"[We
seek to] peel away layers of inaccuracies and sift through centuries of
misconceptions and misrepresentations. Again, why is this important?
Because to represent, by whatever means, any group as accurately as
possible is to show respect. It shows respect for people—both those of the
past and those of today. What is the purpose of learning about different
cultures whether past or present? So that you can know what kind of houses
they lived in? What kind of bowls they ate out of? What they made their
clothes out of? How they raised their children? Whether they kept animals?
Is that kind of knowledge and information the desired end result? NO. It
most certainly isn’t. Or at least it shouldn’t be. All of those things are
just windows into the lives of people. The point of learning about other
human beings is not just to collect facts and information, but to use that
learning to build respect and understanding."
(Quote
from an article
by Linda Coombs, Associate Director Wampanoag Indian Program at Plimoth
Plantation, Inc. Jan. 2004.)
You are
on a virtual field trip to research and then respectfully and with
historical accuracy write a 1st person diary in MLA format using details
from your research as one of the Pilgrims or crewmembers on the
Mayflower or as one of the Wampanoags encountering the new strangers
on your own Patuxet shore.
Your
task is to create two different products as a result
of your learning.
First,
research
interesting facts about the culture or person you chose and copy and
paste the URL and the facts into a Word document. Record data from
at at least six sites in order to document your findings. [See
Six Sitesexample.]
Then you will
use those facts as background information as you write your own
1st person diary.
Write as if you are a Pilgrim, a crewman, or a
Wampanoag in a short realistic historical fiction,
of at least 300 wordssynthesizing at least eight facts you
select from your research. Integrate those facts within your own
sentences and give credit to the original web author by making them
bold. You will print and turn in two papers [A. "Six
Sites" and B. Diary ] typed in Word in MLA format (and
saved in your class folder.)
Save
your work under your name in the Carnie
class folder. Print your Six Sites and your Diary and turn them in at
the start of the next class. They will
be published as you a) read your "Diary" aloud in class, b) see your
writing posted in the class, or possibly c) see your work displayed at
this site.
1. Set up your Word document for the "Six Sites" assignment.
Sit with your partner at one of the computers and login to the computer.
Whichever one of you is more skilled with the mouse gets to "drive." Open
a Word Document and minimize it.
Set up a
Word document in MLA format
(Modern Language Association format is common for most English classes.)
2. Decide
whether you prefer to research what it was like to be a Pilgrim (or
crewmember on the Mayflower) or a Wampanoag. Talk with your partner
about the choices you have below. Which choice below is most interesting
to you?
As
you begin to research to find information you could use in your "diary"
you will write from the "Six Sites" research, think about the following:
A.
Who are "you"? (You will be writing in 1st person, using the pronoun
I.)
B.
Who are you writing to? Are you simply writing in a journal, or is this
a letter to someone? (Your children? Your friends back in England?
Yourself? Your tribe? Your colony?)
C.
What is the setting-- the time and the place?
Are you
an actual historical person?
a Wampanoag?
a child? How old?
job you do in the community?
a fictional person you make up as you learn new details?
male?
living in a established Wampanoag community?
a few months into living in "Plimoth"?
a Pilgrim?
female?
health status?
family status?
a crewmember?
an adult?
on the boat?
newly arrived?
This will determine the historical setting of your story.
3.
Read through the information at one or both of the START links below.
4. Copy and paste
the information and the URL of the information you would like to use in
your "diary" into the "Six Sites" document. (See
example of Six Sites
assignment.) Look for specific details which will allow you to describe
and build Tone or primary emotion
into
your diary.
5.
Copy and paste the other five
required quotes and url's, choosing from the links below:
Note: If you choose to be a Wampanoag interacting with a Pilgrim or vice
versa, you can choose links from both areas below.
Wampanoag links
Mishoon graphics
courtesy of Plimoth Plantation, Inc.,
www.plimoth.org.
Choose: My
network places/ Entire network/ Entire contents/Microsoft Windows
Network/Hastings HS/FS03/Students/Carnie/Your name
6. Print two copies of your
SIX Sites assignment, one for each of you to use (at home if necessary) to
create your "diary." If you have enough time in class, you can start
composing it together.
1.After
gaining a better understanding of the events and setting of your
historical event, as a team begin
to plan your diary.
2.
Brainstorm (web) on the computer or on paper the sights, sounds, tastes,
textures, smells, feelings, ideas, and tone you
want to communicate in your diary. Identify who you, "the author", are.
3.
Introduce the first line of your diary so that your readers can "see"
where you are-- what
time of day-- what season-- the setting around you.
Is
the speaker experiencing any
conflict?
What kind of conflict is it?
5.
Use at least eight interesting important concrete details from the "Six
Sites" assignment you created. As you are writing your own sentence,
include some of the information from one of the web pages you visited and
documented. Put the information from the web in bold to show
clearly which came from another writer and which fact or idea was yours
alone.
6.
You can either write one diary of 300 words or you can break them into
smaller diaries written over a few days or months. Try to give your
reader a clear sense of your thoughts and feelings in what you
4. Browse through the links onthe Pilgrim
and/or the the
Wampanoagpage, looking for
information about the character you have chosen to be. Copy
and paste information from SIX interesting individual web pages(including the URL) into the Word document. (Extra credit if you can
insert the hyperlink and make it active... Go to Insert/ Hyperlink... and put it
in.)
plagiarismNOTE: If you don't give credit by showing clearly to the reader where
you got the information (in the webquest simply by including the link url in
the Word document, it will be considered plagiarism and you won't receive
credit.
5. Save the list of SIX Sites to
your own file in my class folder.
Route to follow to
reach the class folder: My network places/ Entire network/ Entire
contents/Microsoft Windows Network/Hastings HS/FS03/Students/Carnie/Your name
Product 2: "Diary"Write the first sentence
of your "diary" where you (the character) are, so that we (the readers) can see
what you are seeing.
(To
earn a possible "A, your diary must include a easily-visualized and specific
setting within the intro lines of your "diary"-- as well as for a distinct
tone--through
attention to verbs and modifiers--word choice --- which comes across
clearly.)
7. Type your (minimum 300 word)
diary in 1st person AS IF YOU ARE A PILGRIM OR A WAMPANOAG including
at least eight of the facts you learned from the Six Sites you picked
during this webquest. Use a combination of text evidence (facts from the Six
Sites) and commentary (your ideas from your imagination.) Every time you use some text evidence in your
diary, format the fact you got from a web page in BOLD.
Put a number at the end of that sentence to show how many facts you have
included so far (Diary
example) about
whichever culture you choose,
8. Use the spell-check and word
count features of Word under Tools. Include at the bottom how many words are
in your diary. If you have time to finish it today, save it to your file in
the class folder and print it. Staple your diary on top and your Six Sites
print underneath and turn it in. (If you don't finish it in class, take your
Six Sites print with you and finish your diary at home due at the start of the
next class.)
This document should be written with the
student as the intended audience. Write a short paragraph here to introduce the
activity or lesson to the students. If there is a role or scenario involved
(e.g., "You are a detective trying to identify the mysterious poet.") then here
is where you'll set the stage. If there's no motivational intro like that, use
this section to provide a short advance organizer or overview. Remember that the
purpose of this section is to both prepare and hook the reader.It is also in
this section that you'll communicate the Big Question (Essential Question,
Guiding Question) that the whole WebQuest is centered around.
The Task
Describe crisply and clearly what the end
result of the learners' activities will be. The task could be a:
problem or mystery to be solved;
position to be formulated and defended;
product to be designed;
complexity to be analyzed;
personal insight to be articulated;
summary to be created;
persuasive message or journalistic account
to be crafted;
a creative work, or
anything that requires the learners to
process and transform the information they've gathered.
If the final product involves using some tool
(e.g., HyperStudio, the Web, video), mention it here.Don't list the steps that
students will go through to get to the end point. That belongs in the Process
section.
The Process
To accomplish the task, what steps should the learners go through? Use the
numbered list format in your web editor to automatically number the steps in the
procedure. Describing this section well will help other teachers to see how your
lesson flows and how they might adapt it for their own use, so the more detail
and care you put into this, the better. Remember that this whole document is
addressed to the student, however, so describe the steps using the second
person.
1.First you'll be assigned to a team of
3 students...
2.Once you've picked a role to play....
3.... and so on.
Learners will access the on-line resources that you've identified as they go
through the Process. You may have a set of links that everyone looks at as a way
of developing background information, or not. If you break learners into groups,
embed the links that each group will look at within the description of that
stage of the process. (Note, this is a change from the older WebQuest templates
which included a separate Resources section. It's now clear that the resources
belong in the Process section rather than alone.)
In the Process block, you might also provide some guidance on how to organize
the information gathered. This advice could suggestions to use flowcharts,
summary tables, concept maps, or other organizing structures. The advice could
also take the form of a checklist of questions to analyze the information with,
or things to notice or think about. If you have identified or prepared guide
documents on the Web that cover specific skills needed for this lesson (e.g. how
to brainstorm, how to prepare to interview an expert), link them to this
section.
Evaluation
Describe to the learners how their performance will be evaluated. Specify
whether there will be a common grade for group work vs. individual grades.
Beginning
1
Developing
2
Accomplished
3
Exemplary
4
Score
Stated Objective or Performance
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting a beginning level of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting development and movement toward mastery of
performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting mastery of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting the highest level of performance.
Stated Objective or Performance
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting a beginning level of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting development and movement toward mastery of
performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting mastery of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting the highest level of performance.
Stated Objective or Performance
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting a beginning level of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting development and movement toward mastery of
performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting mastery of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting the highest level of performance.
Stated Objective or Performance
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting a beginning level of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting development and movement toward mastery of
performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting mastery of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting the highest level of performance.
Stated Objective or Performance
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting a beginning level of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting development and movement toward mastery of
performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting mastery of performance.
Description of identifiable performance
characteristics reflecting the highest level of performance.
Conclusion
Put a couple of sentences here that summarize what they will have accomplished
or learned by completing this activity or lesson. You might also include some
rhetorical questions or additional links to encourage them to extend their
thinking into other content beyond this lesson.
Credits & References
List here the sources of any images, music or text that you're using. Provide
links back to the original source. Say thanks to anyone who provided resources
or help.List any books and other analog media that you used as information
sources as well.
(to play a sound automatically, place a wav
file in your folder labeled sound.wav)
Last updated on August 15, 1999. Based on a
template from
The WebQuest Page