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Going to School, Then and Now: Education in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and To Kill a Mockingbird by Carla Nordstrom Overview: Background: Clifford Berryman was born in Kentucky in 1869. At age seventeen he moved to Washington, DC and drew patent illustrations. In 1891 he became an understudy to a cartoonist at The Washington Post and he became the chief cartoonist in 1896. Throughout his career, he drew cartoons of each president from Grover Cleveland to Harry Truman. Berryman portrayed Roosevelt refusing to shoot a corralled bear in Drawing the Line in Mississippi, in November 1902. Subsequently, Berryman drew teddy bears in many of his political cartoons that featured Roosevelt. Materials:
Aim/Essential Question: Motivation: Ask students to respond to the question, "What are some major issues that are important to you?" The teacher will record student answers on the chart paper. Ask if anyone thought the environment was important and why or why not. Add that to the list on the chart paper. Objectives:
Procedure: After the motivation, inform students that we are going to be looking at one of Theodore Roosevelt's major concerns and in the process we will be solving a mystery: where does the idea of the teddy bear come from? Put students in four small groups and give each group a Berryman cartoon to analyze as well as a political cartoon analysis sheet. Give groups ten minutes to analyze the cartoon (you may want to model a cartoon analysis for the entire class before breaking into groups). Students will switch groups to form new small groups in which all the participants analyzed different Berryman cartoons (Jigsaw). Students must identify on the analysis sheet how the cartoons are the same and how they are different. Class Discussion: The teacher will then project the image of "Drawing the Line in Mississippi." Students will be asked to describe what they see in a whole class discussion format. What do they think is happening in this cartoon? How does this make them feel about the character of Theodore Roosevelt? Why would Americans like the way this cartoon shows their president? What is a nickname for Theodore? Teachers should be sure to clarify that although Roosevelt would not kill an old, infirm, and captured bear, he was not opposed to hunting and considered it a favorite pastime. Finally, the teacher will ask, "from where do we get the teddy bear?" Students should be able to answer that the teddy bear comes from this cartoon that shows Roosevelt refusing to shoot a bear that has been tied. Closure: Students will read the quotation,
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