Peter Pappas »
23 November 2005 »
In History / DBQ's, Strategies »

Beavers Build a Dam Herman Moll 1732
This lesson improves content reading comprehension and critical thinking skills with an engaging array of source documents – including journal entries, letters, maps, and illustrations. It examines European views of Native American and the New World in the Age of Exploration. While it is a rather one-sided account, the documents also reveal a great deal about the cultural "lenses" that the Europeans "looked though."I developed this lesson to assist high school history teachers working with struggling readers. I wanted to show them how they could scaffold learning so that all students could participate in doing the work of historians. I built the lesson around a theme which was central to their curriculum. It was designed as an essential question that would engage students in reflection about how they allowed prejudice to color their perceptions. I selected images which could be “decoded” by students with a minimum of background knowledge.
The source material contains twenty-five documents in text and image formats. I modernized historic accounts at two reading levels – 5th and 8th grade. Each contains the same twenty five documents. A series of six exercises accompanies the lesson to guide students through the process of extracting information from the documents and constructing their own answers to the essential question. Link to Lesson
Tags: Critical thinking, Curriculum, Essential questions, Higher-order thinking, Maps, US History
Peter Pappas »
18 November 2005 »
In Literacy »
I recently presented a workshop for teachers from the New York State Office of Children and Family Services. The goal was to share strategies for working with struggling readers in multi-ability classrooms in juvenile detention facilities around the state. I used reader profiles to guide teachers through identification of struggling readers and appropriate learning strategies. [...]
Tags: Motivation, NYT, Writing
Peter Pappas »
12 November 2005 »
In History / DBQ's, Presentations »
I recently worked with educators from across the Rochester NY area in a workshop titled “Picturing Ourselves: Teaching with Visual Documents” at a workshop held at the Memorial Art Gallery. We looked at strategies for using visual document to create student-centered lessons that invite students to construct their own meaning. Our focus included – the [...]
Tags: Comparing, Data, Essential questions, Higher-order thinking, Maps, Museums, Rochester, US History, Visual Literacy
Peter Pappas »
04 November 2005 »
In Commentary, Ed Tech, Students »
A report by the Pew Internet & American Life Project states, “Thanks to the internet, American teenagers can engage media material and create their own content in ways their parents could not. Today’s online teens live in a world filled with self-authored, customized, and on-demand content, much of which is easily replicated, manipulated, and redistributable. [...]
Tags: Creativity, Innovation, Parents, Relevance
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