Dynamic dialect: Horace Kephart and our Southern Highlanders
Students will read an excerpt from Horace Kephart's Our Southern Highlanders and explore how language and dialect have changed over the years.
A lesson plan for grades 8 and 11–12 English Language Arts and Social Studies
Learning outcomes
Students will:
- describe aspects of Appalachian culture in the early 1900s. Students will analyze ways that language and dialect have changed over the years.
- become acquainted with primary source material through the use of Our Southern Highlanders.
- identify key linguistic elements that were peculiar to Southern Appalachian dialect and early 20th century authors.
- analyze key customs and traits that were unique to the Southern Appalachians.
Teacher planning
Time required for lesson
90 minutes
Materials/resources
- copy of Our Southern Highlanders
- class set of excerpt of pages 84-92 of Our Southern Highlanders by Horace Kephart. (You may also use the online version available at http://www.newrivernotes.com/osh/osh4.htm)
- chalk-board and/or overhead transparencies
Technology resources
An overhead projector & blank transparencies.
Pre-activities
Teachers should become familiar with the information on dialect located on the websites listed and have read the chapter on Bear Hunting from Our Southern Highlanders.
For teachers that are not familiar with IM-lingo go to the following websites:
This is an excellent and scholarly site through PBS and will give the reader an excellent background on Smoky Mountain dialect
http://www.pbs.org/speak/seatosea/americanvarieties/smokies/
This is a list of acronyms commonly used in chat rooms & e-mail
http://www.web-friend.com/help/lingo/chatslang.html
This is a list of common American slang some of the phrases seem dated while others are still in use
http://www.manythings.org/slang/slang1.html
Good contemporary listing of today’s slang
http://www.thesource4ym.com/teenlingo/#top
Activities
- Explain to students that language evolves over time. The teacher should give examples of lingo that was common in her high school years. Then ask the students for a few examples-just a few. Then lead the students into a discussion about how writing has evolved. Discuss the difference between formal and informal writing. Ask students to give one or two examples of writing informally - i.e. a note to a friend vs. an essay. Then discuss Instant Messaging or IM-ing lingo.
- Divide the class into manageable groups of 4-5 students. Each group should select a scribe for the group. Students then will brainstorm IM lingo or terminology. Students should also list common phrases or words that have a peculiar meaning for today’s time but if read by someone 100 years from now might seem confusing.
- Next bring the class back together and discuss the results: a member from each group may write a few of the examples on the board or a transparency.
- Now distribute the excerpts of “Bear Hunt” to the students. Students are to read silently the selection and should underline words they do not understand. Remind students that dialect is often written phonetically.
- Next the students should get back into their groups. Each group should compile a list of 10 words or phrases that were unique to the Southern Appalachians. Next, each group should compile a list of 5 phrases from the author that characterize the writing from that time period.
- Bring the groups back together and discuss the selection.
Assessment
- Students may be evaluated on their class and group participation.
- Grading for group work may be done on an individual basis by having each student write their name on a slip of paper and a 100 beside it. Each time you have to call on a student to get back on task deduct 20 points from the 100. The teacher should mark out 100 and write an 80 for the first infraction and so on down the list.
- Optional closure activity:Have students write a one-two page essay describing and activity using teenage dialect and lingo.
Supplemental information
See background information
Related websites
NC ECHO; This is a portal to an abundant amount of primary source documents and information on museums and collections across the state of North Carolina.
http://ncecho.org/
PBS: http://www.pbs.org/speak/seatosea/americanvarieties/smokies/
Chat room slang:
http://www.web-friend.com/help/lingo/chatslang.html
Many Things
http://www.manythings.org/slang/slang1.html
Teenage Lingo
http://www.thesource4ym.com/teenlingo/#top
Comments
This lesson was created in conjunction with a seminar on Horace Kephart offered by the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching and NC ECHO.
North Carolina Curriculum Alignment
Social Studies (2003)
Grade 8
- Goal 5: The learner will evaluate the impact of political, economic, social, and technological changes on life in North Carolina from 1870 to 1930.
- Objective 5.02: Examine the changing role of educational, religious, and social institutions in the state and analyze their impact.
- Objective 5.04: Identify technological advances, and evaluate their influence on the quality of life in North Carolina.
Grades 11–12 — United States History
- Goal 9: Prosperity and Depression (1919-1939) - The learner will appraise the economic, social, and political changes of the decades of "The Twenties" and "The Thirties."
- Objective 9.02: Analyze the extent of prosperity for different segments of society during this period.
- Objective 9.04: Describe challenges to traditional practices in religion, race, and gender.
English Language Arts (2004)
Grade 11 — English III
- Goal 4: The learner will critically analyze text to gain meaning, develop thematic connections, and synthesize ideas.
- Objective 4.01: Interpret meaning for an audience by:
- examining the functions and the effects of narrative strategies such as plot, conflict, suspense, point of view, characterization, and dialogue.
- interpreting the effect of figures of speech (e.g., personification, oxymoron) and the effect of devices of sound (e.g., alliteration, onomatopoeia).
- analyzing stylistic features such as word choice and links between sense and sound.
- identifying ambiguity, contradiction, irony, parody, and satire.
- demonstrating how literary works reflect the culture that shaped them.
- Objective 4.01: Interpret meaning for an audience by:



