afterschool project modules

Puzzle

Stories All Around Us: Exploring Oral History

History is not confined to textbooks, but lives in our own and our neighbor's experiences and is passed along through stories.

Overview

This project for elementary school children takes participants through activities that help them see their lives in an historical context and teaches storytelling techniques so they can dramatize an elder's oral history.

This project introduces the concept of oral history and explains how to create timelines of historical events. In the next set of activities, educators guide young people through the process of interviewing a subject and collecting stories. Then they can use the story mapping tool, an online interactive graphic organizer, to arrange the story elements in preparation for sharing them with the group. As participants craft their presentations, educators lead activities that give them support and practice in the art of storytelling.

Oral history projects, which often involve interviewing an older family member or neighbor, promote intergenerational connections and cultivate young peoples' interests in their community and cultural heritage. This project was constructed using resources from different Thinkfinity partners and helps participants develop skills and gain a deeper understanding of concepts in the areas of history, drama and language arts.

Project Duration:

From three to four weeks (assuming multiple sessions per week), depending on how many of the various activities the group undertakes ,and how in depth the research is..

What Young People Will Learn and Do:

  • understand that their lifetime represents a small piece of history and make connections between their family history and world events
  • formulate questions and conduct an oral history interview, taking notes about a family member's or community member's childhood experiences
  • use a graphic organizer to synthesize key elements of a story and share it with an audience using various storytelling techniques

Materials needed:

Computer with Internet access
Large roll of butcher paper, markers
Notebooks and pens

Career fields highlighted:

History/historian
Theater/storytelling
Journalism/creative writing

Academic standards addressed:

  • National Council for the Social Studies, Curriculum Standards: NCSS-1 Culture and cultural diversity; NCSS-2 Time, continuity and change. The ways human beings view themselves in and over time; NCSS-4 Individual development and identity; and NCSS-9 Global connections and interdependence.
  • National Standards for Arts Education, Theater Standards 1 - Script writing by planning and recording improvisations based on personal experience and heritage, imagination, literature, and history; 2 - Acting by assuming roles and interacting in improvisations; and 5 - Researching by finding information to support classroom dramatizations
  • Grades K-4 History I, Standard 1: Understands family life now and in the past, and family life in various places long ago

Get started EDSITEment

What is History? Timelines and Oral Histories

Introduce the idea of oral history and engage the group in building a large-scale timeline of events with Activity 1 - What is History? and Activity 2 - Class Timeline from this EDSITEment lesson plan.

Find out more ArtsEdge

When I was Young

Following Activities Two and Three from this ArtsEdge lesson plan, read aloud the story of Sundiata: Lion King of Mali, from 13th century Africa, to give an example of oral history. After a group discussion, the participants formulate questions to ask an older family member or neighbor. Resources including a handout on interview techniques are provided in the lesson plan. Taking copious notes, the participants carry out their interviews and collect stories about what life was like when people of an older generation were children.

Piece it together ReadWriteThink

Story Mapping

Everyone looks through their notes to select a story that they wish to work with. It should include a setting, problem, and outcome. This storymapping tool from ReadWriteThink can assist the young people in organizing their thoughts as they develop the story that they will share with the group.

When I was Young

Returning to the ArtsEdge lesson plan, draw on various resources presented in Activities Five and Six to teach aspects of good storytelling. One way to support learners is to demonstrate strong (and poor!) storytelling techniques for them to evaluate. After rehearsing with a partner, each young person tells his or her story to the group.

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