LEARN NC

K–12 teaching and learning · from the UNC School of Education

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Related pages

  • Levine Museum of the New South: This museum shows the diverse history of the South since the Civil War, with a focus on Charlotte and the surrounding Carolina Piedmont.
  • North Carolina Women and the Progressive Movement: This lesson includes primary sources from Documenting the American South specifically related to North Carolina women involved in reform movements characteristic of the Progressive era. For the most part, these documents detail women's work in education-related reform and describe the creation of schools for women in the state. They also demonstrate that, as was true in the rest of the nation, the progressive, female reformers of N.C. were segregated based on race and socio-economic status.
  • Women's history: LEARN NC has selected several resources from our collections to help your students learn about the women's history. Find lesson plans, websites, and articles to help your students learn about the achievements and experiences of women.

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Learning outcomes

Students will:

  • learn about the southern, female perspective regarding the Civil War, especially their experiences on the home front.
  • gain an understanding about perspective and point-of-view in historical accounts.

Teacher planning

Time required for lesson

1 day

Technology resources

Internet access, computer lab (or individual copies of primary source documents)

Pre-activities

Have students read a brief introduction to First Person Narratives.

Activities

Group 1. Reads excerpts of Eliza Frances Andrews The War-Time Journal of a Georgia Girl and Learn More: Summary of this Title (pp. 19–21, 29–35).

Group 2. Reads excerpts of Dolly Lunt Burge: A Woman’s Wartime Journal from November 19, 1864. This is a quick read and the entire section can be skimmed rather easily (p. 20–32).

Have students complete half of the compare/contrast sheet (Word), then organize students with a partner to complete the handout. Note: some portions of the handout require students to search various portions of the documents including the cover pages, illustrations, and author’s notes.

Assessment

Assess students based on the completion of the handout and participation in a class discussion that focuses on the texts.

Supplemental information

Extensions:

  • Compare the women’s accounts to the textbook or another secondary source.
  • Also, students could compare these to a male perspective like that of George Washington Baker.

North Carolina Curriculum Alignment

Social Studies (2003)

Grades 11–12 — United States History

  • Goal 3: Crisis, Civil War, and Reconstruction (1848-1877) - The learner will analyze the issues that led to the Civil War, the effects of the war, and the impact of Reconstruction on the nation.
    • Objective 3.03: Identify political and military turning points of the Civil War and assess their significance to the outcome of the conflict.