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- Helping Your Child Learn History
- with activities for children aged 4
through 11
- By Elaine Wrisley Reed
- Edited by Jacquelyn Zimmermann
-
- Contents
-
- Introduction
- History Education Begins at Home
- Children and History
- Parents Make a Difference
- History Is a Habit
- Enjoying Your Child and History
- The Basics of History
- The Meanings of History
- A New Look at History
- Asking Questions
- Activities: History as Story
- What's the Story?
- Our Town
- History on the Go
- What's News?
- History Lives
- Cooking Up History
- Rub Against History
- Activities: History as Time
- Time Marches On
- Weave a Web
- Put Time in a Bottle
- Quill Pens & Berry Ink
- School Days
- Time To Celebrate
- The Past Anew
- Appendices
- Parents and the Schools
- Resources
- Local and National Resources
- Acknowledgments
-
- Introduction
-
-
- Imagine waking up one morning to find out that you have no
- memory! You are not able to remember who you are or what
- happened in your life, yesterday or the day before that.
You
- are unable to tell your children from total strangers, you
- cannot communicate with people because you no longer know
how
- to greet them, or understand their conversation. You don't
- remember what "the election," "war,"
or "the movies" mean.
- Lack of historical memory is parallel to this loss of
- individual memory. The link on which we depend every day
- between the past and present would be lost if we had no
memory
- of our history. And we would miss a great source of
enjoyment
- that comes from piecing together the story of our past.
- Today American educators are working to promote the study
- of history in the schools and at home. Knowledge of our
history
- enables us to understand our nation's traditions, its
- conflicts, and its central ideas and values. Knowledge of
world
- history enables us to understand other cultures.
- We hope to encourage children to love history and to enjoy
- learning about it. This booklet is a tool you can use to
- stimulate your children's active involvement in the
history
- that surrounds them every day. It includes:
- * Basic information about history, and approaches to
- enjoying history with your children, aged 4-11;
- * History activities that you and your children can do--at
- home, in your community, and out of town--for no or little
- cost; and
- * History resources in your community and nationally, in
- bookstores, and libraries.
-
- History Education Begins at Home
-
- Children and History
-
-
- As parents we are in the best position to encourage our
- children's natural interest in history. It is to us they
- address their first historical questions: "Where did
I come
- from?" and "Was I always here?" These two
questions contain
- the two main meanings of "history": it is the
story of people
- and events, and it is the record of times past.
- Now is the time to bring out the historical evidence and
- to share family stories with your child. Birth and
adoption
- certificates, immunization records, first pieces of your
- child's writing and art, as well as photographs all count
as
- historical sources that tell the story of your child.
- The stories you tell and read to your children, or make up
- with them, are part of their cultural heritage and
reinforce
- the two basic parts of history: "Once upon a time,
and long
- ago."
-
- Parents Make a Difference
-
-
- Your child is born into history. She has no memory of it,
- yet she finds herself in the middle of a story that began
- before she became one of its characters. She also wants to
have
- a place in it.
- As parents we can prepare our children to achieve the
- lifelong task of finding their place in history by helping
them
- to learn what shaped the world into which they were born.
- Without information about their history, children don't
"get" a
- lot of what they hear and see around them.
- Your attitude about history can also make a difference for
- your child. Showing your interest in history--your belief
that
- knowing history makes a difference for your
life--encourages
- your child's own interest.
- Many parents say they love history. If you are one of them
- you can share your particular interests in history with
your
- children as well as help them develop their
- own.
- Many other parents say they find history boring. If you
- are among these, try one of the following: start writing
your
- own life story; read the diary of Anne Frank, or the
- autobiography of Frederick Douglass; read the Declaration
of
- Independence, or rent a video about the Civil War. As you
- rediscover history your children may be inspired by your
- interest.
-
- History Is a Habit
-
-
- The activities in this book can help you start doing
- history with your child. You will probably get more ideas
of
- your own. In addition, you can develop some of the
following
- "history habits" that make history important not
only during an
- activity but every day.
-
- History Habits for Parents
-
- Habits are activities we do on a regular basis. We acquire
- habits by choosing to make them a part of our life. It is
worth
- the time and effort to develop good habits because they
enhance
- our well-being. We suggest the following history habits to
- enrich your life experience and your children's.
- Share family history with your children, particularly your
- memories. Help your own parents and other relatives know
your
- children and talk with them about family stories.
- Participate in your community by voting and helping to
- make changes in areas that interest you. Encourage your
- children to vote in school elections, to present
themselves as
- candidates, and gain knowledge of history and the values
and
- behaviors that are the basis of their citizenship.
-
-
- Read newspapers and news magazines, and watch television
- news programs to maintain an informed judgment about the
world.
- Talk about current events and your ideas about them with
your
- children and other adults, and explore different points of
- view. Check the encyclopedia or your local library for
- additional historical information.
- Watch television programs about important historical
- topics with your family, and encourage conversation about
the
- program as you watch. Get library books on the same topic
and
- learn more about it. Check to see if the books and
television
- programs agree on significant issues, and discuss their
- differences.
- Read with your children about people and events that have
- made a difference in the world, and discuss the readings
- together. The list of publications at the end of this book
- serves as a support to you for choosing materials.
- Help children know that the makers of history are real
- people like themselves, who have ideas, work hard, and
- experience failure and success. Introduce them to local
- community leaders in person if possible, and national and
world
- leaders via the media and biographies.
-
-
-
-
- Make globes, maps, and encyclopedias available and use
- every opportunity to refer to them. A reference to Africa
in a
- child's favorite story, or the red, white, and green
stripes on
- a box of spaghetti can be opportunities to learn more
about the
- world.
- Have a collection of great speeches and written documents
- to read from time to time with your child.
- Your own involvement in history, in any of the forms
- referred to in this book, is a good habit you can pass on
to
- your children.
-
- Enjoying Your Child and History
-
- We have intentions of good fun as we plan any activity
- with our children. We also want them to learn something
from
- most activities. They probably would say they want to have
fun
- and learn something new too. But sometimes the difference
in
- abilities between us and them, or the demands of time, end
up
- leaving us disappointed. Keeping the following in mind can
help
- keep your time together fun and productive:
- You don't have to know all the facts or fully understand
- history to help your children learn. Your willingness to
learn
- with them--to read, to ask questions, to search, and to
make
- mistakes--is the most important gift you can bring to the
- process. By viewing their mistakes as sources of
information
- for future efforts, your children gain confidence to
continue
- learning.
- Conversation gets you past the difficult moments. Keeping
- open the communication between you and your children, and
- encouraging continued discussion no matter how off the
mark
- your children may seem, tells them you take them seriously
and
- value their efforts to learn. The ability to have a
- conversation with your children profoundly affects what
and how
- they learn.
-
-
- Children have their own ideas and interests. By letting
- them choose activities accordingly, you let them know
their
- ideas and interests are valuable. Often they will want to
teach
- you as a way to use what they know. Share their interests
and
- encourage them to learn more.
- Make the most of everyday opportunities to do history:
- visits from grandparents, reading books, telling stories,
- holidays, elections, symbols like the flag, the national
anthem
- before sporting events, pictures in newspapers and
magazines,
- visits to museums. If your child asks about a person in a
- painting, stop to find out who it is. Keep asking:
"What does
- this mean? How do I know?"
- Choose your activities well. The activities in this
- booklet are for children aged 4-11. Each of the activities
can
- be adapted to a child of any age and ability level. Even a
- preschooler can "read" a newspaper with your
help, for a short
- period of time. While an activity that is too difficult
will
- frustrate your child, an activity that is too easy will
lose
- his interest. Challenges bring feelings of accomplishment.
- Have a goal. When you choose or begin an activity you may
- not have a clear idea of where it's going. But keep in
mind
- that the purpose of doing the activities in this book is
to
- learn something about history. The first section of this
book,
- the introduction to each activity, and the question boxes
can
- help you. As you complete each activity discuss with your
child
- what you learned together. Making bread is one thing,
knowing
- that bread has historical meaning is another. Achieving a
goal
- for an activity also helps your child sense the pleasure
of a
- completed project.
-
-
- The Basics of History
-
- The Meanings of History
-
-
- If you look for the meaning of "history" in the
dictionary
- you may be surprised to find that history is not simply
the
- past itself. The first meaning of history is "tale,
story," and
- the second meaning is "a chronological record of
significant
- past events." The opening of tales for
children--"Once upon a
- time"--captures both the story and time nature of
history.
- When we study history we are involved in a branch of
- knowledge that records and explains past events. Many
would say
- that history is not just one branch of knowledge among
others,
- but that it is the most essential one because it is the
- complete story of human endeavor. It happens that the word
- "history" comes from the Greek "to
know."
- The activities in this book are organized according to the
- two meanings of history as story and time in order to help
you
- explore these meanings with your child.
-
- The Story in History
-
-
- The work of doing history is to consider people and events
- that are no longer in our presence. Unlike doing science,
we do
- history without being able to observe behavior and its
results.
- This work is fun when we make the past meaningful. We do
- this by weaving together various pieces of information
about
- the past. In doing this we create a pattern that gives
shape to
- "just a bunch of facts." Doing history is a way
of bringing the
- past to life, in the best tradition of the storyteller.
- But not just any story will do. While there are many
- possible tales of the same event, good history is based on
- evidence and several perspectives.
- The history with which we are most familiar is political
- history--the story of wars, peace treaties, and changes of
- government. But anything that has a past has a history.
This
- includes the history of ideas, for example the concept of
- freedom, and cultural history, for example the history of
- music.
- The story of history is interesting to us because it tells
- us about real people who had ideas and beliefs, worked and
- struggled to put them in action, and shaped the present in
- which we find ourselves.
-
- Time in History
-
-
- Human events take place in time, one after the other. It
- is important to learn the sequence of events in order to
trace
- them, reconstruct them, and weave the stories that tell of
- their connections. Children need to learn the measures of
time,
- such as year, decade, generation, and century. When they
hear
- "Once upon a time in history" they need to be
able to ask "When
- did that happen?," and to know how to find the
answer.
- Time in history is a kind of relationship. We can look at
- several events that all happened at the same time, and
that
- together tell a story about that period. Or we can look at
the
- development of an idea over time, and learn how and why it
- changed. And we can consider the relationship between the
past
- and the present, or the future and the past (which is
today!).
- The present is the result of choices that people made and
the
- beliefs they held in the past, while the past, in being
retold,
- is in some way remade in the present. The future will be
the
- result of the coming together of several areas developing
- today.
- The main focus of history is the relationship between
- continuity and change, and it is important that our
children
- understand the difference between them. For example, the
- population of the United States has changed dramatically
over
- time with each wave of immigration. With the entry of
these new
- groups into American society, bringing their own ideas,
- beliefs, and cultures, American democracy has continued
and
- grown stronger. It continues to function according to its
- original purpose of safeguarding our basic values of
freedom
- and equality, even as the meanings and effects of these
values
- change.
-
-
- A New Look at History
-
- History is now understood to be more than memorizing names
- and dates. While being able to recall the details of great
- people and events is important, the enjoyment of history
is
- enhanced by engaging in activities and experiencing
history as
- a "story well told."
- Original sources and literature are real experiences.
- Reading the actual words that changed the course of
history,
- and stories that focus on the details of time and place
help
- children know that history is about real people in real
places
- who made real choices that had some real consequences, and
that
- they could have made different choices.
- Less can mean more. "A well-formed mind is better
than a
- well-stuffed mind," says an old proverb. Trying to
learn the
- entire history of the world is not only impossible, it
feels
- too hard and reduces our enthusiasm for history. In-depth
study
- of a few important events gives us a chance to understand
the
- many sides of a story. We can always add new facts.
-
-
- History is hands-on work. Learning history is best done in
- the same way we learn to use a new language, or to play
- basketball: we do it as well as read about it. Doing
history
- means asking questions about historical events and
characters;
- searching our towns for signs of its history; talking with
- others about current events and issues; writing our own
stories
- about the past.
- There is no final word on history. There are good
- storytellers and less good storytellers. And there are
many
- stories. But very rarely does any one storyteller
"get it
- right," or one story say it all. A good student of
history will
- always look for other points of view, knowing that our
- understanding of history changes over time.
- Your children do well to ask "So what?" Much
that we take
- for granted is not so obvious to our children. We should
invite
- them to clear up doubts they have about the reasons for
- remembering certain things, getting facts right, and
collecting
- and judging evidence. At each step, asking "so
what?" helps to
- explain what is important and worth knowing, and to take
the
- next step with confidence.
-
-
- Asking Questions
-
- At the end of each activity in this book, you will find a
- series of questions that can help develop the critical
thinking
- skills children need to participate well in society, learn
- history, and learn from history. The questions help them
know
- the difference between what is real, fantasy, and ideal,
and
- make the activity more
- Critical thinking is judging the value of historical
- evidence; judging claims about what is true or good;
deciding
- what information is important to have; looking at a topic
from
- different points of view; being curious enough to look
further
- into an event or topic; being skeptical enough to look for
more
- than one account of an event or life; and being aware that
our
- vision and thinking are often limited by our biases and
- opinions.
- The following two sections contain a sampling of history
- activities, organized by the meanings of history as story
and
- time. Each group of activities is preceded by a review of
three
- elements of story and time from the perspective of
history. The
- review is meant to inform and support conversation between
you
- and your child, which is the most important step in each
- activity by far.
-
-
- Activities: History as Story
-
- Records
-
-
- History is a permanent written record of the past. Because
- recording history is an essential part of doing history, a
- "history log" is indicated for each activity.
More recently,
- history is also recorded on audio and video tape, and many
of
- the activities lend themselves to this type of recording
as
- well. Your children may be interested to know that the
time of
- their favorite dinosaurs is called "prehistory"
because it is
- unrecorded history. They should also know that some
written
- languages have been invented because telling stories
orally,
- without recording them in some form, is not by itself a
sure
- enough way to preserve the identity of a people.
-
-
- Narration
-
- George Washington, in his Farewell Address in 1796, said:
- "Though in reviewing the incidents of my
administration I am
- unconscious of intentional error, I am nevertheless too
- sensible of my defects not to think it probable that I may
have
- committed many errors." This reflection is a good
reminder that
- history, with its facts and evidence, is also an
interpretation
- of the past. There is more than one cause for an event,
more
- than one kind of outcome, and more than one way of looking
at
- their relationship.
-
- Evidence
-
- All good histories are written on the basis of evidence.
- Your children need to learn the importance of evidence,
and to
- distinguish it from biases, propaganda, stereotypes, and
- opinion. They need to judge whether the many stories about
John
- F. Kennedy or World War I, for example, are based on solid
- enough evidence to provide an accurate account of the life
and
- times.
-
-
-
-
- What's the Story
-
- History is a story well told. Through storytelling
- children can understand what's involved in writing the
stories
- that make history.
-
- What you'll need
-
- Family members and friends
- A fairy tale or folk tale
- History log
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Tell a story of a person you know. Gather your
children,
- other family members, and friends to have a storytelling
- session. Choose a person you know about whom the group
- will tell the story. Decide who will begin, and go
- clockwise from there with each person adding to the story.
- Set a time limit so that you must end the story somewhere.
- 2. Read a folk story or fairy tale, for example, Little
Red
- Riding Hood or The Story of Johnny Appleseed. Talk about
- how the story begins and ends, who the characters are and
- what they feel, and what happens. Ask how this story based
- on fantasy is different from the story you told about the
- real person you know.
- 3. Read a story about an historical event. Now pick a
moment
- in world history, for example the fall of the Berlin Wall,
- the French and Indian War, or a current event in the news
- headlines. Ask the librarian for help in choosing material
- that is at your child's reading level.
- 4. Help your child write in the history log about this
- storytelling experience.
-
-
- In the storytelling session about the person you know, how
- did you verify the "truth" when there were
differences of
- opinion about what "really happened"? If you
were to write the
- story of a real event for the newspaper, what would count
for
- you the most in preparing it? What else would you include?
- Where would you get your information? How would you check
the
- accuracy of the information?
-
-
- Our Town
-
-
- Your phone book, newspaper, and other resources can serve
- as your best guide to history in your town. Not only does
- referring to them save time, it teaches how to use tools
to get
- information.
-
- What you'll need
-
- Phone books, both yellow and white pages
- Daily city newspaper
- Community newspaper
- History log
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Newspaper search. Look in your city and community
- newspapers. They list "things to do." Look for
parades,
- museum and art exhibits, music events, children's theater,
- history talks and walks.
- Participate in an event and help your child write about it
- in the history log when you get back home.
- For more help, call education services at your city
- newspaper. Ask about their education programs that use
- newspapers.
- 2. Phone book search. Look in your phone books under
- "History" or "Historical Places." You
will find a few
- places under this heading but many more are listed
- elsewhere.
- Brainstorm with your children about what other words to
- look under in the phone book to find local history.
- Call the places you find. -Ask about their programs,
- hours, and upcoming special events. Ask to be put on their
- mailing list. Also ask where else you should go to learn
- about your town's history.
- Your younger children should listen to your phone
- conversation. They learn how to ask for information by
- listening to you.
- 3. Begin a list in the history log of local historical
sites.
- Include phone numbers, addresses, hours of operation, and
- other useful information for future visits.
-
-
- What is the most surprising thing you learned about your
- town? If you were asked to be a tour guide for visitors to
your
- town, what would you show them? If you went to another
town,
- how would you go about visiting it?
-
-
- History on the Go
-
- Visit the historical places in your child's history book,
- either in person or by collecting materials.
-
- What you'll need
-
- Your child's history book
- Maps, guidebooks
- History log
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Find out what historical events your child is studying
in
- school. Perhaps a historical site is near your town.
- Choose a site of one of these events to visit in person or
- through the materials you collected.
- 2. Prepare the trip together in advance. Ask the librarian
to
- help you and your child find books and videos on the
- history of the town or the historical figures who lived
- there.
- 3. Call the Chamber of Commerce of the area for maps and
- guidebooks.
- 4. Make a list. Think of some questions you want answered
on
- your trip.
- 5. Talk about the place you are visiting.
- 6. Have your child write about the trip in the history
log.
- Include answers to the questions that were answered that
- day.
- 7. Have your children make up a quiz for parents, or a
game,
- based on the trip.
- 8. Encourage your child to read more stories about the
place
- you visited and the people who were part of its history,
- and historical documents that are associated with the
- site. For example, in visiting Akron, Ohio, the site of
- the Ohio Women's Rights Convention in 1851, you might read
- Sojourner Truth's address, known also as And Ain't I a
- Woman?
-
-
-
-
- What was historical about the place you visited? What
- kinds of things communicated the history of the place?
When you
- returned, did you see your town in a new way, or notice
- something you hadn't seen before?
-
-
- What's News?
-
-
- What's new today really began in the past. Discussing the
- news is a way to help your child gain a historical
perspective
- on the events of the present.
-
- What you'll need
-
- Daily or Sunday newspaper
- Weekly news magazine
- A daily national news program
- Highlighter
- History log
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Decide on how often you will do this activity with your
- children--current events happen every day. This activity
- can be most useful to younger children if it is done from
- time to time to get them used to the idea of
"news." Older
- children benefit from doing it more often, at least once a
- week if possible.
- 2. Look through the newspaper or news magazine with your
- child. Ask him to decide what pictures or headlines are
- related to history. Highlight these references. Some
- examples are the Yalta Treaty, the French Revolution,
- Lenin, Pearl Harbor, or Brown v. Board of Education.
- 3. Together read the articles you have chosen. Write down
any
- references to events that did not happen today or
- yesterday, or to people who were not alive recently.
- 4. Have a conversation with your child about what these
past
- events and people have to do with what's happening today.
- Help your child write in the history log the connections
- you find between past and present.
- 5. Watch the evening news or a morning news program
together.
- Write down as many references as possible to past history
- and discuss the links you find between these references
- and the news story you heard.
- 6. During another viewing, help your child focus on how
the
- information was communicated: did the newscaster use
- interviews, books, historical records, written historical
- accounts, literature, paintings, photographs?
- 7. Help your child compare several accounts of a major
news
- story from different news shows, newspapers, and news
- magazines.
-
-
-
-
-
- "There is nothing new under the sun," according
to an old
- saying. Did you find anything "new" in the news?
What "same old
- stories" did you find?
-
-
- History Lives
-
-
- At living history museums you can see real people doing
- the work of blacksmiths, tin workers, shoemakers, farmers,
and
- others. Children can see how things work, and can ask
questions
- of the "characters."
-
- What you'll need
-
- Visitor brochure and museum map
- Sketch pad and pencils, or camera
- History log
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Awaken your children's expectations of what they will
see
- and what to look for. Write or call the museum ahead of
- time to obtain information brochures and a map. Living
- history museums are located in Williamsburg, VA and Old
- Sturbridge Village, MA, among other places.
- 2. Plan how to actually "visit history." Pretend
to be a
- family living in the historical place. What would it be
- like to be a family living in the place you choose to go?
- 3. When you visit the museum, ask your child what his
- favorite object or activity is, and why.
- 4. Help your children sketch something in the museum, and
put
- it in the history log. Tell your children that this is the
- way history was visually recorded before there were
- cameras.
- 5. Use your camera, if you have one, to make a
"modern day"
- record of history, and create a scrapbook with the
- photographs of what you saw.
- 6. When you get home, talk about what it would have been
like
- to live in that historical place in that period of time.
- Compare this to the image you had before your visit.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- How were days spent in the period of time you experienced?
- What kind of dress was common, or special? What kinds of
food
- did people usually eat, and did they eat alone or in
groups?
- What kind of work would you have chosen to do as an adult?
If a
- living history museum were made of the late 20th century,
what
- would people see and learn there? Reminder: if you can't
visit
- a museum, travel by reading books.
-
- Cooking Up History
-
-
- Every culture has its version of bread. "Eating it,
one
- feels that the taste one cannot quite put to words may
almost
- be the taste of history."* Children enjoy making this
American
- Indian fried bread.
-
- What you'll need
-
- 2 1/2 cups all-purpose or wheat flour
- 1 1/2 tablespoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 tablespoon dried skimmed milk powder
- 3/4 cup warm water
- 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
- Oil for frying
- Mixing bowls and spoons, spatula
- Large skillet
- Cloth towels
- Baking sheet
- Paper towels
- History log
-
- What to do
-
- 1. In a large bowl, stir together the flour, baking
powder,
- and salt.
- 2. In a small bowl, stir together the dried milk, water,
and
- vegetable oil.
- 3. Pour this liquid over the dry ingredients and stir
- until the dough is smooth (1 or 2 minutes). Add 1
- tablespoon of flour if the dough is too soft.
- 4. Knead the dough in the bowl with your hands about
- 30 seconds. Cover it with a cloth and let it sit 10
- minutes.
- 5. Line the baking sheet with paper towels to receive the
- finished loaves.
- * From Edward Behr (see Acknowledgments).
- 6. Divide the dough into eight sections. Take one section
and
- keep the rest covered in the bowl.
- 7. Roll the dough into a ball and flatten with your hand.
- Then roll it into a very thin circle 8 to 10 inches
- across. The thinner the dough, the puffier the bread will
- be.
- 8. Cover this circle with a cloth.
- 9. Continue with the other seven sections of dough in the
- same way.
- 10. In the large frying pan or skillet, pour vegetable oil
to
- about 1 inch deep.
- 11. As you begin to roll the last piece of dough, turn on
the
- heat under the skillet. When the oil is hot, slip in a
- circle of dough. Fry for about 1 minute or until the
- bottom is golden brown. Reminder: Parental supervision is
- necessary at all times around a hot stove.
- 12. Turn the dough over with tongs or a spatula. Fry the
other
- side for 1 minute.
- 13. Put the fried bread on the baking sheet and continue
with
- the other rounds of dough.
- 14. Eat your fried bread while it is hot and crisp. Put
honey
- on it if you like. Write in your history log what you
- learned about this bread and others you have tried.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- How is this bread different from other breads you have
- tried? Think of common expressions that use the word
"bread."
- For example, "the nation's breadbasket"; "I
earn my bread and
- butter"; or "breadlines of the 1920s." What
does "bread" mean
- in each of these? What place does bread have in your daily
life
- and in other cultures?
-
-
- Rub Against History
-
-
- Younger children find rubbings great fun. Cornerstones and
- plaques are interesting, and even coins will do.
-
- What You'll Need
-
- Tracing paper or other light weight paper
- Large crayons with the paper removed, fat lead pencil,
colored
- pencils, or artist's charcoal
- History log
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Help your child make a kit to do rubbings. It could
- include the items listed. The paper should not tear easily
- but it should also be light enough so that the details of
- what is traced become visible.
- 2. Have children make a rubbing of a quarter or half
dollar.
- Make the coin stable by supporting it with tape. Double
- the tape so that it sticks on both sides and place it on
- the bottom of the coin. Lay the paper on top of the coin,
- and rub across it with a pencil, crayon, or charcoal.
- Don't rub too hard. Rub until the coin's marks show up.
- 3. Go outside to do a rubbing. Look for
- * Dates imprinted in cement sidewalks
- * Cornerstones and plaques on buildings
- * Decorative ironwork on buildings and lampposts
- * Art and lettering on monuments and around doorways
- 4. Your child can ask family members to guess what each
- rubbing is.
- 5. Have the children tell about each rubbing. Tell them to
- look for designs and dates among the rubbings.
- 6. Children may want to cut some of their rubbings out to
- include in their history logs. Or they can fit several on
- one piece of paper to show a pattern of dates and designs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- What showed up in your rubbings? What did the date and
- designs commemorate? Historical preservation groups in
America
- have worked to preserve old buildings and to install
plaques on
- public historical places. Is this interesting or important
- work? Why have humans left their marks on the world from
early
- cave drawings to Vietnam Veterans' Memorial?
-
- Activities: History as Time
-
-
- Chronology
-
- While our children need the opportunity to study events in
- depth to get an understanding of them, they also need to
know
- the sequence of historical events in time, and the names
and
- places associated with them. Being able to place events in
- time, your child is better able to learn the relationships
- among them. What came first? What was cause, and what was
- effect? Without a sense of chronological order, events
seem
- like a big jumble, and we can't understand what happened
in the
- past. It matters, for example, that our children know that
the
- American and French Revolutions are related.
-
- Empathy
-
- Empathy is the ability to put ourselves in the place of
- another person and time. Since history is the
reconstruction of
- the past, we must have an idea of what it was like
"to be
- there" in order to reconstruct it with some accuracy.
For
- example, in studying the westward expansion your children
may
- ask why people didn't fly across the country to avoid the
- hazards of exposure on stagecoach trails. When you answer
that
- the airplane hadn't yet been invented, they may ask why
not.
- They need an understanding of how technology develops and
its
- state at the time. Using original source documents, such
as
- diaries, logs, and speeches, helps us guard against
imposing
- the present on the past, and allows us to see events
through
- the eyes of people who were there.
-
-
- Context
-
- Context is related to empathy. Context means "weave
- together" and refers to the set of circumstances in
several
- areas that framed an event. To understand any historical
period
- or event our children should know how to weave together
- politics (how a society was ruled), sociology (what groups
- formed the society), economics (how people worked and what
they
- produced), and religion, literature, the arts, and
philosophy
- (what was valued and believed at the time). When they try
to
- understand World War II, for example, they will uncover a
- complex set of events. And they will find that these
events
- draw their meaning from their context.
- History means having a grand old time with new stories.
- So, think about the relationship between history and time
as
- you do the following activities.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Time Marches On
-
-
- The stories of history have beginnings, middles, and ends
- that show events, and suggest causes and effects. A
personal
- timeline helps your child picture these elements of story.
-
- What you'll need
-
- Paper for timeline
- Colored pencils
- Crayons
- Shelf paper or computer paper
- Removable tape
- History log (optional)
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Draw on a piece of paper, or in the history log, a
- vertical line for the timeline. Mark this line in even
- intervals for each year of your child's life.
- 2. Help your child label the years with significant
events,
- starting with your child's birthday.
- 3. Review the timeline. Your child may want to erase and
- change an event for a particular year to include a more
- memorable or important one. (Historians also rethink their
- choices when they study history.)
- 4. For a timeline poster, use a long roll of shelf paper
or
- computer paper. For a horizontal timeline, fasten it to
- the wall up high around the room using removable tape so
- that your child can take it down to add more events or
- drawings. For a vertical timeline, hang it next to the
- doorway in your child's room. Start with the birthday at
- the bottom. Your child can begin writing down events and
- add to it later.
- 5. For older children, have them do a timeline of what was
- happening in the world at the same time as each event of
- their life. To begin, they can use the library's
- collection of newspapers to find and record the headlines
- for each of their birthdays.
-
-
-
-
- What is the most significant event on the timeline? What
- effects did the event have on your child's life? What are
the
- connections between the events in your child's life and
world
- events at the time?
-
-
- Weave a Web
-
-
- A history web is a way of connecting people and events. Is
- there an old ball field in your town you've always
wondered
- about? Or did you ever wonder why there are so many war
- memorials in your town? Then you need to do a history web!
-
- What you'll need
-
- Large piece of paper or poster board (at least
- 3 1/2 x 2 1/2 ft.)
- Colored pencils or markers
- History log
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Pick a place in your community that has always seemed
- mysterious to you--an old ball field, general or hardware
- store, house, or schoolhouse.
- Or ask yourself. "What are there lots of in my
town?"
- Churches, fountains? Pick one of these historical
- "families."
- 2. Go to one of these places. Jot down in your history log
- what you see and hear there. For example, look for marks
- on the buildings, such as dates and designs, or parts of
- the buildings, such as bleachers or bell towers.
- 3. Find out other information about the place by asking a
- librarian for resources, or by searching the archives of
- your local newspaper. Look for major events that took
- place there, such as the setting of a world record or the
- visit of a famous person. Also look for other events that
- changed the place, such as modernization or dedications.
- 4. Find people who have lived in your town a long time.
- Interview them using questions about these major and
- related events, and any others they remember.
- 5. Draw a web, with the name of the place you studied in
the
- middle (like the spider who weaves a "home").
- 6. Draw several strands from the middle to show the major
- events in the life of the place.
- 7. Connect the strands with cross lines to show other
related
- events.
- 8. When the web is complete consider the relationships
among
- the strands. (See parent box.)
- 9. Ask the editor of your local newspaper to publish your
- web. Ask readers to contribute more information to add to
- it. This is exactly how history is written!
-
-
- When was the place you picked built? If you picked a
- "family" of places, when was each place built?
If they were
- built around the same time, what similarities and
differences
- do you notice about their features, such as style and what
they
- commemorate? How is the place you picked connected to
other
- events in history?
-
-
- Put Time in a Bottle
-
-
- Collecting things from one's lifetime and putting them in
- a time capsule is a history lesson that will never be
- forgotten.
-
- What you'll need
-
- Magazines or newspapers with pictures
- Sealable container
- Tape or other sealant
- History log
-
- Lift up your eyes upon
- This day breaking for
- Give birth again
- To the dream.
- Women, children, men,
- Take it into the palms of your hands,
- Mold it into the shape of your most
- Private need. Sculpt it into
- The image of your most public self.
- Lift up your hearts...
- Excerpted from "On the Pulse of Morning",
delivered by Maya
- Angelou at the 1993 Presidential Inauguration.
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Have your children collect pictures of a few important
- things from their life to date.
- 2. Tell your children that the items will be put in a time
- capsule so that when future generations find it they can
- learn something about your children and their time.
- Some things to collect that represent the life and times
- of a period are games and toys, new technology, means of
- transportation, slang, movies, presidential campaign
- memorabilia, great speeches, poetry and fiction, music,
- heroes, advertising, events, television shows, fashions,
- and accounts of issues and crises.
- Also have them include a letter describing life today to
- the person who opens the time capsule.
- 3. Meet together for a "show and tell" of the
items.
- 4. Once everyone is satisfied with the collection, label
the
- items by name and with any other information that will
- help those who find them understand how they are
- significant to the history of our time.
- 5. Place the items in a container, seal the container, and
- find a place to store it.
- 6. Write in the history log a short description of the
time
- period and record the location of the time capsule.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- What did, the collection of items tell about the period?
- Did the items tend to be of a certain type?
-
- Quill Pens & Berry Ink
-
- Knowing how to write has been a valued skill throughout
- history. History itself depends on writing, and writing
has
- changed over time from scratches on clay to computerized
- letters.
-
-
- What you'll need
-
- For quill pen:
- feather, scissors, a paper clip
- For berry ink:
- 1/2 cup of ripe berries, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 1/2 teaspoon
- vinegar, food strainer, bowl, wooden spoon, small jar with
- tight-fitting lid
- Paper
- Paper towel
- History log
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Make the ink: Collect some berries for your ink.
Consider
- what color you want your ink to be, and what berries are
- available. Blueberries, cherries, blackberries,
- strawberries, or raspberries work well. Fill the strainer
- with berries and hold it over the bowl. Crush the berries
- against the strainer with the wooden spoon so that the
- berry juice drips into the bowl. When all the juice is out
- of the berries, throw the pulp away. Add the salt and
- vinegar to the berry juice and stir well. If the ink is
- too thick, add a teaspoon or two of water, but don't add
- too much or you'll lose the color. Store the ink in a
- small jar with a tight-fitting lid. Make only as much as
- you think you will use at one time, because it will dry up
- quickly.
- 2. Make the pen: Find a feather. Form the pen point by
- cutting the fat end of the quill on an angle, curving the
- cut slightly. A good pair of scissors is safer than a
- knife. Clean out the inside of the quill so that the ink
- will flow to the point. Use the end of a paper clip if
- needed. You may want to cut a center slit in the point;
- however, if you press too hard on the pen when you write,
- it may split.
- 3. Write with the pen: Dip just the tip of the pen in the
- ink, and keep a paper towel handy to use as an ink
- blotter. Experiment by drawing lines, curves, and single
- letters, and by holding the pen at different angles. Most
- people press too hard or stop too long in one spot.
- 4. Practice signing your name, John Hancock style, with
the
- early American letters shown here. Then write your
- signature in your history log.
- 5. Write your name again using a pen or pencil. Compare
the
- results.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Why do write? When do people in your family use writing?
- What written things do you see every day? What is their
- purpose? What effect do different writing implements have
on
- writing, for example quill pens, ballpoint pens,
typewriters,
- and computers?
-
- School Days
-
-
- Did you ever wonder why there is no school in summer? Or
- why there might be soon?
-
- What you'll need
-
- Map of the United States
- Crayons or colored pencils
- History log
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Talk about what school was like when you were a child.
- Include how schools looked physically (e.g., one-room
- schoolhouse or campus?); what equipment teachers used
- (e.g., chalk boards or computers?); what subjects you
- studied; what choices you faced (e.g., transportation to
- and from school, extracurricular activities ); and
- favorite teachers.
- 2. Talk about what school was like 50 or 100 years ago.
Ask
- your librarian for help in looking this up, and talk to
- older relatives.
- Include the history of work in America and how this
- affects schooling. For example, when America was an
- agricultural society, children were needed to help plant
- and harvest crops. It was common then that children didn't
- go to school every day, or in the summer.
- Have children draw a variety of crops or animals raised in
- the United States, including those grown in their own
- state or neighborhood. They can draw either right on the
- map or on paper that they will cut and paste on the
- appropriate state. The map can be traced from an atlas in
- the library or from a geography book. Talk about when
- various crops are planted and harvested, and the effects
- of growing seasons on migrant worker families.
- Talk about another change in work in America and how it
- affected schooling. For example, when America was becoming
- a manufacturing economy, during the Industrial Revolution,
- laws were made against child labor and for mandatory
- schooling.
- Help your child talk about how the work of parents in
- America today affects schooling, for example, the need for
- afterschool programs.
- 3. Imagine what school will be like in the future. Younger
- children may want to use blocks to build their future
- school, and older children may want to draw theirs.
-
-
-
-
- What has remained the same about school from the past to
- the present? What has changed? If you could be the head of
a
- school 20 years from now, what would you keep and what
would
- you change based on your current school? How would you go
about
- making the changes?
-
-
- Time To Celebrate
-
-
- On quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies is written the
- phrase "E pluribus unum," "One out of
many." What does it mean?
-
- What you'll need
-
- U.S. coins
- Map of the world
- Calendar
- History log
-
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Have your children look at U.S. coins for the
expression
- "E pluribus unum", and translate it for them:
"One out of
- many." Explain to them that it refers to America as
one
- nation with many peoples and cultures, and that it is not
- a common nationality but shared democratic values that
- bind us as a nation.
- 2. With your children talk about the following list of
- holidays celebrated in the United States. Look at a
- calendar to add other holidays, and next to each holiday
- write when it is celebrated and what is celebrated.
- New Year's Day January 1 New beginning
- Martin Luther January 15 Birth of a leader
- King Jr.'s
- Birthday
- Presidents' Day 3rd Monday Originally, Presidents
- of February Lincoln and Washington
- currently all former
- U.S. presidents
- Memorial Day Last Monday War dead
- of May
- Independence Day July 4 National independence;
- adoption of the
- Declaration of
- Independence in 1776
- Labor Day First Monday Working people
- of September
- Columbus Day Second Monday Landing of
- of October Columbus in the
- Bahamas in 1492
- Veterans Day November 11 War veterans
- Thanksgiving Fourth Giving thanks
- Day Thursday of for divine goodness
- November
- Christmas Day December 25 Birth of Jesus
-
- 3. Use the opportunity of talking about what holidays
- celebrate to read original sources. For example: on
- Presidents' Day read one of the great presidential
- speeches such as the Gettysburg Address; on Martin Luther
- King's Day read the "I Have a Dream" speech.
- 4. Find holidays celebrated in other nations. Classmates,
- neighbors, and relatives from other countries are good
- sources of information.
- 5. Think and talk about other important holidays our
nation
- should celebrate.
- 6. Discuss what your family celebrates, and have your
- children write about the discussion in their history log.
-
-
- What kinds of accomplishments or events do we celebrate in
- America? What similarities and differences did you find
between
- American holidays and holidays celebrated by people from
other
- countries.
-
-
- The Past Anew
-
-
- Reenactments of historical battles or periods, such as
- colonial times, make our nation's history come alive. And
they
- get our children involved.
-
- What you'll need
-
- A library card
- Local newspapers
- Phone book
- History log
-
-
- What was unusual or interesting about the reenactment?
- What role did each of the reenactors play? If there was
- conflict, what was shown or said about its causes? What
- obstacles did the characters face? How did they overcome
them?
- What is the difference between the "real thing"
and a
- performance of it? What did you learn from the
performance?
-
- What to do
-
- 1. Find out where reenactments are held by looking in your
- local newspaper or calling your local historical society,
- State Park, or National Park Service.
- 2. Choose one, and prepare your child to see it by
visiting a
- local museum or historical site that relates to the
- reenactment, or by watching a television program about the
- event or period to be reenacted. Use your local librarian
- and TV guide as resources.
- 3. Attend the reenactment and participate. Ask the
reenactors
- questions about anything--from the kind of hat they are
- wearing to the meanings of the event or period for the
- development or transformation of America. Finally, help
- your child write about this experience in the history log.
-
- Parents and the Schools
-
- Educators and education policymakers at the national and
- state levels support an expanded history curriculum in our
- schools. Parents and schools can be partners in this
endeavor
- as they work toward their common goal of educating
children.
- Following are some well-proven measures for supporting
your
- children's study of history at school, and for forming
- productive relationships with those responsible for their
- education away from home:
- 1. Become familiar with your school's history program. Ask
- yourself:
- * What do I see in my child's classroom that shows history
- is valued there? For example, are maps, globes, atlases,
- and original source documents visible?
- * Are newspapers and current events media part of the
- curriculum? Are biographies, myths, and legends used to
- study history?
- * Does my child regularly have history homework, and
history
- projects periodically, including debates and mock trials?
- * Are there field trips relating to history?
- * Is my child encouraged to ask questions and look for
- answers from reliable sources?
- * How is knowledge of history assessed in addition to
tests
- based on the textbook?
- * Are my children learning history in elementary and
middle
- school, and are the history curriculums well coordinated?
- * Does the history curriculum include world history as
well
- as American history?
- * Does my school require teachers to have studied history?
- Or does it assign history classes to teachers with little
- or no background?
-
- 2. Talk often with your child's teachers.
-
- * Attend parent-teacher conferences early in the school
- year.
- * Listen to what teachers say during these conferences,
and
- take notes.
- * Let teachers know that you expect your child to gain a
- knowledge of history, and that you appreciate their
- efforts towards this goal.
- * Ask the teachers what their expectations of the class
and
- your child are.
- * Agree on a system of communication with the teachers for
- the year, either by phone or in writing twice a semester,
- and whenever you are concerned.
- * Keep an open mind in discussing your child's education
- with teachers; ask questions about anything you don't
- understand; and be frank with them about your concerns.
-
- 3. Help to improve history education in your child's
school.
-
- * Volunteer in your children's history class, for example,
- to organize visits from the mayor or local historians, and
- to local historical sites.
- * If you feel dissatisfied with the history program, talk
to
- your children's teachers first, and then to the principal,
- history curriculum division, superintendent, and finally
- the school board. Also talk to other parents for their
- input.
-
- Resources
-
- Listed below are a few of the many excellent books about
- people, events, and issues in American and world history
that
- are available for primary and middle school children. They
are
- available in most public and school libraries, as well as
in
- children's bookstores. Suggestions came from: The New York
- Times Parents Guide to the Best Books for Children, by
Eden
- Ross Lipson; History--Social Science Curriculum: A Booklet
for
- Parents, by the California Department of Education; The
Horn
- Book Guide to Children's and Young Adult Books, by The
Horn
- Book, Incorporated; Children's Books in Print; and from
the
- 1991 bibliography of the National Council for the Social
- Studies-Children's Book Council. The listing includes
author,
- title, and publisher.
-
- Primary Level Books
-
- 1. American History and Culture
-
- Adler, David A. A Picture Book of Eleanor Roosevelt. See
also
- other titles in this series, and Thomas Jefferson: Father
of
- Our Democracy, and George Washington: Father of Our
Country.
- Holiday.
- Barth, Edna. Turkeys, Pilgrims and Indian Corn: The Story
of
- the Thanksgiving Symbols. Clarion.
- Cherry, Lynne. A River Ran Wild. Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich.
- Cohen, Barbara. Molly's Pilgrim. Lothrop.
- Faber, Doris. Amish. Doubleday.
- Ferris, Jeri. Go Free or Die: A Story about Harriet Tubman.
See
- also Walking the Road to Freedom: A Story about Sojourner
- Truth. Carolrhoda Books.
- Fisher, Leonard E. The Statue of Liberty. Holiday.
- Fritz, Jean. Can't You Make Them Behave, King George? See
also
- What's the Big Idea, Ben Franklin?, and Will You Sign
Here,
- John Hancock? Coward.
- Gibbons, Gall. From Path to Highway: The Story of the
Boston
- Post Road. T.Y. Crowell/HarperCollins.
- Harness, Cheryl. Three Young Pilgrims. Bradbury Press.
- Jakes, John. Susanna of the Alamo: A True Story. Harcourt
Brace
- Jovanovich.
- Lawson, Robert. Watchwords of Liberty: A Pageant of
American
- Quotations. Little, Brown.
- McGovern, Ann. If You Lived in Colonial Times. Scholastic.
- McGuffy, William Holmes. McGuffey's Third Eclectic Reader.
Van
- Nostrand Reinhold.
- Monjo, F. N. The One Bad Thing about Father (biography of
- Theodore Roosevelt). See also The Drinking Gourd. Harper.
- O'Kelley, Mattie Lou. From the Hills of Georgia: An
- Autobiography in Paintings. Little, Brown.
- Provensen, Alice. The Buck Stops Here: The Presidents of
the
- United States. HarperCollins.
- Rynbach, Iris V. Everything from a Nail to a Coffin.
Orchard.
- Sewall, Marcia. The Pilgrims of Plimoth. See also People
of the
- Breaking Day (same period from Indian point of view).
Atheneum.
- Von Tscharner, Renata, and Ronald Fleming. New Providence:
A
- Changing Cityscape. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
- Waters, Kate. The Story of the White House. Scholastic.
- Williams, Sherley Anne. Working Cotton. Harcourt Brace
- Jovanovich.
-
- 2. World History and Culture
-
- Adler, David A. Our Golda: The Story of Golda Meir.
Viking.
- Aliki. Mummies Made in Egypt. T.Y. Crowell/HarperCollins.
- Fisher, Leonard E. The Great Wall of China. See also
Pyramid of
- the Sun--Pyramid of the Moon, and The Wailing Wall.
Macmillan.
- Musgrove, Margaret W. Ashanti to Zulu: African Traditions.
- Dial.
- Provensen, Alice, and Martin Provensen. The Glorious
Flight:
- Across the Channel with Louis Bleriot. Puffin.
- Sabin, Louis. Marie Curie. Troll.
- Stanley, Diane. Peter the Great. Four Winds.
- Wells, Ruth. A to Zen: A Book of Japanese Culture. Simon
and
- Schuster.
-
- 3. Historical Fiction and Poetry
-
- Aliki. A Medieval Feast. T.Y. Crowell/HarperCollins.
- Baylor, Byrd. The Best Town in the World. Scribner's.
- Benchley, Nathaniel. Sam the Minuteman. HarperCollins.
- Burton, Virginia Lee. Litle House. Houghton Mifflin.
- Goble, Paul. Death of the Iron Horse. Macmillan.
- Hall, Donald. Ox-Cart Man. Puffin.
- Kurelek, William. A Prairie Boy's Winter. Houghton
Mifflin.
- Kuskin, Karla. Jerusalem, Shining Still. Harper Trophy.
- Lee, Jeanne M. Ba-Nam. Henry Holt.
- Le Sueur, Meridel. Little Brother of the Wilderness: The
Story
- of Johnny Appleseed. Holy Cow! Press.
- Livingston, Myra. Celebrations. Holiday.
- Lobel, Anita. Potatoes, Potatoes. HarperCollins.
- Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. Hiawatha. Dial.
- Lyon, George-Ella. Who Came Down That Road? Franklin
Watts.
- Spier, Peter. We the People: The Constitution of the U.
S.. See
- also Tin Lizzie, New Amsterdam, and The Star-Spangled
Banner.
- Doubleday.
- Swift, Hildegarde, and Lynd Ward. Little Red Lighthouse
and the
- Great Gray Bridge. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
- Turkle, Brinton. Thy Friend, Obadiah. Puffin.
- Zolotow, Charlotte. The Sky Was Blue. Harper.
-
- Upper Elementary Level Books
-
- 1. American History and Culture
-
- a. Original sources and biographies
-
- The Log of Christopher Columbus' First Voyage to America:
in
- the Year 1492, As Copied Out in Brief by Bartholomew Las
Casas.
- Linnett Books/Shoestring Press.
- Brown, Margaret W. (editor). Homes in the Wilderness: A
- Pilgrim's Journal of Plymouth Plantation in 1620, by
William
- Bradford and Others of the Mayflower Company. Linnett
- Books/Shoestring Press.
- Cousins, Margaret. Ben Franklin of Old Philadelphia.
Random.
- Douglass, Frederick. The Life and Times of Frederick
Douglass.
- Macmillan. See also The Narrative and Selected Writings.
Modern
- Library.
- Freedman, Russell. Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Clarion. See
also
- Indian Chiefs, The Wright Brothers: How They Invented the
- Airplane (Holiday), and Lincoln: A Photobiography
(Clarion).
- Harrison, Barbara, and Daniel Terris. A Twilight Struggle:
The
- Life of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Lothrop/Morrow.
- Lester, Julius. To Be a Slave. Dial.
- McKissack, Patricia, and Frederick McKissack. Mary McLeod
- Bethune: A Great Teacher. Enslow.
- Meltzer, Milton. The Black Americans: A History in Their
Own
- Words. See also others in this "In their own
words" series, and
- Voices from the Civil War. T.Y. Crowell/HarperCollins.
- Ravitch, Diane (editor). American Reader: Words That Moved
a
- Nation. HarperCollins.
-
- b. Period History and Historical Fiction
-
- Alcott, Louisa May. Little Women. Little, Brown/Orchard
House.
- See also An Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving. Holiday.
- Benet, Rosemary, and Stephen Vincent Benet. The Ballad of
- William Sycamore. Henry Holt.
- Blumberg, Rhoda. The Incredible Journey of Lewis and
Clark.
- Lothrop.
- Brink, Carol R. Caddie Woodlawn. Macmillan.
- Brown, Marion Marsh. Sacagawea: Indian Interpreter to
Lewis and
- Clark. Childrens.
- Fisher, Leonard E. The Oregon Trail. See also Tracks
Across
- America: The Story of the American Railroad, 1825-1900.
- Holiday.
- Flournoy, Valerie. The Patchwork Quilt. Dial.
- Forbes, Esther. Johnny Tremain. Houghton Mifflin.
- Freedman, Russell. Cowboys of the Wild West. Clarion.
- Fritz, Jean. Shh! We're Writing the Constitution. Putnam.
See
- also other books by the same author on Pocahantas, Paul
Revere,
- and others.
- Hakim, Joy. The First Americans, the first volume of the
series
- A History of the United States. Oxford University Press.
- Haskins, Jim. Outward Dreams: Black Inventors and Their
- Inventions. Walker.
- Hawthorne, Nathaniel. True Stories from History and
Biography.
- Ohio State University Press.
- Hunt, Irene. Across Five Aprils. Berkley.
- Jacobs, William J. Ellis Island: New Hope in a New Land.
- Scribner.
- Maestro, Betsy. A More Perfect Union: The Story of Our
- Constitution. Lothrop.
- Nixon, Joan L. A Family Apart. Bantam.
- O'Dell, Scott. King's Fifth. See also The Serpent Never
Sleeps:
- A Novel of Jamestown and Pocahontas. Houghton Mifflin.
- Parker, Nancy W. The President's Cabinet and How It Grew.
- HarperCollins.
- Smith, Carter (editor). Daily Life: A Sourcebook on
Colonial
- America. Millbrook.
- Stewart, George. The Pioneers Go West. Random.
- Wilder, Laura I. Little House in the Big Woods. See also
others
- in the "Little House" series. Harper Trophy.
-
- 2. World History and Culture, and Historical Fiction
-
- Blumberg, Rhoda. The Remarkable Voyages of Captain Cook.
- Bradbury.
- Corbishley, Mike. Ancient Rome. Facts on File.
- Foreman, Michael. War Boy: A Country Childhood. Arcade.
- Galbraith, Catherine A., and Rama Mehta. India Now and
Through
- Time. Houghton Mifflin.
- Harkonen, Reijo. The Children of Egypt. Carolrhoda Books.
- Macaulay, David. Pyramid. See also City: A Story of Roman
- Planning and Construction; Cathedral: The Story of Its
- Construction; and Castle. Houghton Mifflin. Also available
on
- video.
- Marrin, Albert. Napoleon and the Napoleonic Wars. Viking.
- Muller, Jorg. The Changing City. McElderry.
- Nhuong, Quang Nhuong. The Land I Lost: Adventures of a Boy
in
- Vietnam. Harper Trophy.
- Rogasky, Barbara. Smoke and Ashes: The Story of the
Holocaust.
- Holiday.
- Stott, Ken (illustrator). Columbus and The Age of
Exploration.
- Bookwright.
-
- Collections
-
- Baker, Charles F., Ill. The Struggle for Freedom: Plays on
the
- American Revolution. Cobblestone.
- Barchers, Suzanne, and Patricia Marden. Cooking Up U. S.
- History: Recipes and Research to Share with Children.
Teacher
- Ideas Press.
- Bell, R. C. Board and Table Games From Many Civilizations.
- Dover Publications.
- Benet, Rosemary, and Stephen Vincent Benet. Book of
Americans.
- Henry Holt.
- Boorstin, Daniel J., and Ruth F. Boorstin. The Landmark
History
- of the American People. Random House. See also Visiting
Our
- Past: America's Historylands. National Geographic Society.
- D'Aulaire, Ingri, and Edgar D'Aulaire. D'Aulaire's Book of
- Greek Myths. Doubleday.
- Dorell, Ann (collector). The Diane Goode Book of American
Folk
- Tales and Songs. Dutton.
- Fearotte, Phyllis. The You and Me Heritage Tree:
Children's
- Crafts from 21 American Traditions. Workman.
- Hughes, Langston, and Arna Bontemps. The Book of Negro
- Folklore. Dodd, Mead.
- McEvedy, Colin. The Penguin Atlas of Ancient History.
Penguin.
- National Geographic Society. Historical Atlas of the
United
- States.
- Walker, Barbara M. The Little House Cookbook. Trophy.
-
- Children's Magazines
-
- Calliope: World History for Young People. Cobblestone
- Publishing, Inc., 30 Grove St., Peterborough, NH 03458.
World
- history for grades 6-8.
- Cobblestone: The History Magazine for Young People.
Cobblestone
- Publishing, Inc., same address as above. An American
history
- monthly for grades 4-8.
-
- Videos
-
- An American Tail, Universal Studios. An animated fable
about
- 19th century immigration, in color.
- The Civil War, PBS, directed by Kenneth Burns. An 11 hour
- series in color and black and white.
- Eyes on the Prize, PBS. A series on the civil rights
movement
- in the United States.
-
- References for Parents
-
- Hirsch, E.D. Jr. What Your First Grader Needs To Know. See
also
- titles on second-, third-, and fourth-graders.
Doubleday/Core
- Knowledge Series.
-
- Local and National Resources
-
- Federal Government
-
- General Services Administration, Publications Sales
Branch,
- NEPS-G, Washington, DC 20408. Write for a list of
available
- "documents from the past."
- National Park Service, Office of Public Inquiries,
Washington,
- DC 20013-7127. Write for maps and guides to national
historic
- sites.
- National Register of Historic Places, Interagency
Resources
- Division, National Park Service, P.O. Box 37127,
Washington, DC
- 20013-7127. The Register's archives contain information on
- 59,000 places of national, state, and local significance.
-
- National Nonprofit Organizations
-
- American Association for State and Local History, 172
Second
- Avenue North, Suite 202, Nashville, TN 37201. The
association
- maintains an extensive list of museums, historic sites,
and
- historical societies.
- National Council for History Education, 26915 Westwood
Rd.,
- Suite B-2, Westlake, Ohio 44145. Write to the council for
the
- monthly newsletter, History Matters! The council also
maintains
- a Speakers' Bureau.
- National History Day, University of Maryland at College
Park,
- 0121 Caroline Hall, College Park, MD 20742. Write for
- information on local, regional, state, and national
contests
- for middle schoolers.
- National Trust for Historic Preservation, 1785
Massachusetts
- Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20036. Write to them for lists of
- preservation groups in local communities throughout the
United
- States. These groups often have walking maps and special
- historical programs.
-
-
- Acknowledgments
-
- This booklet was made possible with help from the
- following people who provided materials and suggestions:
George
- T. Reed, Rodney Atkinson, Gilbert Sewall, Joseph Ribar,
Steven
- and Amy Jack, Candece Reed, Joseph and Peter Ryan, Nancy
- Taylor, Joan McKown, Susan Perkins Weston, Carol Shull,
Paul
- Regnier, and Joyce Hunley. Special thanks are given to
Judith
- J. French, a media specialist in Fairfax County Public
Schools,
- for reviewing the bibliography; to the 1990 third-grade
class
- of Capitol Hill Day School whose illustrations of
historical
- houses in Washington, DC appear on page 13; to Leo and
Diane
- Dillon for their advice on how to work with illustrators;
and
- to Gerard Devlin, Nancy Floyd, John Fonte, Paul Gagnon,
Wilma
- Prudhum Greene, Margery Martin, and many others at the
U.S.
- Department of Education.
- The Helping Your Chad series was initiated by Diane
- Ravitch when she was Assistant Secretary of OERI, to
expand
- educational opportunities for children. In addition, she
- provided a historian's thoughtful review of this
manuscript.
- The following sources were consulted in conceiving the
- introductory text: Awakening Your Child's Natural Genius
by
- Thomas Armstrong; Building a History Curriculum by the
Bradley
- Commission on History in Schools; History-Social Science
- Framework for California Public Schools by the California
State
- Department of Education; Framework for the 1994 NAEP U.S.
- History Assessment by the National Assessment Governing
Board;
- Learning H/story by A.K. Dickinson et al.; and the Art of
- Eating (No.18), a newsletter by Edward Behr with an
article on
- the history of breadmaking.
- The activities are inspired by suggestions from John Ahem;
- Kid's America by Steve Caney; Great Fast Breads by Carol
- Cutler; Native American Cookbook by Edna Henry; Claudia J.
- Hoone; Kathleen Hunter; Peter O'Donnell, Director of
Museum
- Education at Old Sturbridge Village; Janice Ribar; and My
- Backyard History Book by David Weitzman.
-
- What We Can Do
- To Help Our Children Learn:
-
- Listen to them and pay attention to their problems. Read
with
- them.
- Tell family stories.
- Limit their television watching.
- Have books and other reading materials in the house.
- Look up words in the dictionary with them.
- Encourage them to use an encyclopedia.
- Share favorite poems and songs with them.
- Take them to the library--get them their own library
cards.
- Take them to museums and historical sites, when possible.
- Discuss the daily news with them.
- Go exploring with them and learn about plants, animals,
and
- local geography.
- Find a quiet place for them to study.
- Review their homework.
- Meet with their teachers.
- Do you have other ideas?
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