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Title: Teaching with Primary Sources


1
Teaching with Primary Sources
  • Brent Modak

2
Why bother?
  • Instruction must be designed not to put
    knowledge into learns heads, but to put learners
    into positions that allow them to construct
    well-structured knowledge (Anderson, 102).
  • This is beneficial to learning because learning
    occurs when learners actively transform incoming
    information and construct meaning in terms of
    their prior knowledge (Anderson, 1989, 101).
  • During a museum walk students make observations
    and use those observations to construct critical
    inferences and analysis.

3
Why bother?
  • During assimilation, a person imposes his or her
    available structure on the stimuli being
    processed. That is, the stimuli are forced to
    fit the persons structure. In accommodation, the
    reverse is true. The person is forced to change
    his or her schema to fit the new stimuli
    (Wadsworth, 15).
  • The process of accommodation results in a
    qualitative change in intellectual structures
    (schemata), while assimilation only adds to the
    existing structuresa quantitative change
    (Wadsworth, 17).
  • Through the use of primary sources, the teacher
    can force the student to reevaluate preconceived
    notions or predictions.

4
Why bother?
  • Students with performance-oriented goals focus on
    doing better than other students in their class
    (Eccles, 2004, 131).
  • This is beneficial because there is no stronger
    predictor of students self-confidence and
    efficacy than the grades they receive (Eccles,
    2004, 142).
  • The focus is not on a grade the focus is on
    accruing the skill of being able to craft
    inferences and make observations.
  • Students receive guidelines for good observations
    and inferences

5
SWBAT...
  • ...break down who benefitted from the advent of
    new methods of transportation and technology
    during American westward expansion of the 19th
    century.

6
  • What do you think the women in white represents?
  • Where do you think she is leading them?
  • What are the settlers bringing with them?
  • http//www.loc.gov/pictures/item/97507547/resource
    /

7
  • This picture was taken in Montrose, Colorado.
  • The men in the picture are drilling for artesian
    water.
  • Why would such technology be important in
    westward expansion?

http//memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/AMALL
_at_field(NUMBER_at_band(codhawp10010461))
8
  • Describe the technology in this picture.
  • Who do you think the technology helps or hurts?

http//memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/h?ammem/psbib
_at_field(DOCID_at_lit(p10235))
9
  • The first patent for barbed wire was issued in
    1867.
  • How do you think the invention of barbed wire
    affected the West?
  • Who do you think it helped?
  • Who do you think it hurt?

http//www.loc.gov/pictures/item/fsa2000011905/PP/
10
  • This is an invitation for Alexander Graham Bell
    to participate in ATT's formal opening of the
    transcontinental telephone line on January 25,
    1915. The event included a telephone conversation
    between Bell in New York and his old assistant,
    Thomas Watson, in San Francisco, as well as
    speeches by President Woodrow Wilson from the
    White House and ATT President Theodore Vail from
    Georgia. When a duplicate of an 1876 telephone
    was connected to the New York line, Bell, echoing
    his famous words on the original occasion, called
    out, "Mr. Watson, come here, I want you." Watson
    replied that this time it would take him a week
    to do so.
  • http//memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collIdmagbel
    lfileName129/12900103/bellpage.dbrecNum0

11
  • This is a picture of one of Alexander Graham
    Bells first telegraphs.
  • How do you think this piece of technology
    affected westward expansion?
  • http//memory.loc.gov/ammem/bellhtml/belltelph.htm
    l

12
  • This particular telephone crew strung five
    copper wires from Omaha, Nebraska, to Denver,
    Colorado. The woman pictured is the operator.
  • source American Memory Library of Congress
  • http//memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/h?ammem/psbib
    _at_field(DOCID_at_lit(p10135))

13
http//www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/ourdocs/PacificR
ail.html
  • How do you think this affected development of the
    West?
  • The Pacific Railway Act was signed into law by
    President Abraham Lincoln on July 1, 1862. This
    act provided Federal government support for the
    building of the first transcontinental railroad,
    which was completed on May 10, 1869.
  • SourceVirtual Services Digital Reference Section
    of the Library of Congress

14
http//www.loc.gov/rr/scitech/SciRefGuides/winches
ter-rifle.html
  • In what ways do you think firearms, such as the
    Winchester rifle, were used?
  • In the 1800s the idea of a repeating rifle was
    finally realized by Oliver Winchester, the
    largest stockholder of the New Haven Arms Co. of
    Connecticut. He was assigned US patent No. 5501,
    which protected improvements to the Henry rifle.
    The new technology included a spring-closed
    loading port on the right-hand side of the frame,
    directly at the rear of the magazine tube, and
    resulted in the first reliable lever-action
    repeating rifle, produced as the first
    Winchester, Model 1866.
  • Famous for its rugged construction, the original
    Winchester rifle allowed the rifleman to fire a
    number of shots before having to reload hence
    the term, "repeating rifle."

15
References
  • Anderson, L.M. (1989a). Learners and learning.
    In M.C. Reynolds (Ed.), Knowledge base for
    the beginning teacher (pp. 85-99). Oxford
    Pergamon Press
  • Eccles, J.S. (2004). Schools, academic
    motivation, and stage-environment fit. In R. M.
    Lerner, L. Steinberg (Eds.), Handbook of
    Adolescent Psychology, 2nd Ed. New York Wiley.
  • Wadsworth, B.J. (1989). Chapters 1 and 2 from
    Piagets theory of cognitive and affective
    development, 4th Ed. (pp. 9-32). New York
    Longman.
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