Lesson: Personal and Historical Oral History Timelines
New Bedford Division of Adult/Continuing Education
455 County Street
New Bedford, MA 02740
MAIN CONCEPT:
The students compare local history to oral history.
OBJECTIVES:
To help the students form a personal timeline.
To help the students discover more about their family heritage.
To help the students see themselves and their heritage as an integral part of the ongoing events in
history.
To help the students realize the importance of their own family history, and how it relates to the
local history.
To have the students explore immigration.
To help the students enhance their research and communicative skills.
To help the students use their reading and writing skills and begin making comparisons regarding
how the local area has changed since their arrival.
MATERIALS:
Computer, modem, CD-ROM drive, a telecommunications network providing access to the World
Wide Web, and a Web browser bookmark for Oral History sites
Word Processing Software
World Map
CD-ROM (such as Grolier's Encyclopedia)
Journals for students to record information
Portraits of Our Mothers (p.52)
Multicultural Activities for the American History Classroom, by Hallie Ann Wannamaker
(p. 221- The 1990's)
If Your Name was Changed at Ellis Island, by Ellen Levine
Ellis Island, by R. Conrad Stein
PROCEDURES:
The students draw a timeline and record their birthdates, the birthdates of their mother,
grandmother, and, if possible, their great-grandmother. The students could also include the dates
of important events that happened in their lives, such as: when they arrived in the U.S., left
school, married, the birthdates of their children, etc.
The class takes a field trip to the public library and asks the reference librarian or media
specialist to help the students find local newspapers for each of the dates. Each student lists the
local historic events on their timeline covering the same time period as their dates.
Using the computer students access the Internet viewing the web site of their local newspaper
or the museum of the local historical society which lists local historic events, and they write
these dates on their timeline.
Using a timeline of local historical events, students begin to make comparisons of how the
local area has changed since their arrival.
ACTIVITIES:
As a class activity students write the names and birthdates of themselves, their mothers,
grandmothers, and, if possible, their great-grandmothers, each on a separate index card. Combine
all the cards from the class and put them in order from the earliest to the most recent. Make an
enormous timeline around the classroom. The students research the local history and list the
historic events which occurred on these dates.
The class takes a field trip to the public library and asks the reference librarian or media
specialist to help the students find newspapers for each of the dates. Each student lists the
worldwide historic events on their timeline covering the same time period as their dates.
Using the computer students access the Internet viewing the web site that lists worldwide
historic events in a timeline.
Given a Venn Diagram, students will brainstorm their personal and/or friends' experiences
about fitting into a situation, then retell their experiences at the writing center.
To recall and retell individual experiences of "fitting in". The students tell about their personal
experiences of adjusting to a new culture (school, work, country, neighborhood, club, sport).
Students learn about the history of immigration by reading and listening while the teacher
reads excerpts from the books, Ellis Island and
If Your Name was Changed at Ellis Island.
Given the use of the World Wide Web immigration site (FAIR)
students will
read about the experiences of others in adjusting to a new culture and explore immigration on the
Internet and write these dates on their timelines.
The class may take a field trip to a local museum. Comparisons may be made of the present
and the past. Students may also discuss and compare the American culture to that of other
countries.