This lesson plan outlines a multi-day lesson for 4th grade students about the Oregon Trail. Students will imagine themselves as modern-day pioneers traveling across the United States. They will use maps, computers, and books to plan routes from their current location to assigned destination states. Students will work in groups to determine supplies, transportation methods, stopping points, and itineraries. They will then present and compare their journeys. Finally, students will role play hardships of traveling the Oregon Trail and reflect on differences between past and present travel experiences. The goal is for students to understand challenges of the Oregon Trail and how geography impacts travel.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
227 views
Oregon Trail Lesson Plan
This lesson plan outlines a multi-day lesson for 4th grade students about the Oregon Trail. Students will imagine themselves as modern-day pioneers traveling across the United States. They will use maps, computers, and books to plan routes from their current location to assigned destination states. Students will work in groups to determine supplies, transportation methods, stopping points, and itineraries. They will then present and compare their journeys. Finally, students will role play hardships of traveling the Oregon Trail and reflect on differences between past and present travel experiences. The goal is for students to understand challenges of the Oregon Trail and how geography impacts travel.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 5
1
Name: Kristen Drabek
Level of Certification: Early Childhood/Elementary Education Major
Lesson: Imagining the Oregon Trail in the 21 st century
Subject: Geography
Grade Level: 4 th
Previous Lesson: History Timeline Ladder: Kindergarten
GLCE: 4-G1.01 Identify questions geographers ask in examining the United States (e.g., Where is it? What is it like there? How is it connected to other places?). 4-G1.0.3 Identify and describe the characteristics and purposes (e.g measure distance, determine relative location, classify a region) use a variety of geographic tools and technologies (e.g globe, map, satellite image).
Lesson Objective: Students will be able to describe the characteristics and purposes to determine relative location, and use a variety of geographic tools and technologies. Students will be able to answer questions the class may ask about the places they travel while on their journey of the Oregon Trail. Students will understand historical data through creative writing and teamwork posting ideas on the board. Students will be able to compare and contrast modern day travel experiences with travel experiences of the 21 st century with the impact of geography had on travel in the past vs. modern times
Prior Knowledge: Students will have already worked with globes, maps, and satellite images. Students will have already learned about the different regions of the United States and also the location of the United States compared to other places on the globe.
Anticipatory Set: Ask students what they already know about Pioneers. What is a Pioneer? Do we have any Pioneers today? If so, where? I will then ask students what they think, know, and assume what life may be like. I will go over the background of what pioneers are, who were they, where they came from, what time period they are from and where they went and why. I will then explain to students that they are now going to learn about the experiences of people who really did move across the country, the pioneers who 2 traveled west on the Oregon Trail in the 1840s. I will show them a map of the route the emigrants traveled which can be found on http://edsitement.neh.gov Then as a group we will try and decide and talk about if there are pioneers today? Next I will group students and have them begin their journey and brainstorm together as a team, for about 30-45 minutes. During this time students will be given a location and talk about where their desired location is in relation to their current location? Based on where students begin their starting journey, they will have to choose what land they will be crossing and what they may want to bring with them for travel.
Teaching / Instruction Process: I will first ask students to explore what they already know about pioneers. Activating their prior knowledge! We will then go over questions o Who were they? o Where did they come from? o Where did they go, and why? o What period in history are they associated with? Then I will explain to students that they are now going to imagine themselves as modern day pioneers. We will use national geographic magazines to determine what region(s) that students could be traveling through or ending in. Students will then be able to use a large classroom map, and individual maps of the United States. Students will also have access to Google earth, and road maps from the states they will cross to get to their desired location. Once the students have received the maps I will then divide the class into 4 groups and then choose four different states far away from our home state to have them travel too. Next the students will imagine that they are going to move to this distant state one month from now. Students in each group will then brainstorm together a list of belongings they are allowed to bring. There are NO RESTRICTIONS. After the students compile a list they will then start their journey across the states to get to their desired location. Students must write out their direction marking where they stop for rest. Each group will be given a different choice of transportation chosen from a hat by the group; it could be by train, carriage, car, boat, or plane. Once students have created each individual trip, each group will present the itinerary of how they will get there and what they are bringing. They will also act out how they traveled. Students would then discuss the differences between groups and the routes each group took.
Monitoring: Creating Under- standing Analyzing 3 I will float throughout the room to ensure that students have properly set up their map, and followed the directions discussed in the beginning. I will also monitor the students using the computers and help in research if needed with the books we have throughout the classroom about pioneers.
Closure: Throughout the process of mapping the students journey I will remind the students that they are learning about pioneers experience and not about just mapping a route, and that they will understand historical data through research and putting together their trip today vs. the trip down Oregon trail in the 1840s. Students will then put together a skit of how it was for them to travel on the Oregon Trail. Last students will do a reflection based upon if they were going to travel in the future how it should shape their travel experiences from what they learned planning their own journey.
Reflection: Students may have trouble mapping out the journey with a map Students would rather use the internet rather then the book By asking some students preferred and easier route vs. the challenging Some students will have trouble multi-taking Some students will have difficulty working in a group Some students will have trouble using historic data to todays data.
Assessment: Do students understand what it was like to travel west on the Oregon Trail? Have the students act out how their experience would be in the form they traveled. How has the experience of travel changed over the course of the last 150 years? Did you enjoy working as a team instead of by yourself? Have students play Oregon Trail, and see if they notice anything different from their journeys. I will assess if the students can compare and contrast modern day travel experiences with travel experiences of the 21 st century with the impact of geography had on travel in the past vs. modern times by having them write a journal entry comparing and contrasting these things. I will also have them come up one by one and point out on a globe what things might have been a set back for the Oregon Trail (lakes, rivers, mountains, oceans). I will assess the students when they are doing their skit on whether or not they can answer the questions correctly and accurately the class may ask about the places they traveled while on their journey of the Oregon Trail. I will assess if students understand historical data while I walk around and observe their discussion, creative writing, and teamwork while writing down ideas Under- standing Applyi ng 4 for their skit. I will ask them HOT questions and possibly be the devils advocate to challenge them on their thinking. I will informally assess students when they are using the globe, Google earth, and road maps to make sure they are finding the relative location with these tools and technology.
I will assess the students if they have come up with a correct itinerary of their travel guide and how they will get to their desired location, with the stops and what they need to get there. I will grade them upon how well they worked together, how well their travel trip planning came together. The skit that the students chose to do based upon their travel experience will relate if they had hardships versus the more convenient ways of traveling for other groups. And have them write a reflection based upon what they if you were going to travel in the future how would this shape your travel and what they learned from planning their journey traveling on the Oregon Trail.
HOT/Bloom actions:
1. Compare and contrast modern day travel experiences with travel experiences of the 21 st century with the impact of geography had on travel in the past vs. modern times. (Journal entires) 2. Create a skit with a group. (Activity) 3. Can you formulate an hypothesis of what the people that traveled the Oregon trail wished they would have from our world today while traveling other than technology and transportation? (In Reflections) 4. When you are performing your skit, provide some type of evidence that would lead your audience to believe you are traveling the Oregon Trail. (Skit) 5. Examine the United States and explain how to it is connected to other places around the world?(Teaching/ Instruction Process)
The reason I choose this lesson plan format is because I feel that while it is a lot of information it is easy to follow and helps you as a teacher be guided in a simpler form, then having a ton of information that could be important but not necessary to understand the lesson. Also this format is easy once you set your standard and objectives and follow throughout. The other lessons were too much and not enough. Ever since I took EDU 3210 this lesson plan format makes much more sense then the other formats I have used previously. Unfortunately some things I dealt with creating this lesson plan were finding a standard in GLCEs. But I found one that would fit with the criteria taught.
Students gained new information on mapping, and using the internet resources for travel guidance. Students gained some knowledge on mapping and internet guidance to prepare for traveling. Students used little to no internet resources, and did not map out travel plan well. Poor work, did not gain support from map or internet.
Knowledge on Oregon Trail
Could answer all questions when asked about travel experiences. Could answer most questions. Only knew some knowledge based upon their travel stops. Knew very little of trip and was not organized much at all.
Content
Explained full lifestyle of student and said 3+ things they learned while doing this lesson. Explained lifestyle of a pioneer and spoke on 2-3 things they learned while completing this lesson. Explained some of your pioneers lifestyle and only knew 1-2 things about what you learned about them. Barely knew anything about pioneers and could only mention one thing they learned from the research.
Presentation/Skit
Skit produces was great and reflected the experience they traveled. Skit showed many skills gained from travel experiences. Skit was short only showed a few things about their journey. Did bare minimum only.