Students examine how primary sources such as letters, photographs, census data, and interviews can be used to surface hidden narratives, expose injustice, and challenge erasure. Students also conduct mini oral history projects with family or community members, and analyze primary documents. The lesson considers how preserving memory honors those whose stories have been historically silenced.
This section includes background information, questions for discussion and reflection, a glossary of useful terms, extension activities, and additional resources. The guide features a printable handout on “Items Recovered in the Ringelblum Archive" (also available as a Google Slideshow).
Learn more and get the 𝙐𝙣𝘽𝙧𝙤𝙠𝙚𝙣 Learning Guide now. For grades 6-12, higher education & adult education.
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