History > United States (History) (1097 resources)
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Farm and Rural Life -- 1939-1945

Grade Levels: 3 - 5

Overview

Students use an online resource to view photographs depicting rural and factory life in the United States during the years 1939 – 1945. Then they describe one photograph and what it reveals and obscures about a particular time and place.

Objective

Students will practice using information provided to make inferences.

Materials


Procedure

  1. Tell students they are going to use the World Wide Web to take a look at America's past specifically, rural and factory life in the 1930s and 1940s. Review with them the information they have learned about earlier Americans.

  2. Direct students to Color Photographs from the FSI and OWI, 1939 – 1945. Have them click on "Subjects Index" to find alphabetical subject listings. Subjects of special interest might be "Children" or photographs taken in either your state or a neighboring one.

  3. When students find a subject of interest, they can click on it to see a small version of the photograph, and then click on that to see it in a larger format. If there is more than one photograph on the subject, the titles of all the relevant photographs will appear.

  4. After students find a photograph that appeals to them, discuss the role of photographs as historical records.

  5. Help students analyze what the photo shows about the past and what the photographer is trying to say. Encourage them to think both about what is in the photo and what might have been left out.

  6. In the classroom, distribute the "Farm and Rural Life – 1939 – 1945" worksheet. Tell students that they are going to closely observe and then tell the story of a photograph. Remind them that part of their task will be to use the information in the photograph to infer what is missing.

  7. Allow time for students individually or in small groups to browse through the subjects and select a photograph to describe. Encourage students to share their completed descriptions and discuss differing interpretations.


Extension

Students might enjoy going to the American Memory website to browse through the list of all the American Memory Collections.


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