spectrum of Federal agencies about the Cuban missile crisis, events that led up to it, and its aftermath.

Newly declassified records gave new perspectives to four critical areas of analysis: 1) Why the Soviet Union placed missiles in Cuba; 2) why the United States responded as it did; 3) the leadership role of John F. Kennedy during the crisis; and 4) the consequences of the near-miss of nuclear weapons deployment. Newly available records also let historians study the Cuban missile crisis from the point of view of the Soviet Union and Cuba as well as the United States.

Teaching About the Cuban Missile Crisis

The issues are so complex and the ramifications so profound, getting a grasp on the critical points of the Cuban missile crisis focus on diplomatic history, on understanding the situation from the top down. The following resources filter only a few among the many available materials to provide an overview of the issues and main actors.

This simple interactive site from the National Endowment for the Humanities summarizes the situation from the point of view of the Presidential cabinet. It poses the question, "Mr. President, you've been briefed about the presence of medium-range missiles in Cuba." Visitors examine the choices Kennedy and his advisors faced and get a brief analysis of the consequences of each, the opinions of key members of President Kennedy's advisory committee, and an introduction to primary sources—particularly the National Intelligence Estimate, a key briefing document for the advisory committee. It's a helpful site for summarizing the complexities from the viewpoint of the Cabinet.

The massive National Security Archive Documents Reader is the ultimate repository of primary source materials.

The Cuban Missile Crisis 1962 Documents Reader, from the National Security Archive at George Washington University, is extraordinary in the depth and breadth of materials and narrative. It is a research site for teachers and advanced students. Resources include primary source materials, a detailed timeline, and documents and audio files, from both the United States and the Soviet Union charting causes and events of the Crisis.

Equally important, the Documents Reader explains how our understanding of the event continues to change as more documents are declassified or retrieved from a spectrum of agencies who were major players in the flow of information and decision-making in process in 1962. Analytical essays from historians sift through the historiography and recent evidence, discussing how this new evidence has rearranged assumptions and conclusions about the missile crisis. ". . . [M]isinformation, miscalculation, and misjudgment" characterized the decision-making process in Washington, Moscow and Havana," according to then-Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara.

American accounts always left Cuba out of the story; and the film Thirteen Days ignores the Soviet Union as well.

Both the Documents Reader and the U.S. State Department suggest using the blockbuster film Thirteen Days as an analytic tool for students. At the Documents Reader, the essay Turning History on Its Head explains why the film misrepresents actual causes, events, and outcomes of the crisis—a crisis clearly neither begun nor finished during these 13 October days. (In fact, the Soviet Union and the United States continued to negotiate on missile removal and ending the blockade until reaching agreement on November 20.)

The U.S. State Department offers an activity idea, suggesting watching Thirteen Days and comparing the story told by historic documents with the version relayed by Hollywood using the Motion Picture Analysis Worksheet from the National Archives. The U.S. Department of State website for youth also includes a number primary sources on the Cuban missile crisis that can spark classroom discussion.

Primary source documents are readily available.

The PBS American Experience series The Presidents also provides well-selected primary source documents incorporating correspondence circulating among Kennedy, Khrushchev, and Fidel Castro on the Cuban missile crisis.

At the Clearinghouse

Featured website reviews lead you to NSA and the Cuban Missile Crisis, a resource for 100 declassified documents related to Soviet and American involvement in Cuba.

Learn about 19 short video clips where scholars discuss The Cuban Missile Crisis: Considering Its Place in Cold War History.

Explore using Wordle to help your students wend their ways through some of the more complex vocabulary, documents, and issues of the Cuban missile crisis.

Download a quiz from the Clearinghouse archive—Textbook Twisters: Cuban Missile Crisis—and see if you can tell which which country wrote which account of the event in their school textbooks.