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Draft Lesson for Pursuing Justice, Davey

Last post 09-30-2008, 11:26 AM by Edward Davey. 0 replies.
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  •  09-30-2008, 11:26 AM 12488

    Draft Lesson for Pursuing Justice, Davey

    Rich, Geoff, et. all,

    I am sorry for my delay, but I have again had difficulty uploading the files related to this project. Below I am re-pasting the particulars of the lesson I have created.  There are 3 files related to this
    lesson that I have ready to show. I saved them in the file area but I can not attach them here.  Anyway, here is the curriculum draft again.  It is copied from a post I submitted as the institute ended.

    Rich, I will email you directly to let you know I have re-posted.

    -Eddie

    __________________________________

    Pursuing Justice – Summer 2008 Curriculum Project Draft- Edward Davey

    • This curriculum project is an investigation of the Seneca Falls Convention and the Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions published by this convention.  These took place in 1848.  This project will be taught during a unit on the reform movements of the early/mid 1800s.  This project comes directly from the Pursuing Justice seminar focused on The First Wave of Women’s Rights Activism, given by Professor Andrea Walsh.
    • Essential Questions/ Skills Focus
      • How did the Seneca Falls Convention contribute to the emergence of the Women’s movement?
      • What was the substance, tone and impact of the published Declaration of Sentiments?
      • Middle School Social Studies skill work will focus on reading secondary and primary sources, understanding an event and responses to the event.

    • Scale of Project – This project will be a 2 day lesson within the context of teaching about reform movements of the time period.  It will be taught after a review of the Abolition movement.  The central activity of the lesson will be a series of documents for students to read, respond to and discuss.  The readings are sequenced from pre-convention background to media responses to the convention.

    • Assessments:  This lesson will be assessed in part of a test on the Reform Movements of the era.  Like the central activity, the assessment will be a reading or two that assesses reading and understanding skills within the context of the content taught.

    •  Resources used – resources for readings, further research, visual aids, etc. are given on the lesson documents.  In addition, a video clip is planned from the documentary One Woman One Vote.


    Edward Davey
    U.S History Teacher
    Jonas Clarke Middle School
    Lexington Public Schools
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