Women and the Vote
Grade Levels: 5 - 8
Objectives
- Students will use navigational strategies within a website.
- Students will find out facts about the women's suffrage movement and the suffragists.
Materials
- Women's Suffrage activity sheet
- Internet Glossary
- Pencils
- Internet access
Procedures
- Distribute the Internet Glossary.
- Have students review Internet terms that may help them navigate the Internet.
- Review terms as time allows, focusing on ones that students are likely to use, such as bookmarks, forward button, home button, and scroll.
- Tell students they will find out about the women's suffrage movement by exploring a website you have bookmarked.
- Model how to get to Not for Ourselves Alone (http://www.pbs.org/stantonanthony/index.html).
- Distribute the Women's Suffrage activity sheet.
- Remind students that all the information for completing this activity sheet can be found on the above website.
- Encourage students to complete the entire website quiz as well as the activity sheet.
- You might also have students note strategies they used to navigate the website and/or any problems they encountered.
- Students share their thoughts and findings with each other.
Extension Activities
- Invite students to work independently or in groups to create timelines of the women's suffrage movement. Encourage students to illustrate their timelines.
- Students may enjoy performing a play chronicling important events in the suffrage movement leading up to the passing of the 19th Amendment. Or have students use a play as a springboard to creating their own scripts.
Standards Correlations
-
National Technology
Education Standards
- are proficient in the use of technology.
- practice responsible use of technology systems, information, and software.
- develop positive attitudes toward technology uses
that support lifelong learning, collaboration, personal pursuits, and
productivity.
National Social Studies Education Standards
Students: - apply key concepts such as time, chronology, causality, change, conflict, and complexity to explain, analyze, and show connections among patterns of historical change and continuity.
- investigate, interpret, and analyze multiple historical and contemporary viewpoints within and across cultures related to important events, recurring dilemmas, and persistent issues, while employing empathy, skepticism, and critical judgment.
- apply ideas, theories, and modes of historical inquiry to analyze historical and contemporary developments, and to inform and evaluate actions concerning public policy issues.
Students:
Assessment
Use the following scale to assess students' ability to evaluate a website, navigate within a website, and draw conclusions about women's suffrage.
4 – Exemplary Understanding
Student:
- skillfully and independently navigates to and at the site.
- locates the required information quickly and efficiently.
- accurately summarizes information found at the website.
- displays a thorough understanding of the suffrage movement.
3 – Competent Understanding
Student:
- uses sound navigational strategies without teacher prompting.
- locates the required information without help.
- summarizes information found at the website.
- displays an adequate understanding of the suffrage movement.
2 – Developing Understanding
Student:
- navigates at the site with teacher prompting and/or assistance from
peers.
- locates the required information with assistance.
- summarizes information found at the site, but summary may be incomplete
or inaccurate.
- can recall facts about the suffrage movement.
1 - Emerging Understanding
Student:
- understands navigational strategies when they are demonstrated by
the teacher or peers.
- needs to work with the teacher or peers to complete the activity
sheet.
- has difficulty summarizing the information found at the site.
- recalls few facts about suffrage and suffragists.
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