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Create Docents For 25 National Monuments For In Class Field Trip To DC


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Keywords: Government, Monuments, Congressional Initiatives, Washington, DC Tour
Subject(s): Art, Photography, Civics, Social Studies, Technology, Geography, Podcasting, Journalism, History
Grades 9 through 12
NETS-S Standard:
  • Creativity and Innovation
  • Communication and Collaboration
  • Research and Information Fluency
  • Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Decision Making
  • Digital Citizenship
  • Technology Operations and Concepts
View Full Text of Standards
School: Williamsburg Christian Academy, Williamsburg, VA
Planned By: Dianna Lindsay
Original Author: Dianna Lindsay, Williamsburg
Students will read three art history scholastic articles on public structures and their role in developing civic pride and preserving national history. In addition, using Cornell note structures, students will post their summaries and reactions to the articles and the class lecture on the topic. Students will develop a class woke page on this topic as well as a series of Podcasts and a YouTube production for the school's news station.

Twenty five selected monuments will be reviewed by seniors in US Government class to reflect the most popular and historically compelling monuments. The teacher will compile the list and students will have an opportunity to select a monument with guidance and awareness of likes, interests, and special needs. The end product of the lesson will include podcasts on each monument and a school YouTube production on the virtual trip to DC for use in a variety of elementary/middle school classes emphasizing US History and geography (grades 4, 6, 7, and 8). Each student will serve as the special docent for each selected location. It is hoped that the class may do an on-site visit to Washington, DC to do the live broadcasting per the annual trip plans and a pending grant.

Each student will research the following: Congressional role in the creation and construction of their monument, timeline from beginning to ending of each ideal structure, annual cost of maintenance, artist and her/his credentials and other public works structures, dedication ceremony details, special facts, details, and inscriptions, and other facts about the structure. Students will do their primary research via the Library of Congress using primary sources available in the Library and through the National Archives. Students will work as research, production, creative, web, and performance teams. The final products will be grouped to show the developmental changes in national monuments. Each Podcast will be a stand-alone 6 minute production highlighting the monument, it's geography, history, and creation from Congressional beginnings to current status.

Students will need instruction in: podcasting, YouTube, digital cameras, editing, wiki development and Prezi. The final exhibition is a public source series of worthy materials for other learners available in the public domain. As a teacher, I am not competent in these areas and have not yet purchased proper digital devices to bring this high interest lesson to life. I have experience in Prezi, wikis and digital cameras; I will expand my knowledge to partner with the students.
Comments
It is my intention to someday have all secondary students own iPads and/or iTouches to also use and develop Apps for this project and several other authentic learning projects in government, civics, and US history. Based on individual and group collaborations from primary source texts and documents, students can learn the new ways to explain and hypothesize about historical implications of their research.
Cross-Curriculum Ideas
Students will be introduced to art, architecture, congressional records, history, geography and writing supported by technological production tools to communicate and distribute their research to a wider and authentic audience beyond their immediate classroom.
Follow-Up
Students will distribute the products, blog about the productions and create a Wiki highlighting their work. Shared final products will be shared within the school and be available in the public domain.
Materials: Mobile Labs, Flip Video, Point and Shoot, Microphones, Art Tools, Video Tools, Camera/Video Accessories, Camera Bags, Flash/USB Drives, Tripods, Batteries, Memory Cards, CDs and DVDs, Cables, Writing, Social Studies, Books, Podcasting, Inspiration, Authoring and Publishing, Slideshow, Clip Art, Timeline, Screen Capture, Animation, Cause and Effect
Other Items: 1 Prezi License , $500 each, total of $500.00