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Virtual Ellis Island Museum Unit

Lesson Three
Oral Histories

  • Brief Description
  • Objectives
  • Materials and Resources
  • Activity Description

  • Brief Description

        Using the criteria developed in lesson two, students conduct oral histories of family members to learn about their cultural and ethnic heritage. Prior to starting, students and teachers develop a list of questions that students will use in their interviews and research. Up to

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    Objectives

        In conducting their oral histories students will:

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    Materials and Resources Needed

         In developing our lessons and activities, we made some assumptions about the hardware and software that would be available in the classroom for teachers who visit the LETSNet website. We assume that teachers using our Internet-based lessons or activities have a computer (PC or Macintosh) with the necessary hardware components (mouse, keyboard, and monitor) as well as software (operating system, TCP/IP software, networking or dial-up software, e-mail and a World Wide Web client program, preferably Netscape, but perhaps Mosaic or Lynx). In the section below, we specify any "special" hardware or software requirements for a lesson or activity - over and above those described above - as well as our sense of the Internet access required to do the activity.

    1. Special hardware requirements: None.
    2. Special software requirements: None.
    3. Internet access: Medium-speed (28,000 BPS via modem)
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    Activity Description

        Below are some sample questions that you might use with your students to guide their oral history interviews.

        Students may be interviewing family members who immigrated, or they may interview family members to find out what they know of their ancestors' and why and when they immigrated. These questions have been designed to work with people who themselves immigrated. They can be easily reworded to work in the latter case.

    1. What was the primary reason you immigrated to this country?
    2. When did you come to the United States?
    3. Where was your home before you moved to the United States?
    4. What did you do in your homeland before you moved here?
    5. Where did you first settle when you came to this country?
    6. Did you know English when you came here? What other languages did you speak?
    7. What was the trip to the U.S. like? Did you come over land, by boat, or by plane? Was the trip hard or easy? Were you ever worried or frightened?
    8. What were your first impressions of the United States? Did your first experiences live up to what you had hoped for?
    9. Did you experience any racism or prejudice when you moved to this country?
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