Aim / Essential Question:
How successful were photographs in demonstrating the conditions of immigrants during the Gilded Age?
Background:
The latter portion of the nineteenth century and the early
twentieth century witnessed the start of photojournalism
- investigators scouring the slums and ghettos of American
cities. Just forty to fifty years following the devastating
and powerful photographs taken by Matthew Brady during
the Civil War, these new chroniclers of the urban scene,
along with the print "muckrakers," recognized
that photographic images could have an effect on perceptions
of social realities and used them to expose the horrific
living conditions of America's immigrant underclass. The
photos provoked debate and discussion, and promoted legislative
action to remedy the neglect of those who had no real
voice in the halls of government.
Rationale:
This lesson gives students an opportunity to analyze historic
photographs to gain a better understanding of the Gilded
Age and of the life struggles of immigrants during that
era. Students will engage in historical analysis and will
decide which photograph or photographs would be most useful
in supporting a thesis.
Objectives:
Students will be able to:
- Analyze photographic evidence
- Explain the conditions faced by immigrants in the Gilded Age
- Write a thesis statement
- Discuss and explain the challenges of using photographs as historical evidence
Materials:
Lesson
Prerequisites:
- Students should have had prior lessons establishing
a connection to the period of the Gilded Age and the
concurrent immigration
Modeling for Student Learning:
- Select one image from the collection.
- Ask the students to use the Photo Analysis sheet
from the National Archives to analyze the selected
photo as a class. Ask them to look at the people,
objects, and actions in the image. You can find the
Image Analysis sheet at - - www.archives.gov/digital_classroom/lessons/
analysis_worksheets/photo.html
- In the discussion ask the students to focus on the
following questions:
1. What does this image tell you about living and
/ or working conditions at the time it was taken?
2. What might motivate someone to take such a photograph?
3. What other images would you like to have if you
were an historian creating a narrative of that time
period?
Activities:
After completing the above motivational activities,
distribute the attached chart for students to complete
as they examine other photos.
-
Use the following strategies to allow students
time to examine each of the photos in the collection:
- Displaying each photo for a few moments on
a projection screen and allowing students time
to examine the photos and take notes.
- Setting up groups of photos at "history
lab stations" in a computer lab and having
students examine photos in groups, spending a
few moments at each station before rotating to
the next one.
- If individual students have access to their
own computers in a computer lab or classroom:
allowing time for them to explore the photos on
their own.
- Break the students up into small groups and ask
each group to select three photos that will go on
display at the "Gilded Age Immigration Museum."
Ask the groups to provide rationales for their choices.
- After the photos have been selected, ask the students:
- What common theme was used to select the photos
chosen?
- What generalization can one make about immigration
and this time period based solely on the three
photos selected? Can a thesis statement be created
based on this generalization?
- What problems do you think historians have in
selecting sources for use in supporting a thesis?
Application:
- Ask the students: If you were going to highlight
a contemporary problem through photography, toward
what issue or condition would you point your lens?
Why?
Assessment:
The following assessments are designed to allow students
to "do history" and be historians in the truest sense
- reflective, analytical, and knowledgeable.
- Analysis and comprehension: Ask the students
to work either individually or in groups to write
their justifications of the images chosen, using their
newly acquired knowledge and incorporating the knowledge
of the time period to justify the choices made. Students
should be certain to relate the selections to the
theme or thesis.
- Research: Ask students to find another primary
source (an image) that could be included in this display
and justify why it could be included. Be sure it helps
support the generalization and/ or thesis statement.
- Research and application: Ask students to
find a written primary source document that provides
perspective on one of the images that has already
been chosen and ask them to pair the image with the
narrative. Note that for this exercise students may
not use a document that has already been used in class.
- Further Understanding: Have students research
Jacob Riis. How can his background and motivations
be used to help explain the photos? Ask students to
examine How the Other Half Lives and compare
the actual photos with the drawings.
http://www.yale.edu/amstud/inforev/riis/title.html
- How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis -
full text on line version. Illustrations of photos
included. Yale University
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