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

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Related pages

  • Differences Across the Curriculum: Part 1: This set of lessons can be used with "Differences Across the Curriculum: Part 2" as an integrated approach to exploring diversity with eighth graders. The unit will revolve around the use of the drama version of "The Diary of Anne Frank." Students will learn how diversity creates bias which leads to conflict, where students confront their bias and practice tolerance. These parts reflect the four core curricula in an interwoven approach to teaching students to confront their biases, learn tolerance, and infer the impact of these on today's society. This activity, Part 1, is meant to serve as a pre-reading activity to the reading of the play form of "The Diary of Anne Frank."
  • The village farmers: North Carolina sat on a crossroads by AD 1000. Cultural ideas from other places breezed through it and around it: how to decorate pottery, how to orient political and social life, how to honor the dead, how to structure towns.
  • The pottery makers: Archaeologists do a bit of shrugging when asked about the Woodland—that time and lifeway tucked between 1000 BC and AD 1000. Some things they readily understand, but others leave them wondering.

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Learning outcomes

The teacher can use this lesson as a reinforcement tool for students learning their legal duties as citizens versus their civic responsibilities. One of the five legal duties is to attend public school, in most states, until age 16. This lesson serves as an activity to reflect on the historical development of public education in North Carolina by using a primary source from 1869. The selections from the primary source serve as good prompts for questions, essays, and class discussions about the listed objectives. Finally, the discussions regarding public education issues in 1869 can be linked to current events in public education locally, statewide, or nationally, such as local efforts to pass bonds to support the building of new facilities.

Teacher planning

Time required for lesson

30—45 minutes

Materials/resources

Teacher should either use internet connection/projector to display primary source material, or an overhead projector with transparencies.

Students should either have computers with internet access or a copy of the selected pages from the primary source. In addition, students should have a copy of the guided reading.

Pre-activities

Teacher should have taught the lessons on legal duties versus civic responsibilities. Students must know that attending school until age sixteen, in most states, is a legal duty.

Activities

  1. Teacher should first introduce concept of “Superintendent of Public Instruction.” Ask if anyone knows who the local Superintendent is? Ask if anyone can explain his job? Ask if anyone can name the State Superintendent.
  2. Remind students of their legal duty to attend school.
  3. Next, teacher should project cover of primary source onto screen, introducing the report. The purpose of examining this document is to obtain a glimpse into schools of the past.
  4. Discuss the following, as seems appropriate.
    • Date of document.
    • Who is it written to?
    • Who is it from?
    • What is it?
  5. Assignment: First, provide students with access to the document — either hard copy or electronically. Next, do one of the following:
    • Provide students with guided reading and collect answers. This can be either a class work or homework assignment, individually or in teams.
    • Use the guided reading as a tool to facilitate class discussion as you review the document with the class.

Assessment

Teacher may grade guided reading responses.

Supplemental information

Attachments:

Comments

Inspiration for this lesson comes from the numerous complaints students make about the duty to attend school. Hopefully, this will help them to value their opportunity.

North Carolina Curriculum Alignment

Social Studies (2003)

Grade 10 — Economics and Civics

  • Goal 4: The learner will explore active roles as a citizen at the local, state, and national levels of government.
  • Goal 10: The learner will develop, defend, and evaluate positions on issues regarding the personal responsibilities of citizens in the American constitutional democracy.
    • Objective 10.01: Explain the distinction between personal and civic responsibilities and the tensions that may arise between them.
    • Objective 10.03: Evaluate the importance of supporting, nurturing, and educating oneself in the United States society.
    • Objective 10.04: Demonstrate characteristics of effective citizenship.
    • Objective 10.05: Describe examples of recurring public problems and issues.