Sitting Bull and Little Bighorn Videos and Free Acrostic Poem Assignment

Here is a great video about Sitting Bull and his role in Native American resistance, particularly in the Battle of Little Bighorn. It’s not on Youtube, but you can watch it here. There’s even a link to download the video! This is a great option if you need to post it somewhere for distance learning or if you want to have a copy on your hard drive in case your internet goes down the day you want to show the video.

Here’s another video showing the reaction to the Battle of Little Bighorn.

This is a longer video that gives a play by play of the Battle of Little Bighorn. It might be too long for the classroom if you have a lot of material to cover, but it would be a great suggestion for students who want to learn more about the battle itself.

Easy assignments to implement after watching these videos include a word web about Sitting Bull or my free acrostic poem assignment.

 

*Image of Sitting Bull is in the public domain.

Erie Canal Video, Worksheet, and Assignments

Check out the video tour of the Erie Canal Museum below. It gives you the basic information about the Erie Canal and it’s impact. While the narration could be more energetic, the video comes with review questions that students can answer while watching it to help reinforce the information they hear and see. The museum has also provided a document with over 20 different assignment ideas on the Erie Canal. I would allow students to pick one assignment and complete it. Some additional research may be required for some of the assignments, but a good variety of choices are given (blueprint, timeline, limerick, speech, poster, etc.).

Ultimately, whether you have a lot of time or just a few minutes, make sure your students can answer the following questions about the Erie Canal:

  • Where is the Erie Canal located?
  • Why was the Erie Canal built?
  • How did the Erie Canal affect shipping, transportation, and growth in the United States?

 

Image: Public Domain

Short Video about the First Thanksgiving

Use this short video before Thanksgiving break as a bell ringer or filler.

The True Story of the First Thanksgiving – PBS (2:58)

Optional questions to ask:

  • How long did the first Thanksgiving last?
  • How many men did Massasoit bring with him and what did they contribute to the feast?
  • Why is the idea of Native Americans and colonists coming together so appealing?
  • The Pilgrims and Native Americans were coming out of a time of loss and grief. How can being thankful help someone get over loss and grief?
  • Why is it important to have an attitude of thankfulness, especially during the current pandemic? How does an attitude of thankfulness affect your thoughts and behavior?

Short Halloween History Videos

I always show my students a couple of short videos about the history of Halloween each year. Here are some of my favorites from the History Channel. The first gives a general history of Halloween. The second focuses more on the origins of trick or treating. Both are about 2-3 minutes long. Use them as a fun filler at the end of class or to grab students’ attention at the beginning of class. You can even use them to start a discussion about how American traditions and culture were influenced by other cultures.

Video: George Washington Carver

This is an EXCELLENT video about George Washington Carver.  It does a great job of summarizing his contributions and highlights important character traits such as perseverance, endurance, and service.  Also, interesting fact:  George Washington Carver was born into slavery, kidnapped as an infant, and, once returned, was eventually raised and educated by his owner.

You can used this video when discussing inventors, Black History month, the contributions of African-Americans, challenges in the Reconstruction South, and the Tuskegee Institute.

World War I Video: The Assassination of Franz Ferdinand

This is a good video explaining the start of World War I.  The link will take you to the an Encyclopedia Brittanica page about Franz Ferdinand.  It’s the first video on the page.  It’s entitled, “Witness the beginning of World War I with the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand on June 28, 1914” and is 3:28 (after the ad).  I typically show a video like this after in order to reinforce the content after I have explained a historical event.  However, if you show this as conversation starter, bell-ringer, or opener, before you show this to your students, explain who the leaders are that are mentioned in the video.  For example, the video starts with Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany.  Explain briefly that Kaiser Wilhelm was the head of Germany and that Germany had the strongest military in Europe before the war.  Also, mention that Germany was aligned with Austria-Hungary, etc.  You may even want to write a list of countries and leaders on the board for reference.  If you do this, use a chart and use a different column for each “side.”

By the way, just a side note, I do NOT recommend the Biography.com video about Franz Ferdinand.  It is very biased and even calls him “stupid and unpleasant” and calls his assassin “studious.”  That is NOT an objective video!  I don’t deny that he probably wasn’t the most pleasant guy, but a video that uses language that it is clearly not being objective.

Next Class:  Access Prior Knowledge

This is a very interesting article including little known facts about Franz Ferdinand.  It would be great to go over it at the beginning of the next class as a way to access the students’ prior knowledge and gain their interest.  Keep in mind that there are some negative aspects to him (as with any leader) that are discussed in this article.  However, remind your students that just because someone is unlikeable or does something you disagree with does not mean that he/she deserve to be killed.  I have found that many students often respond with an emotional outburst like “Well, he deserved to be killed!” or “Serves him right!”  Use instances like that to reinforce the value of every human life, and remind students of how they would want to be treated by those who thought little of them.

Eli Whitney Videos and Cotton Gin Craft

Eli Whitney.  You’ve all heard of him.  You know, he’s that guy that indirectly led to an increase in slavery and all of that horrible stuff.  He was just trying to help make life easier (and make a little cash in the process), but his ideas made a HUGE impact on America.

I taught a lesson on Eli Whitney this week.  In my opinion, you need to make sure your students know 2 things about Eli Whitney:

1- He invented the cotton gin

2- He came up with the idea of using interchangeable parts in manufacturing

It can be hard to visualize how the cotton gin works without seeing one (or at least a diagram of one).  I found the BEST video I have ever seen showing the operation of a cotton gin.  Now granted, this video is in black and white and is probably older than me, but there is no better video that I have found which has clear shots of the teeth in the wheels.  When you show this to your students, just let them know ahead of time that it is an older black and white video and that there is a cheesy guy in a wig pretending to be Eli Whitney.

(Side note:  I have often found that students tend to dismiss something they see as old or in black and white IF they haven’t been prepped for it.  Before I show an older video, I always explain that the video explains or illustrates something so much better than other videos that it still has relevance and is worth showing.  Once I acknowledge any obviously cheesy moments or outdated phrases or clothing, it takes away much of the novelty of it, and the students can move past it and just absorb what the video is showing.)

 

Another “decent” video (although NOT the History Channel’s best production) is this one.  You may want to use this in between your discussion of the cotton gin and interchangeable parts.

Now, here’s what I’m REALLY proud of!  I decided that I wanted to have my students make some kind of crafty-type thing to help them remember how the cotton gin worked.  So I enlarged and printed the picture below on cardstock (you could use regular paper too if you had to).

I then gave my students some glue, cotton balls, and unpopped popcorn kernels (to represent cotton seeds).  They had to glue the stuff on the diagram in such a way as to represent what the cotton gin did.  Use liquid glue if you do this.  None of this will stick if you use a glue stick.  Also, tell your students to tear apart the cotton balls into smaller chunks.  The balls will last longer, and it just looks better.

 

Now, this will seriously take less than 5 minutes, so why should you do it?  Because sometimes your students need to do something hands-on.  Because sometimes your students need to do something other than take notes.  Because sometimes you need to do something different.  And if you think this craft may be too “childish” for your kids, I think you underestimate how refreshing a change of pace is when you are sitting in class and listening to people talk all day long.  Did I mention that it would be GREAT reinforcement for tactile learners…or really anyone?

If this idea is too simple for your “high-minded classroom ways,” (haha) try this:  Divide your students into small groups and give them a poster board, cotton balls, popcorn, and glue and say…”Make me a diagram of a cotton gin.” or “Make a poster demonstrating how a cotton gin works.”

Before you get your students pasting and crafting, you need to reinforce the impact of the cotton gin.  It is pointless for your students to know how the cotton gin works if they don’t know the impact it had on the South (and really the world).  I used a table to show the students the difference the cotton gin made.  Have them cut out each box and put it in the correct spot in the chart.  (See link at the bottom of the article.)

One thing that you need to discuss when covering the effects of the cotton gin is the positive and negative effects of the invention.  Have a brief discussion about the good and bad that has resulted from various inventions (start off discussing the cell phone).  Have students do some deep thinking about consequences and cause and effect (maybe a short free-write).  Many people talk about the fact that the cotton gin led to an increase in slavery but often overlook the fact that the cotton gin also provided a way for poor farmers living in the South (who didn’t own slaves) to better support their family.  Also, cotton provided the raw materials necessary for textile mills to expand which provided more jobs.

Once you cover the cotton gin and move on to interchangeable parts, there’s more fun stuff to do.  After explaining interchangeable parts and their importance, may sure you show them that they are surrounded by hundreds of examples of them.  You can use your board markers as a handy example.  If you lose the top to one, you can replace it with another.

Have your students go on a scavenger hunt around the room for examples of interchangeable parts.  You can divide them into groups and have them race.  Whoever gets done first is the winner and gets candy or extra points on a quiz.  I would make them find about 30 different examples within the classroom.  Or, you could also set a timer and see which group can come up with the most examples of items with interchangeable parts in the time allotted.  Pretty much anything with a screw has interchangeable parts.  In fact, a screw is an interchangeable part!  Students are probably wearing examples of items with interchangeable parts as well:  watches, zippers, buttons, earrings, etc.

A word of warning, apparently there is a theory out there called the Mandela effect, where a group of people collectively remembers something wrong.  There’s a bunch of articles devoted to this.  Well, some crazy people claim that Eli Whitney was black and that he invented the cotton gin to reduce the work of slaves.  It’s a crazy Internet theory with no reliable evidence, but there’s always that ONE kid in class who’s read stuff like that and brings it up.  Haha!  The point is, the cotton gin changed the course of American history, regardless of the physical characteristics of the inventor!

Here’s a link to my cotton gin table.  It’s pretty simple.  You can add more stuff to it if you would like (specific statistics about cotton production and slavery).  The fonts may look weird if you don’t have them on your computer.

 

Featured image courtesy of Dsdugan – Own work, CC0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=58026846

I’m Back! Benjamin Franklin Video and Activities

So, I’ve decided to start the blog up again. I don’t have plans to resume the podcast any time soon though, because it is too time-consuming. After stepping away for a while and working on some other projects, I think I can carve out a chunk of time here and there to write a post. I don’t know how often I’ll write. Originally, when I stared the podcast, I tried to make sure I posted every ____ days. I didn’t like that, though, because it felt forced. So, now I’m doing it more for fun, and when I get inspired. The good news is that inspiration has been steadily creeping back in over the last few weeks. I’m preparing to teach a class called American Inventors for my homeschool co-op and I’ve come across some fun resources that get me excited and make me want to share with someone. And to save my non-history-loving mom friends from my rantings about history, I will share my thoughts here.

Speaking of which, the video below from the History Channel is a good one to show when you are studying Benjamin Franklin. You know, that time when Benjamin Franklin stood out in a thunderstorm with a kite and got struck by lightning? Oh yeah, that didn’t happen! At least, it didn’t happen the way so many people think it did. This is a good video for clearing up the myths surrounding his famous lightning experiment.  (Don’t forget to look below the video for classroom uses!)

Classroom Uses:

  • You could do a quick K-W-L before the video to see what your students know. (If you don’t know what a K-W-L is, this sheet gives the basic idea.)  A K-W-L is good to use with a topic that your students already know about or have misconceptions about.
  • Watch the video and create a two-column chart comparing the myth vs. the reality of the experiment.
  • Use the video to reinforce the importance of Franklin as an Enlightenment figure.
  • Use the video at the beginning of class to get your students interested in Franklin before a lesson on the Enlightenment in the US.

Another great activity to use when studying Franklin is a word web.  Word webs are great to use with people who are multi-faceted and/or have many different roles in US history.  After you have discussed Franklin, divide students into groups and have them create word webs about him.  (Make sure you show them an example of what a word web is.  Here’s an easy Halloween word web that your students would easily understand.)  You may need to prompt them or give hints as to how to divide up his life.  Here’s a very quick example of how a word web about Franklin might be structured.  Also, a simple word web could also be used as an exit ticket to reinforce content at the end of class.

Tips for Remembering Constitutional Amendments

Do you know about ALL of the amendments to the Constitution?  Can you tell me what each one changed or added to the Constitution?  I can’t (gasp).  I’m betting your students can’t either (and probably you neither, unless you’ve been teaching Civics for a while).  Well, I found this video that gives some quick pneumonic devices to help you remember some of the more important amendments.  You don’t necessarily need to show this to your students, but I would watch it and go over these tricks with your students (and use them yourself).  The tip about the Reconstruction amendments is pretty helpful.

The one that he didn’t cover, which I think is super-important, is the 19th amendment, which gave women the right to vote.  I actually scoured the internet (ok, I looked for 10 minutes) to see if anyone else had tips for remembering the 19th, and I couldn’t find anything useful!  I used to tell my students to imagine a bunch of women standing in line to vote wearing t-shirts that say “19” or imagine a bunch of girls jumping up and down squealing, “I’m 19!”  You know, that would be a good extra credit assignment; have students come up with easy and creative ways to remember the some of the important amendments.

Do you have any neat ways to remember amendments?  Leave them in the comments below!

World War I Christmas Truce

“The soldier above all others prays for peace, for it is the soldier who must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war.” — Douglas MacArthur

I absolutely LOVE stories of historical events that show humanity at its best.  One such story is that of the World War I Christmas truce.  If you’ve never heard of this incident, it is fascinating!  It began when British troops sitting in the trenches heard the Germans singing Christmas carols.  Next thing you know, the British and German troops met in no man’s land and exchanged gifts, took pictures, and even played soccer together!  Eventually, due to pressure by commanding officers, the fighting resumed between the two sides.  To check out the whole story, read about it here.  There are even pictures of the “enemies” mingling during the truce (see the picture above)!  How cool!  The History Channel also has a short video clip here that has a voiceover of one of the veteran’s who was involved!

If you like stories like this, you can also read the book Chicken Soup for the Veteran’s Soul.  It is full of neat anecdotes from various wars that will make you feel all warm and fuzzy inside.  I sometimes read a story from this book to my students when we had a few minutes to spare at the end of class.  Random Acts of Kindness:  True Stories of America’s Civil War is one that has a ton of heartwarming, true accounts from the Civil War.  (I actually mentioned this in my last podcast.)  Do you know of any other books like these?  I’d love to hear about them.  Leave a comment and let me know.

 

Photo:  British and German troops meeting in no man’s land during the unofficial truce – Imperial War Museums

Great Depression Video

How did the Great Depression start?  Here’s a very informative video about the Great Depression that can tell you that and more.  It does an excellent job of explaining how the Great Depression came about.  It is clear, straightforward, and easy to understand.  The video is 7 minutes and 30 seconds long, but you can stop it at 6 minutes if your students start to lose interest.  The last minute and a half is basically a silent comparison of Roosevelt and Hoover.  It does end a bit abruptly, but overall it explains the start of the Depression very clearly.

“This Day in History” Websites

You know that excited-yet-also-frustrated feeling you get when you come across something that is awesome and can totally help you out in the classroom?  You have that whole, “Why haven’t I found this sooner” moment.  Well, I had that when I came across this website today.  I was looking for a particular historical picture on the Library of Congress website (which has an amazing, yet overwhelming amount of stuff on it), when I came across their “Today in History” series.

When I taught full-time, I always had a “This day in history” segment in my bell ringer.  I would display one significant historical event (not necessarily specifically related to US history) on the board and discuss it briefly with my students.  When I did it, I had to create a PowerPoint slide with a picture and explanation for each school day of the year.  It took me a while to research and create them.  I did have a book called Today in History, which helped, but it was still time-consuming.

The students really enjoyed it.  Guess what?  You don’t have to go through all of that work to do this in your classroom. You can just go here and find the date you need.  Under each link for each date, there is a page about at least one historical event which contains a picture and an explanation.  It’s really easy to navigate!  Also, each page (or at least all of the ones I checked out) had links at the bottom to related Library of Congress resources.  Even if this doesn’t become a daily feature of your classroom, you could always keep it handy in case your lesson runs short and you need a filler for the last few minutes of class.

By the way, the History Channel also has a really good This Day in History page, which is accompanied by a video.  However, the video has a commercial and sometimes the videos are slow to load.  Also, the History Channel video covers 5 or 6 topics, and sometimes it’s more effective to focus on one particular event rather than mention several briefly.  Either way, both of these resources can save you time!

 

Photo:  Collins, M., photographer. (1942) New York, New York. Audience at the Stage Door canteen. Aug.?. [Image] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/owi2001009097/PP/.

Teddy Roosevelt Video Footage at the Library of Congress

According to the Library of Congress, “It has been said that during the silent newsreel period no president was more photogenic than Theodore Roosevelt. He was unusually cooperative with motion picture photographers, often pausing in the midst of official ceremonies to face the camera, bow, wave, smile, gesture, or otherwise accommodate the cameraman.”1

The Library of Congress has a good bit of video footage of Roosevelt at various places and events.  These things are really neat to watch!  Not only do you get to see the man himself, BUT you get a good glimpse of the crowds that came to see him.  Check out the outfits that everyone wore!  In some of the footage, it may take a minute or more for TR to appear.  If you want to show a few of these to your students, play a quick game of “Who Can Spot Teddy Roosevelt.”  Make sure that you watch the clips beforehand, so that you know when Roosevelt will appear (in case your students miss it and don’t see him).  Remind students that this is not some old movie with people in costumes; these were actual people in these clips!  They might get bored watching all of each clip, so you may want to show just a couple of minutes.  You could also show one a day for a few days at the end of class.  Here are a few below.  To see the full list of videos with descriptions, click here.

 

1 Theodore Roosevelt on Film – Theodore Roosevelt: His Life and Times on Film. (n.d.). Retrieved October 12, 2016, from https://www.loc.gov/collections/theodore-roosevelt-films/articles-and-essays/theodore-roosevelt-on-film/

60-Second Presidents Videos

I’ve mentioned this resource before in a couple of my podcasts, but I decided it would be a good idea to post the link for all of the videos.  PBS created a video series called 60-Second Presidents in which they cover the basic info and accomplishments of each US president.  The videos are short but interesting and would be a great way to review a president the day after you discussed his administration.  The site also has activities that go along with some of the videos, but these activities seem to be best suited (in my opinion) to a civics or government class.  Click here to check out these short but sweet videos.