Every
Picture Tells a Story:
"Read" photographs for clues about children's toys,
dolls or games from long ago.
Related
Curriculum Framework Benchmarks for Michigan Teachers
Objectives:
- "Read"
photographs for clues about the past.
- Use
these clues to find and construct their own meaning or ideas
about children in the past.
-
Compare and contrast their childhood with those of children
from the past.
Materials
Needed:
- Selected
downloaded and printed images from the collections of The Henry Ford. For choices see our list
of suggested images.
Procedures:
- Because
students enjoy learning about their teacher's life outside of
the classroom, start this lesson with a photograph of yourself
as a child with a favorite toy, doll or game or invite another
adult in your school building (principal, teacher, secretary,
etc.) to do so. You may wish to make an enlarged photocopy of
this photograph so that it can be easily viewed, handled and
passed around.
- Ask
students to generate a long list of who, what, where, when,
why and how questions about this photograph. Record all their
questions on a flip chart or black board. Questions might include:
- Who
is in this photograph?
- Where
was it taken?
- When
do you think this photograph was taken?
- Why
was this photograph taken? etc.
- Discuss
with students:
- How
many of these questions can they answer just by looking
at the photograph?
- How
many questions can only be answered by asking those pictured
in the photograph?
- How
much guesswork or detective work is involved in "reading"
photographs for clues about the past? etc.
- Use
the questions students have generated to develop a "Reading"
a Photograph Questionnaire for examining the online or downloaded
and printed photos of children with toys, dolls or games from
the collections of The Henry Ford
(see list of suggested
images).
- Share
and review the results of their "reading." Ask students
to identify what is the same and what is different between the
children pictured in these photographs from long ago and their
lives today.
Suggested Student Assessment:
- Recreate
a diary about children from long ago using the online photographs.
Incorporate what the students have learned or imagined about
these children's lives based on what they have "read"
in the photographs.
Extension Activities:
- Develop
an exhibit of students' family photographs that show aspects of
childhood in the 21st century.
- Use
books to examine the photographs of children from a variety of
countries and cultures. Some choices include:
- Children
Just Like Me, by Susan Elizabeth Copsey, Barnabus Kindersley
and Anabel Kindersley.
- Children
Just Like Me: Celebrations, by Barnabus, Anabel and
Dorling Kindersley.
- Children
from Australia to Zimbabwe: A Photographic Journey
Around the World, by Maya Amerja, Anna Rheasa Versola
and Marian Wright Edelman.
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