Why
Use Primary Sources?
Using primary sources in research papers and projects is a
time-honored way to engage students with primary historical materials. Yet primary sources
can be incorporated into all phases of instruction. This framework will help you use
primary sources throughout your teaching.
The framework is
divided into four sections:
For years, historians and other educators have understood the value
of primary sources in K-12 education. Two key reasons for including primary sources in the
curriculum are:
- Primary sources expose students to multiple perspectives on great
issues of the past and present. History, after all, deals with matters that were furiously
debated by the participants. Interpretations of the past are furiously debated as well,
among historians, policy makers, politicians, and ordinary citizens. By working with
primary sources, students can become involved in these debates.
- Primary sources help students develop knowledge, skills, and
analytical abilities. By dealing directly with primary sources, students engage in asking
questions, thinking critically, making intelligent inferences, and developing reasoned
explanations and interpretations of events and issues in the past and present.
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Selecting Sources: Here are some questions to
answer before selecting primary sources for your students:
Interest - What kinds of sources are of
particular interest to my students? - What kinds of sources are of
particular interest to my students?
Reading Level - How difficult is the
reading level of the primary source compared to my students' abilities? What might help my
students comprehend this material (a glossary of terms, for example)?
Length - How long is the source? Do I need
to excerpt a portion of the source given my students' abilities and/or classroom time
constraints? How do I ensure that the original meaning of the source is preserved in the
excerpt?
Points of View - Are various points of
view on a given topic, event, or issue fairly represented in the sources I have chosen to
use? Have I achieved proper balance among the competing points of view?
Variety of Sources - Have I included a
variety of types of sources (e.g., published, unpublished, text, visual, and artifacts)?
Location - Where can I or my students find
the sources we need (the school or public library, the local history society, over the
Internet)?
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Organizing Instruction
To organize the use of primary sources in your classroom, consider
the following:
Activity Types - How will the primary
sources be used (as the basis for class discussion, written reports, in-class
presentations, role playing, or other instructional strategy?) - How will the primary
sources be used (as the basis for class discussion, written reports, in-class
presentations, role playing, or other instructional strategy?)
Classroom Management - How will I organize
students for an activity? Will the primary source activity lend itself to individual,
small group, or whole class participation?
Time - How much time must I allocate for
completion of student tasks?
Assessment - What product or performance
will my students create as a result of this experience with primary sources? How will I
assess that product or performance?
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Activities for the Instructional: Here
are ideas for incorporating primary sources into four phases of instruction.
Focus | Inquiry
| Application | Assessment
Focus Activities
Focus activities can be used to introduce a topic or to
re-engage students during a longer unit of instruction. Use one or two short primary
sources to begin a lesson, unit, or block of instruction.
- For focus activities, choose primary sources that:
- present a puzzle;
- challenge a stereotype or conventional wisdom;
- present a contradiction;
- offer an insight (or aha! experience);
- promote empathy (through a human interest story);
- present a generalization or explanation against which different
generalizations or explanations can be compared later.
- Present focus activities using the following techniques:
- Generate one or two well-crafted questions about the sources. Use the
questions to spark a class discussion or as a task for pairs of students to answer.
- Ask students to freely write their reactions to a thought-provoking
document. Then, as a class, compare different reactions prompted by the document.
- After reviewing one or two primary sources, have small groups of
students generate a list of questions about the upcoming topic of instruction.
- Use contemporary primary sources to focus instruction on a historical
period. For example, use a modern newspaper editorial on immigration, minimum wage, or
welfare reform as a springboard into exploration of those issues in the past. Ask students
to make predictions about historical debates based on what they have read in contemporary
editorials. Similarly, a historical source on a recurrent topic can be used to spur
inquiry into current debate on that recurring issue.
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Inquiry Activities
Help students explore main concepts in a block of instruction
using an inquiry approach to primary sources.
- To develop an inquiry approach, provide students with a set of
primary sources on a topic, concept, or time period. Students can use the Internet and
other research tools to assemble sets of primary sources for themselves.
- Use primary source sets as the focus for a series of inquiry
activities. Have students use primary source sets to answer questions about historical
eras, generate and test hypotheses, and derive conclusions.
- Student inquiry can range from working exclusively with primary
source documents to using selected primary sources to supplement the student textbook and
other instructional materials.
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Application Activities
Use primary sources to help students apply the concepts they are
learning and to extend that learning beyond the textbook, other instructional materials,
or other primary sources.
- Primary sources can be used to challenge students to apply what
they've learned from primary sources. Have students expand or alter textbook explanations
of history based on primary sources they study.
- Provide students with the entire text of a primary source that has
been excerpted in their textbook. Based on the full text of the primary source, ask
students to defend or refute conclusions drawn by the textbook author. Then have students
search online and in other sources for additional documents that support their
conclusions.
- Present a set of primary sources in sequence. Ask students to
consider how new documents support or challenge information and understanding garnered
from other documents. Have students refine or revise conclusions based on their study of
each subsequent primary source.
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Assessment Activities
Primary sources can be useful tools for evaluating student
mastery of skills and concepts.
Use primary sources to assess what students have learned and to
evaluate their skill in analyzing primary sources. For evaluation activities, select
either sources from the historical era under study or choose contemporary sources related
to the historical topic. Actual assessment tasks might include having students:
- Write an essay about a primary source document. Explain how the
source supports or challenges a commonly accepted conclusion about a time in history.
- Based on analysis of several primary sources, prepare an oral
presentation taking a stand on an issue in history.
- Select primary source documents to create a museum display about an
historical topic. Write captions for the items and justify the documents that were
selected.
- Write a response to a primary source (speech, news article, sermon),
taking the position of someone who lived at the time the source was created.
- Prepare a visual display (poster, magazine cover, illustrated
timeline) that highlights the most important points to be gained from the primary sources
under study.
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