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Webinars

Using Primary Sources from the Library of Congress through Distance Learning

Featured speakerS
Tina Heafner

Tina Heafner

President, National Council for the Social Studies
Sarah Westbrook

Sarah Westbrook

Director of Professional Learning, The Right Question Institute

NOTE: There is no recording for this webinar.

Apr 9, 2020
4
MIN READ
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Using Primary Sources from the Library of Congress through Distance Learning

Apr 9, 2020
4
MIN READ
Copied!

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K-5 Social Studies Curriculum

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K–2 integrated ELA and social studies

Key Takeaways

The Importance of Primary Sources

Primary sources should be the key evidence used in the investigations of the social studies classroom. They provide students with the crucial information, viewpoints, and perspectives they need to construct valid arguments and make decisions about the world. Likewise, as we teach the process of collecting sources, their analysis, and use, we are actually teaching the process of inquiry. We are training students to look more deeply than the social media post or the knee-jerk reaction.  We are teaching them to question what they see and hear - and seek out proof -  before coming to conclusions.

Only a Piece of the Puzzle

Primary sources are critical - yes - but so are the instructional practices used to select these sources for students and integrate them into social studies curriculum.

In "The Danger of a Single Story," Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie describes the reductive power of  hearing, seeing, and learning a single story. She talks about the stories she grew up with as a Nigerian woman, then the single story that she was reduced to when she attended a university in the United States.

It's important to keep Adichie's reflections in mind as we incorporate primary sources into our curriculum. Are we using those sources to tell a single story? What biases do we hold that shape the selection of those sources? We should ensure that our use of primary sources

  • integrates the history and experiences of diverse cultures and historically underrepresented groups throughout the curriculum, avoiding the tokenism of special months and lessons that can serve to marginalize under-represented groups.
  • investigates the history of discrimination in all its forms as a determining force in shaping historical narratives and practices.
  • incorporates the voices, ideas, images, and perspectives of under-represented groups in the primary and secondary sources used during student investigations.

The content of our sources also must be aligned with the strategies and practices we use as well.  The use of primary sources should

  • seek to build skills and content knowledge in students from diverse backgrounds.
  • actively engage cultural learning styles and tools.
  • include instructional approaches that mirror the cultural norms of under-represented groups.
  • approach difficult subject matter with sensitivity and awareness.
  • scaffold student learning toward indepedence

Webinar Summary

Thanks to our panelists: Sarah Westbrook (Right Question Insitute), Ann Canning (Teaching With Primary Sources Eastern Region) and Jennifer Hanson (Teaching With Primary Sources Eastern Region). During the webinar, we used resources from the Library of Congress to implement inquiry-based activities with online learning tools.  

The Importance of Primary Sources

Primary sources should be the key evidence used in the investigations of the social studies classroom. They provide students with the crucial information, viewpoints, and perspectives they need to construct valid arguments and make decisions about the world. Likewise, as we teach the process of collecting sources, their analysis, and use, we are actually teaching the process of inquiry. We are training students to look more deeply than the social media post or the knee-jerk reaction.  We are teaching them to question what they see and hear - and seek out proof -  before coming to conclusions.

Only a Piece of the Puzzle

Primary sources are critical - yes - but so are the instructional practices used to select these sources for students and integrate them into social studies curriculum.

In "The Danger of a Single Story," Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie describes the reductive power of  hearing, seeing, and learning a single story. She talks about the stories she grew up with as a Nigerian woman, then the single story that she was reduced to when she attended a university in the United States.

It's important to keep Adichie's reflections in mind as we incorporate primary sources into our curriculum. Are we using those sources to tell a single story? What biases do we hold that shape the selection of those sources? We should ensure that our use of primary sources

  • integrates the history and experiences of diverse cultures and historically underrepresented groups throughout the curriculum, avoiding the tokenism of special months and lessons that can serve to marginalize under-represented groups.
  • investigates the history of discrimination in all its forms as a determining force in shaping historical narratives and practices.
  • incorporates the voices, ideas, images, and perspectives of under-represented groups in the primary and secondary sources used during student investigations.

The content of our sources also must be aligned with the strategies and practices we use as well.  The use of primary sources should

  • seek to build skills and content knowledge in students from diverse backgrounds.
  • actively engage cultural learning styles and tools.
  • include instructional approaches that mirror the cultural norms of under-represented groups.
  • approach difficult subject matter with sensitivity and awareness.
  • scaffold student learning toward indepedence

Webinar Summary

Thanks to our panelists: Sarah Westbrook (Right Question Insitute), Ann Canning (Teaching With Primary Sources Eastern Region) and Jennifer Hanson (Teaching With Primary Sources Eastern Region). During the webinar, we used resources from the Library of Congress to implement inquiry-based activities with online learning tools.  

Watch the recording

Resources

Elementary Distance Learning

inquirED's Together When Apart

  • Weekly inquiries for Early, Intermediate, and Middle School students. Releasing one a week for 10 weeks. All centered on the compelling question: How can we stay together when we're apart?

Zoom IN Inquiry: Primary Source Analysis with Google Form

  • A direct link to the Google Form used in Jennifer's activity.

"School Begins" Image

  • High-resolution version of the image used in Jennifer's activity.

Teachers Guide to Creating a Zoom IN with Google Forms

  • A handy guide to creating a Zoom IN!

TPS Primary Source Analysis Tool

  • A PDF version of the Primary Source Analysis Tool

TPS Primary Source Analysis Tool

  • An online version of the Primary Source Analysis Tool

TPS Regional Programs

  • The TPS Regional program promotes the widespread, sustained and effective use of primary sources from the Library of Congress in K-12 classrooms by increasing access to the TPS program

TPS Eastern Region

  • The Teaching with Primary Sources (TPS) Eastern Region program at Waynesburg University supports K-12 education by offering free professional development and resources to educators in Southwestern Pennsylvania and throughout the Eastern Region.

TPS Midwest Region

  • The TPS Midwest Region at Illinois State University covers 17 states situated in the center of the United States, from Minnesota to Louisiana.\

TPS Western Region

  • The TPS Western Regional, coordinated by Metropolitan State University of Denver, encompasses 16 western states including Alaska and Hawaii.  States in the Western Region include:

TPS Civics Interactive Student APPS

  • Each project is intended to provide young people with engaging and meaningful opportunities to learn about Congress and civic participation using primary sources from the Library’s online collections

TPS Teachers Network

  • Become a member and join the community of support!

Resources from Sarah Westbrook's Activity

The Right Question Institute's Resource Center

  • Find everything you need to use the QFT in class tomorrow!

Access the QFT Padlet Activity

  • Feel free to take and use this Padlet activity as a template. Simply log in or create a free Padlet account and click the “Remake” button at the top right of your screen. Remember to clearly cite The Right Question Institute as the source of the QFT!

Day of Remembrance: Photographs of Japanese American Internment During World War II

  • LOC blog post that links resources throughout Library collections

Japanese American Internment

  • A primary source set on Japanese American internment with detailed teacher’s guide

Ansel Adams Collection

  • Ansel Adams's Photographs of Japanese-American Internment at Manzanar relocation center

Women Come To the Front -  Dorothea Lange

  • Dorothea Lange (1895-1965) documented the change on the homefront, especially among ethnic groups and workers uprooted by the war.

Japanese-American Internment Camp Newspapers, 1942 to 1946

  • Produced by the Japanese-Americans interned at assembly centers and relocation centers around the country during World War II, these newspapers provide a unique look into the daily lives of the people who were held in these camps.

Resources from Tina Heafner's Activity

Primary Source Set for Women’s Suffrage

  • Teacher’s Guide for historical context, teaching suggestions, links to online resources about Women's Suffrage.

Idea Book for Educators: Women’s Suffrage

  • The current issue features select primary sources from The Library of Congress that are related to the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States as well as the campaign for women’s voting rights.

Indians of North America--Women--1910-1920.

  • Image collection for Indians of North America

Iroquois Indians--Women--1910-1920.

  • Image collection for Iroquois Women

Joseph Ferdinand Keppler

  • Image collection for Joseph Ferdinand Keppler

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inquirED supports teachers with high-quality instructional materials that make joyful, rigorous, and transferable learning possible for every student. Inkwell, our integrated core ELA and social studies elementary curriculum, brings ELA and social studies together into one coherent instructional block that builds deeper knowledge, comprehension, and literacy skills. Inquiry Journeys, our K–5 social studies curriculum, is used across the country to help students develop the deep content knowledge and inquiry skills essential for a thriving democracy,

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