Working with Documents in Remembering WWI

Remembering WWI is an iPad and Android app that invites audiences to explore, collaborate, and engage with the extensive collection of World War I films and photographs in the holdings of the National Archives.

Remembering WWI App Welcome screen

This post includes ready-to-go strategies for helping your students work with newly digitized WWI-era primary sources featured in the new Remembering WWI app – helping them to make sense of the stories, events, and ideas of the past through document analysis and inquiry-based learning.

It comes from Kerri Young of Historypinapp developer and partner on Remembering WWI. It was originally posted on the Historypin blog.


Pairing with Document Analysis Worksheets

If you want to ease your students into working with primary sources, start with document analysis worksheets. These downloadable sheets will help your students think through the Remembering WWI app’s featured WWI-era films and photographs for contextual understanding and to extract information to make informed judgments.

Below, 5th and 6th grade teacher Carol Huneycutt, from Fayetteville, Arkansas, created a simple prompt to pair with the photograph analysis worksheet:

World War I app
(Note that copy should read “Explore Archive” not “Explore Artifacts.”)
Photo Analysis Worksheet
Photograph analysis worksheet — While Carol used the photograph analysis worksheet, a video analysis worksheet is also available for pairing with film clips featured in the app.

As Carol did above, you may choose to let students explore WWI featured topics and documents of their choosing; or you can walk through one film or photo together with them.

Download the photograph analysis worksheet from DocsTeach.

Download video analysis worksheet from DocsTeach.


Answering a Unit-focused Question – Examples from a Teacher Workshop at UC Berkeley

Educators working on their lesson documentation during a Remembering WWI workshop at UC Berkeley
Educators working on their lesson documentation during a Remembering WWI workshop at UC Berkeley on 10/20/17

On October 20th, teachers gathered at UC Berkeley for a Remembering WWI workshop, in partnership with the Berkeley History and Social Science Project (UCBHSSP). Very much in line with the National Archives’ Primarily Teaching strategies, teachers in this workshop researched WWI-era films and photos in the app that aligned with a specific unit-focused question or theme, and produced learning activities that would help incorporate these digitized sources into the classroom.

UCBHSSP is working on creating educator resources for California’s newly-adopted History and Social Science Framework, which emphasizes inquiry-based learning. To get students to think historically, we helped participants meditate on the experience between student and archive, and how to work from a treasure trove of sources in the app to help students interpret significance through evidence.

Guideposts for Historical Thinking

To think historically, students need to be able to:

  1. Establish historical significance
  2. Use primary source evidence
  3. Identify continuity and change
  4. Analyze cause and consequence
  5. Take historical perspectives, and
  6. Understand the ethical dimension of historical interpretations.

See a full list and explanation of these guideposts here.

To think about: Does one of the Guideposts speak in particular to the lesson question you’re focusing on?

 

Lesson Documentation Examples from the Workshop

Below are sample lesson plans produced by educators at the workshop. Read more about what a Framework-aligned History Classroom looks like here.

 

Example lesson plan: Galvanizing support at home for the War

Who: Jennifer Collier, U.S. History high school teacher

Lesson Focus Question: How did World War I change the identity of the United States from an isolationist nation to a global power?

Unit focus Question: How did the United States Government galvanize support at home for the Great War?

Pre-created collections for students to explore: Remembering WWI app

Lesson documentation: here

Lesson Planning Template

Like Carol in the previous section, Jennifer also paired her lesson with a document analysis worksheet, provided by the UCBHSSP. Download the document here.

 

Example lesson plan: WWI Propaganda

Who: Jarred Fobian, high school history teacher

Unit Focus Question: ?Which was the most significant cause of WWI: militarism, alliances, imperialism or nationalism?

Lesson focus Question: ?How were elements of nationalism used in propaganda to gain public support of The Great War?

Pre-created collections for students to explore: Remembering WWI on Historypin

Lesson documentation: here

Enlist in the Navy poster
“All Together! Enlist in the Navy.” (4-P-66)

 

Example lesson plan: California and WWI

Who: Hayley Beale, school librarian

Lesson Focus Question: What was California’s role in WWI and what was the lasting significance of this nationally?

Unit focus Question: How did the United States Government galvanize support at home for the Great War?

Pre-created collections for students to explore: Remembering WWI on Historypin

Lesson documentation: here

Collections on Historypin
Collections Hayley created on Historypin as part of her “California in WWI” lesson

Some images of Hayley’s amazing WWI bulletin board she created within her school, reusing images from Remembering WWI:

WWI board
WWI board 2To create WWI collections on Historypin, instead of in the app, as Hayley did (if you don’t have access to tablets in the classroom, for example), see this step-by-step guide.

 

More Things to Note About WWI Sources from the National Archives

In exploring these guideposts in the workshop, here are some things to discuss with your students about these WWI-era sources:

  • An important part of the sources is that they are revealing. That is, they shed light on enduring or emerging issues in history or contemporary life.
  • There are two types of sources to talk about with students: 1. The visual source itself  2. Interpretive caption of it
  • What makes these sources particular? 1. Government-produced, staged 2. Early war journalism

An important thing to note is that any of these lesson plans and above questions can be applied to working with primary sources beyond this conflict, such as with World War II sources.

 


Historypin teamed up with the National Archives to develop the Remembering WWI tablet app, part of the Wartime Films Project. You can learn more about the national collaborative Remembering WWI project here.

This project was made possible in part by the National Archives Foundation and a generous gift from an anonymous donor.

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