This album contains primary sources for teachers to design inquires that promote historical empathy for middle and secondary social studies about the COVID-19 pandemic. Among the topics that can be investigated include, but are not limited to, social justice protests, mask mandates, lockdowns, school closures, remote learning, first responders, and developing the mRNA vaccine. historical empathy 6 - 8 9 - 12 13+ Social Studies/History covid-19
Katie,
I think your topic is great for teaching historical thinking with primary sources. Here are some loc.gov resources that I have found that may interest you.
https://www.loc.gov/search/?q=Amplifier+Poster+COVID-19&sp=1&st=gallery
And here is a 12th grade lesson created using one poster from that gallery as a QFT (Question Formulation TEchnique)lesson with a primary source as the Q Focus.
When the pandemic first closed our schools and work places down, many TPS colleagues created inquiry lesson based on the 1918 Spanish Few pandemic. Check out this Teachers Blog that described one of those lesson:
You will also find Covid 19 primary sources right here in the teachers network. At the top of my list is an album by Celia Roskin Teaching History Through COVID-19 and the 1918 Pandemic https://tpsteachersnetwork.org/tps-commons/1918-pandemic-content-spanish-flu
Celia, this is awesome!!! Thank you- these resources are going to be so helpful for my project! I appreciate your help!
Katie, your album includes an impressive variety of primary sources related to COVID 19. As I scrolled through your album, I was delighted to see the different analysis strategies you suggested for the different sources. It was as if most of the strategies demonstrated in the TPS Leadership Institute were parading across my screen! You included the TPS Analysis Tool, the QFT, Thinking Like a Historian, and some of the LOC/TPS PD Activities adapted for student use. It was great to see you go beyond the searching and curating primary sources to thinking about how these would engage students in inquiry. Adding Teacher Notes to your album is a gift to all of us who lead inquiry activities. Thank you.
Katherine Perrotta , thanks for taking my suggestion to turn your links to collections and exhibits in this unusual album into images. Albums with images just seem so engaging. They make me want to jump into the scene and get engaged! Let me send a shout out to Kile Clabaugh who sent me directions for doing just this. I'll repost them here for others who want to improve their album visual appeal and Network Clickability!
Notes from Kile:
I think this might be the best option:
Keep in mind: