Voices
of the past, classrooms of today
Oral history program at Lincoln
Presidential Library offers lesson plans on Ag, POWs and more
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[October 02, 2015]
SPRINGFIELD
– Teachers can bring the voices of POWs, politicians, farmers and
social reformers into their classrooms using new resources provided
by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.
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The presidential library has created a series of lesson plans built
around the hundreds of first-person interviews recorded by the
library’s Oral History Program. Teachers can use them to cover such
topics as agriculture, women’s rights, the atomic bomb in World War
II, veterans’ experiences and the growth of women’s athletics after
Title IX.
Dr. Mark DePue, director of the presidential library’s Oral History
Program, said the interviews can make a dramatic impact in the
classroom.
For instance, the teacher resources on prisoners of war include a
Korean War veteran explaining how claustrophobia after months in a
Chinese POW camp forced him to sleep on the deck of an aircraft
carrier when returning to America. A pilot describes enduring
torture and a broken back after being shot down in Vietnam. A World
War II veteran discusses guarding Japanese POWs, including General
Hideki Tojo.
“Listening to a POW talk about his harrowing experiences really
makes history come to life for students,” DePue said. “It’s just so
much more meaningful to hear their stories first-hand than reading
about it in a textbook.”
The lesson plans are available at www.oralhistory.illinois.gov in
the “Teacher Resources” section.
Each teacher resource includes audio and video clips from the
program’s extensive collection, explains how the lesson relates to
state and Common Core learning standards and provides a list of
potential discussion questions and secondary sources.
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The material offers a well-rounded look at each topic. If you’re interested in
why the Equal Rights Amendment failed in the early 1980s, you can hear both
liberal supporter Dawn Clark Netsch and conservative opponent Phyllis Schlafly.
“There’s something for everyone,” DePue said. “We strive to interview people on
all sides of an issue, then let our users decide.”
The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum holds an unparalleled
collection of Lincoln documents, photographs, artifacts and art. It has some 12
million items pertaining to all aspects of Illinois history, making the library
one of the nation’s leading institutions for genealogy and history research.
The museum is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year. For information on all
our events, visit
www.TenYearsLincoln.com.
[Chris Wills, Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library and Museum]
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