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

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Related pages

  • Intrigue of the Past: Teach your students about North Carolina's fascinating past. This edition contains lesson plans about the fundamental concepts, processes, and issues of archaeology, as well as essays for the teacher with detailed information about four periods in North Carolina's ancient history.
  • Archaeological sites open to the public: A listing of field trip opportunities focusing on Native Americans as well as colonial times in North Carolina. Organized by county.
  • 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.

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Learning outcomes

  • Students will learn more about the experience of soldiers during the Civil War.
  • Students will read and evaluate a primary source and identify perspective and bias.
  • Students will express what they know about the Civil War in a point-of-view writing exercise.

Teacher planning

Time required for lesson

1 day

Technology resources

Internet access and computer lab (or copies of the primary source document)

Pre-activities

This lesson should coincide with students’ study of the Civil War.

Activities

  1. Have every student read the “Diary of a Tar Heel Confederate Soldier.”
  2. While they are reading ask students to complete the Primary Source Analysis Sheet.
  3. After students have completed the Analysis Sheet, have them share their answers first in pairs and then with the whole class Read, Pair, Share.
  4. Next hand out the RAFT assignment. Allow students to select their own role, audience, format, and topic and to brainstorm on the handout before writing their final assignment on un-lined white paper this could be done in a word processing document or by hand.
  5. If students have additional time, they may add illustrations.

Assessment

Assess students based on the completion of the Analysis Sheet and the RAFT assignment.

Supplemental information

There are many additional Civil War diaries available online through the Documenting the American South site that students may read.

Comments

This lesson could also be used in high school history classes.

North Carolina Curriculum Alignment

Social Studies (2003)

Grade 8

  • Goal 4: The learner will examine the causes, course, and character of the Civil War and Reconstruction, and their impact on North Carolina and the nation.
    • Objective 4.02: Describe the political and military developments of the Civil War and analyze their effect on the outcome of the war.
    • Objective 4.04: Evaluate the importance of the roles played by individuals at the state and national levels during the Civil War and Reconstruction Period.