Scope
and Sequence
Lesson “O”
Title:
Zooming Out Date
Presented: 9/18/08
Lead Teacher:
Maria
Brewer and Shannon Lochner
Rational
Statement:
Students will follow the discussion
about the book that was read and related to the Alcotts. After the
discussion,
the students will complete a map using color. Beginning with their team
hero of
freedom, children will understand expanding contexts personally and for
the 19th
century. Children will appreciate the way America has changed since the
19th
century.
Lesson #1
Title:
What is a Timeline?
Date Presented: 9/25/08
Lead
Teacher: Shannon Lochner
Rational
Statement:
The teacher will begin the lesson with
information about timelines. The teachers will model their own timeline
to the
students. The teachers and students will work together to learn about
and
create a timeline of the Alcotts and the 1800s. Last, the students will
individually create their own timeline of the Alcotts and the 1800s.
The
students will understand and use timelines for past dates and will
appreciate
that the past is what has shaped the world we live in now.
Lesson #2
Title: How
it Goes Date Presented: 10/2/08
Lead
Teacher: Maria Brewer
Rational
Statement:
The
students will participate in a discussion and skit about the Alcotts’
views.
They will then write a letter to Louisa May as if they were a friend
she moved
away from. After a discussion about the Alcotts position on the
timelines
(created last lesson), the students will perform a skit based on
Louisa’s
childhood. The children will appreciate the efforts made by Bronson
Alcott and
the sacrifices his family made for him.
Lesson #3
Title:
What Exactly Was the Civil War?
Date Presented: 10/9/08
Lead
Teacher: Shannon Lochner
Rational
Statement:
The teacher will begin the lesson
with information about the Civil War. The teacher will lead a
discussion in the
different roles of those involved in fighting in the Civil War. The
teacher
will talk about how important ordinary heroes were in the War. The
teacher will
model how to create a 3-D picture of one of the ordinary heroes. The
students
will then create their own 3-D picture to write about and share with
others.
The students will understand what the Civil War was about and who was
involved
and appreciate that ordinary heroes, including Louisa May and Bronson
Alcott,
were important in fighting the Civil War.
Lesson #4
Title:
Women for Louisa
Date Presented: 11/6/08
Lead
Teacher: Maria Brewer
Rational
Statement:
The teacher will begin the lesson with information about
the women’s rights movement. The teacher will lead a discussion about
the
different roles of women, specifically Louisa May Alcott, during the
Civil war.
The students will be expected to listen and participate in discussion.
After
the discussion, the teacher and the students will each contribute to a
quilt by
drawing a picture of a woman working on a square of fabric. The
students will
understand what the women’s rights movement was and how it affected
Louisa May
Alcott and appreciate and value the rights of women today.
Lesson #5
Title:
What Would Bronson and Louisa May Alcott Say?
Date Presented: 11/13/08
Lead
Teacher: Shannon Lochner
Rational
Statement:
The teacher will begin the
lesson with a
review of Bronson and Louisa May Alcott.
The teacher will lead a discussion about the roles of a reporter
as well
as what they think Bronson and Louisa May would say to a reporter. The teacher and students will read
information about Bronson and Louisa May to find the answers to
questions a
reporter would have for them. The
students will then become reporters, a prop manager, Bronson, or Louisa
May to
record their own interview. The students will understand the answers
that
Bronson and Louisa May Alcott would give in an interview and appreciate
that
the Alcotts were ordinary heroes of their time.
Lesson #6
Title:
Little Women Make a Newspaper
Date
Presented: 11/20/08
Lead
Teacher: Maria Brewer
Rational
Statement:
The students
will understand what people, specifically children or young adults,
might do
for entertainment in the 1800s by watching clips of the movie Little
Women.
The students will also review past material by creating a newspaper
which will
allow them to write about what they’ve learned about the 1800s and the
Alcotts.
The students will appreciate the amount of resources we have available
today
for entertainment purposes.