Museum educators have prepared classroom programming that can be downloaded for your use for free. If you download a program, please email education@vahistorymuseum.org
Explore Virginia’s multifaceted history through five engaging lessons prepared by the Historical Society of Western Virginia educator for download and use in your classroom to meet SOLs. Each lesson incorporates unique objectives, materials, activities, and assessments, fostering critical thinking, research skills, and reflection. Differentiation options and extension activities are also available with most of the lessons.
AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD:
1. Explore 19th-century rural Virginia through Maria Jane Gish Frantz’s primary source account.
Students will analyze her insights into daily life, challenges, and traditional skills of the era.
Engage in discussions about tasks, technology, and education, followed by modern-life
comparisons. Assess students based on their notes and participation. Differentiation and
extension activities are available.
Download link: Life in 19th Century Rural Virginia
2. Past and Present Perspectives – Early Craftsmen in Appalachia
“Embark on a journey through Appalachian craftsmanship with our two-part lesson, “Past and Present Perspectives.” Students will compare 18th-century craftsmanship with the late 19th to early 20th-century craft revival through the reading of two articles: ““Early Craftsmen” by Roddy Moore and “The Craft Revival in Appalachia, 1896-1937” by Anna Jariello. This engaging experience features articles, group discussions, and a comparative analysis, nurturing an appreciation for the cultural significance of these crafts.”
Past and Present Perspectives, Early Craftsmen in Appalachia
3. The Lost Colony of Roanoke Island Jigsaw Lesson
Dive into the enigma of the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island with our Jigsaw Lesson. Students will work in expert groups to read “Lost Colony” by Jeff Hampton and then focus on researching different facets of the mystery, such as background information, the disappearance, Native American perspectives, and historical significance. Following this, in new groups, students will synthesize their findings and reflect on the experience.
The Lost Colony of Roanoke Island
4. Uncovering Precontact Native American Stone Structures in Virginia
Uncover the mysteries of precontact Native American stone structures in Virginia in this 90-minute lesson. Students will read and discuss “The Enigmatic Stone Structures of Western Virginia” by Daniel Pezzoni, exploring architectural features and cultural meanings. They’ll engage in research to understand how these structures challenge traditional historical narratives.
Uncovering Precontact Native American Stone Structures in Virginia
5. Colonel William Fleming’s Origins
Explore the life and experiences of Col. William Fleming with our engaging lesson. Students will read the article “Col. William Fleming’s Origins” by Claire White, discuss its content, and delve into the significance of Fleming’s early life in Dumfries, Scotland, and his later achievements.
Colonel William Fleming’s Origins
Other programs offered periodically include these:
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Going West: European Settlement of the Roanoke Valley
Learn about people who settled the Roanoke Valley and the American Indians who already lived here. Explore how people survived and eventually prospered in an area once considered wilderness; discuss how western settlements like Roanoke were involved in the Revolutionary War. On the fun side, students make butter in this class.
Learning Objectives
- Learn about native cultures in the Roanoke Valley
- Understand why European settlers came to the valley
- Learn how western settlements contributed to the American Revolution
- Analyze reproductive American Indian artifacts
Suggested Readings
- You Wouldn’t Want to Be an American Colonist!: A Settlement You’d Rather Not Start; ages 8 and up
- Enemy in the Fort by Sarah Masters Buckley; ages 9-12.
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How Work Has Changed: The 20thCentury Labor Movement
View photographs of child laborers in Roanoke mill, taken by Lewis Hine, whose photos helped get tighter enforcement of labor laws in the early 1900s. Students can pretend they work in the cotton mills and try their hand at working the doffer station (changing spindles). Discuss the labor movement and how workers formed unions to fight for better wages and working conditions. Students read selected primary sources about the movement and try to think like historians.
Learning Objectives
- Understand how work has changed
- Identify important leaders and strategies of the labor movement
- Develop analytical reading skills with primary sources
- Teamwork
Suggested Readings
- The Bobbin Girl by Emily Arnold McCully; ages 6-9
- Missing from Haymarket Square by Harriette Gillem Bell; ages 10-14
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Pinching Pennies: Saving during the Great Depression
Learn about the importance of saving money! Students will learn the differences between saving, spending, and donating, and how people in the past managed their money. The program starts by reading the picture book, A Chair for My Mother by Vera Williams, in which a family works together to save enough money for a new armchair after losing theirs to a house fire. Students make their own piggy banks out of recycled materials so they can start their own savings!
Learning Objectives
- Define saving, spending, and donating
- Learn that work has changed
- Artistic development
Suggested Readings
- A Dollar, a Penny, How Much and How Many by Brian Cleary; ages 2-5;
- How to Turn $100 Into $1,000,000: A Kid’s Guide to Earning, Saving, and Investing; ages 6- 10
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Life on the Home Front: Roanoke during the Civil War
Learn what life was like for the women, children, and older men who stayed at home during the Civil War. Tour Civil War-related exhibits and discuss what happens at home during the war, based on letters between area family members. Write your own letters to a family member fighting in the war.
Learning Objectives
- List examples of how and why the war affected citizens’ day-to-day life
- Discuss the challenges faced by those on the home front
- Describe how news traveled to the home front during the Civil War
- Develop analytical reading skills with primary sources
- Creative writing
Suggested Readings
- Guts & Glory: The American Civil War by Ben Thompson; ages 8-12
- Pink and Say (about a friendship between black and white soldiers) by Patricia Polacco; ages 5-9
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Visual Literacy Workshop
Like words, photographs have their own meanings, thoughts, and emotions. They record important events and can be used as historical evidence. Learning to read images
Learn how O. Winston Link created this plane, train photo expands our observation and critical thinking skills. Discuss images from O. Winston Link as he chronicled the end of the steam train on the Norfolk & Western Railway, including the communities the trains rolled through.
Learning Objectives
- Learn to read the stories within photographs and pictures
- Understand principles of light, focus, framing, and composition
- Develop analytical skills.
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Then & Now Photography
Explore Roanoke’s history through photography. Then and Now and Shoot Like Link workshops also are offered for teens and adults. Then and Now encourages participants to recreate the setting of an historic photo. Veteran photographers from the Roanoke Camera Club are enlisted to teach these classes. Shoot Like Link explores Link’s photography techniques, which were advanced for their time.
To learn more, contact info@vahistorymuseum.org or 540-982-5465.
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