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

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Related pages

  • The African American experience in NC after Reconstruction: The documents included in this lesson come from The North Carolina Experience collection of Documenting the American South and specifically focus on African Americans and race relations in the early 20th century. The lesson juxtaposes accounts that relate to both the positive improvements of black society and arguments against advancement. Combined, these primary sources and the accompanying lesson plan could be used as a Document Based Question (DBQ) in an AP US history or African American history course.
  • A renaissance of jazz and poetry: The Harlem Renaissance was the birth of a creative plethora in all fields of art for African Americans. The poetry and jazz composed during or inspired by this era naturally complemented each other. Furthermore, many of the themes from the musical and literary worlds are universal and provide a great lesson on how two different works can have a parallel theme.
  • An introduction to slave narratives: Harriet Jacobs's Life of a Slave Girl: This lesson is intended to enhance student knowledge about the life experiences of a slaves in America during the 1800s by using the story of a North Carolina slave woman who eventually escaped.

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Learning outcomes

  1. Students will learn how to identify a primary source from a secondary source.
  2. Students will learn how to analyze a primary source from their own lives and the life of an historical character.
  3. Students will better understand the effects of the institution of slavery on its victims, especially children.

Teacher planning

Time required for lesson

1 day

Materials/resources

  • 2 copies of the primary source analysis handout per student
  • Electronic or text copies of primary sources from Documenting the American South (See websites below).

Technology resources

Internet connection

Pre-activities

Assign students to bring in 3 artifacts from their own childhood. These could include photographs, letters, favorite toys, parent recollections (written), newspaper clippings in which they appeared, prizes, certificates. etc.

Activities

  1. Tell students to keep their objects hidden. Briefly describe the difference between a primary source and a secondary source. Have students complete an Analyzing Primary Sources form.
  2. Next, partner students up. Have partners read each other’s handout describing the primary source. Ask partners to guess the objects; allow for time for sharing and discussion of primary sources from childhood.
  3. Have students write a brief journal entry on their childhood in which they incorporate their primary sources.
  4. Handout copies or provide access to electronic copies of excerpts from the following narratives:
    • Douglass. Chapters I and II (to page 20)
    • Equiano. Volume One, page 5, pages 13–14; Volume One, Chapter Two, pages 45–50
    • Jacobs. Pages 11–12 (to end of line 1); page 14 beginning “Such were the unusually fortunate” to page 15 ending with ”born to be a chattel.”
    • Said. Page 792 beginning “I cannot write my life” to page 793 ending with “Fayd-il.”
    • You may also want to use excerpts from Jacobs (beginning on page 195 “The Flight”) and Douglass (Second Part, Chapter One beginning on page 196 “Escape From Slavery”) to compare and contrast how each planned their escape.
  5. Assign students to read one of the four documents and to complete a primary source analysis form.
  6. Allow students assigned to the same document compare their analysis and to make changes or additions.
  7. As a whole class engage in a discussion about aspects of the students’ childhood and those of slave children.

Assessment

Student completion of primary source analysis forms.

Assign students to address the following questions in a response paper:

  1. Tell how each description of childhood experiences were alike and tell how each differed.
  2. What factors led to the different childhood experiences?
  3. What emotional factors weighed upon enslaved children as they realized their social status?
  4. Why and how do you think young people conformed to the expectations of their imposed servitude?
  5. How did the experiences in the slave narratives differ from your personal recollections of your early childhood years?

Supplemental information

Related websites

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl

Life and Times of Frederick Douglass

The Life of Oloudah Equiano

Autobiography of Omar Bin Said

Comments

None

North Carolina Curriculum Alignment

Social Studies (2003)

Grades 11–12 — African American Studies

  • Goal 1: The learner will assess the influence of geography on the economic, political, and social development of slavery in the United States.
    • Objective 1.03: Assess the impact of the slave trade on Africa and the colonies.