Overview:
Students will examine immigration documents and interviews
in order to describe the experience of Chinese immigrants
entering California in the 1900s.
Students will use depth and complexity icons as tools
to develop higher-level thinking skills.
Materials:
Aim/Essential Question
How can immigration documents from the early 1900s help
us understand the Chinese immigrant's experience when
entering the United States?
Background Information:
From 1882 to 1943, the United States government cut back
on the number of Chinese immigrants allowed in the U.S.
Concern over the large number of immigrants and competition
with American workers resulted in the passage of the Chinese
Exclusion Act of May 6, 1882. Enacted by the Forty-seventh
Congress, this law suspended immigration of Chinese laborers
for ten years. The law created a "Section 6"
exempt status for teachers, students, merchants, and travelers,
which allowed Chinese people in these classes admission
to the United States if they could present a certificate
from the Chinese government. (Chinese people who were
already in the United States as of November 17, 1880 were
allowed to stay, and to travel to other countries and
return to the U.S.)
Objectives:
Day 1
Students will read Soo Hoo Lem Kong's Declaration
of Nonimmigrant Alien document and learn how to
use depth and complexity icons. Students will use the
icons to identify details, ethical issues, big ideas,
and unanswered questions in the text.
Day 2
Students will apply depth and complexity icons to Soo
Hoo Lem Kong's Interview to Enter the U.S. Reader's
Theater (a script of his interview). Using the icons,
they will identify details, ethical issues, big ideas,
and unanswered questions about Soo Hoo Lem Kong's experience
and record them on Soo Hoo Lem Kong's frame.
Motivation:
Ask your students to define "immigration."
Explain that when immigrants came to the United States,
they were required to have papers to enter the country
and be interviewed by government officials. Ask students
what questions they feel would be important to ask a
person immigrating to the United States.
Procedure:
Day 1
- 1. Introduce the four depth and complexity icons
and their meanings. Have each student fold an 8½
by 11 inch piece of paper into four squares. Have
students follow you on the overhead. In the top left
squares, have them draw the Details icon and then
ask them to define "Details." Then have
them draw the Ethics icon in the bottom left squares,
and ask them to define "ethics." (You may
have to help them define "ethics" by giving
an example of an ethical issue.) Continue in the same
manner for Big Ideas and Unanswered Questions. Some
sample definitions are below.
 |
Details:
facts, features, clues |
 |
Big Ideas:
main idea, summary, conclusion |
 |
Ethics: biases,
controversies, dilemmas traits |
 |
Unanswered Questions:
puzzles, unknowns, something unexplained, missing
information |
- Introduce Soo Hoo Lem Kong's Declaration of Nonimmigrant
Alien document. Explain that this document was required
for entrance into the United States.
- Read the document together. As you are reading,
stop as you come to information that relates to details,
ethics, big ideas, and unanswered questions. Have
students record this information in the correct icon
squares on their papers.
Closure:
Ask the students to identify:
1. details about Chinese immigration that they found
in the text.
2. one ethical issue about Chinese immigration found
in the text.
3. a big idea about Chinese immigration found in the
text.
4. one unanswered question found in the text.
· Ask each student to pair with a neighbor.
· Ask the two students in the pair to share
what they've learned with one another and to be prepared
to share with the class.
Day 2
- Inform students that they will continue looking
for details, ethical issues, big ideas, and unanswered
questions, this time by examining Soo Hoo Lem Kong's
Interview to Enter the U.S.
- Inform students that this time they will record
their information on Soo Hoo Lem Kong's Frame (link
to Frames.pdf)
Group Work:
- Divide students into groups of four.
- Review class procedures for group work.
- Explain that each group will be reading Soo Hoo
Lem Kong's Interview to Enter the U.S. as a reader's
theater. As they read, they will be looking for details,
ethical issues, big ideas and unanswered questions.
- Pass out the reader's theater and have each group
assign parts.
- Give students five minutes to practice their parts
and ask questions concerning any unfamiliar vocabulary.
- When all groups have finished, have each group share
one new idea that they have added to Soo Hoo Lem Kong's
frame. Continue asking groups to do this until all
ideas have been shared.
Closure:
Ask:
- How does looking at Soo Hoo Lem Kong's immigration documents help you understand his experience immigrating to the United States? Record student responses.
- If you had been the immigration official, would you have admitted Soo Hoo Lem Kong into the U.S.? Explain.
Extensions:
- Have students locate on a map of China the locations
that are described in the documents.
- Write an expository essay using the depth and complexity
icons to determine the topic sentence for each paragraph.
- Decorate Soo Hoo Lem Kong's frame with Chinese and
U.S. Symbols.
- Research "paper sons" and "mail-order brides".
- Have students write a reader's theater using Tang
Suey Jin's Interview to Enter the U.S. Tang Suey Jin's
Application and Interview to Enter the U.S.: http://www.archives.gov/facilities/ca/laguna_niguel/
workbook/chinese_exclusion_tsj.html
- Have students visit the Angel Island web-site to
analyze pictures of immigrants and the Angel Island
Immigration Station. www.angelisland.org
Suggested Books:
- Bunting, Eve, Day's Work
- Bunting, Eve, How Many Days to America?
- Cech, John, My Grandmother's Journey
- Currier, Katrina Saltonstall, Kai's Journey to
Gold Mountain
- Lai, Him Mark, Genny Lim, and Judy Yung. Island,
Poetry and History of Immigrants Detained on Angel
Island, 1910 -1940.
- Levinson, Riki, Watch the Stars Come Out
- Say, Allen, Grandfather's Journey
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