Categories
Publishing and Presenting

Migration Stories: Publishing and Presenting:

Why do people migrate, and how does the process of migrating effect people and countries?

Lesson Overview

Grade Level: 2

Duration: 2-3 lessons, 45 minutes each

Supporting Questions: Why did the person you interviewed migrate? How did he/she/they feel at first? Did this feeling change over time? What did they bring with them? What did they learn?

What Students Will Produce : By the end of the lesson, students will create a web-based story (example) using material that they created in the previous lessons. Students will publish these stories online and present them to other students. Students’ collage work will also be assembled into a public display.

What Students Will Learn: Students will learn how to adapt their narratives to fit a particular publishing platform, and also gain experience using pictures to support a story. By publishing their work in a public forum, students will also learn how to participate in civic discussions, and continue to learn about immigration through the ways in which other people interact with their work.

Procedures
Related Curriculum Standards
List of Resources

Categories
Data Analysis and Content Creation

Migration Stories: Data Analysis and Content Creation

Why do people migrate, and how does the process of migrating effect people and countries?

Lesson Overview

Grade Level: 2

Duration: 3-4 lessons, 45 minutes each

Supporting Questions: How does it feel like to move to a new country? What do people bring with them when they migrate? What are some things things that people have to adapt to when then migrate?

What Students Will Produce : By the end of the lesson, each students will have completed a collage and written narrative (in first person, from the perspective of the person that they interviewed) of their interview with an immigrant.

What Students Will Learn: Students will continue to build knowledge of why people migrate, and what the process of migration feels like in these lessons. The focus of these lessons will be on representing what they have learned so far using visual and language arts. Specifically, students will learn how to create a collage that represents another person’s experience, and how to write a narrative about an event using a primary source.

Procedures
Related Curriculum Standards
List of Resources
Categories
Data Collection

Migration Stories: Data Collection

Why do people migrate, and how does the process of migrating effect people and countries?

Lesson Overview

Grade Level: 2

Duration: 2-3 lessons, 45 minutes each

Supporting Questions: How does it feel to move to a new country? What do people bring with them when they migrate? What are some things things that people have to adapt to when then migrate?

What Students Will Produce : By the end of the lesson, each students will have completed a KWL sheet, an interview guide, and recorded an interview with an immigrant that they know.

What Students Will Learn: students will continue to discover why people migrate, and what the process of migration feels like in these lessons. In addition, students will learn how to develop questions that will help them understand a topic, and use those questions to interview a primary source.

Procedures
Related Curriculum Standards
List of Resources

Categories
Social Studies Visual Arts Migration

Project Unit: Migration Stories

Teaching students about migration early in their academic lives is important for several reasons.  First, a quarter of U.S. students are first- or second-generation immigrants, so acknowledging and understanding the sometimes slow process of adapting to their new country is important simply to help them and their families become engaged in the school community.[1]  Second, immigration is central to the “story of the U.S.A.”, so understanding the reasons people move and how they contribute to their new country is essential to understanding U.S. history.  And third, studying immigration can help students appreciate how distinct cultural experiences can shape distinct perspectives, which helps them to develop the empathy necessary to engage in civic deliberation with people who might see the world differently.[2]  This project-based unit addresses all three of these reasons for studying immigration through a variety of activities that help construct an understanding of immigration as an ever-present force shaping the nation, and as a process of adjustment that can be both rewarding and challenging. 

Project Overview
woman draw a light bulb in white board

Migration Stories: Building Background

These first two lessons introduce the goal of the project and immerse students in whole-classroom, small-group, and self-directed inquiry into the causes, process, and real-world consequences of immigration.
two girls gossiping with one another

Migration Stories: Data Collection

These lessons teach students how to collect information by interviewing primary sources. Students will learn how to create useful questions and actually conduct and record an interview.
people woman girl painting

Migration Stories: Data Analysis and Content Creation

The third set of lessons teach students how to analyze and document their “findings” – through writing and collage “workshops” that involve self-directed activities as well as structured peer feedback.
teacher talking to the class

Migration Stories: Publishing and Presenting:

In the final set of lessons, students assemble their content into a single web-based narrative and present their work to the broader school community.
Priority Standards
Unit Design and Rationale
Personal Relationship to Topic and Pedagogy
Resources Used in Unit

[1] https://www.urban.org/features/part-us-data-driven-look-children-immigrants

[2] Barton and Levstik, 2004 (ch 2).

Categories
Migration Building Background Social Studies Lesson Plans

Migration Stories: Building Background

Why do people migrate, and how does the process of migrating effect people and countries?

Lesson Overview

Grade Level: 2

Duration: 2 lessons, 45 minutes each

Supporting Questions: How has immigration shaped the U.S.A.? How long does it take for a new country to feel like home? In what ways do immigrants change after they move? In what ways do they stay the same?

What Students Will Produce : By the end of the lesson, each students will have completed a 3-part graphic organizer that they will use to guide their future work.

What Students Will Learn: Through a guided reading activity, jigsaw activity, and self-directed research, students will develop and demonstrate understanding of migration as a process that: 1) has shaped the U.S.A. 2) results from a variety of causes; and 3) involves a process of adjustment that can be unique to individuals.

Procedures
Related Curriculum Standards