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Curriculum Tie:
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Summary: Main Curriculum Tie: Materials:
Background For Teachers: Intended Learning Outcomes:
Instructional Procedures: Display some quilts or show slides of quilts. Ask the students to identify the outstanding color of each. A variety of answers will be forthcoming. Discuss why personal perspective makes this happen. Does this happen in extended families as well? Do personal perspectives make this happen here as well? Discuss how Utah has many different cultures. Create family trees. Highlight with favorite colors the different nationalities, ethnic backgrounds, genders, abilities, etc. Seek out differences. Work to help make trees as colorful as possible. Construct a data base of the family backgrounds of the class. Decide with the students how to progress from the data base. With enough diversity or sufficient student interest, select some of the backgrounds to research. It could be an on going project of researching a background a month or by student selected groups for immediate research and presentation. Research could begin with family members, church members, community members who can tell stories of contributions made by the background under study. Another beginning is to create parallel timelines. One timeline for the student, from birth to the present, and a blank for the same period of time. The student will then begin research to fill in a chronological history of a specific nationality or ethnic group that parallels their life.
Then research back to the earliest possible connection with Utah.
Discuss a way to visually present the information so that each nationality or ethnic group timeline looks different. Perhaps the use of colored or patterned paper would be helpful to relink with the quilt analogy.
Extensions: Make a real quilt 'The Honor of Diversity' and donate it to an organization, family, charity, etc. Present a 'best of us' show to the community. A 'best of us' show could be done in a series of montages, by panel discussion, readers theatre, or the like. Create a celebration to honor others' ethnic background. Have students of other backgrounds research, plan and host a celebration. Then, of course, turn the tables and allow others backgrounds to be likewise studied and celebrated.
Select an important point in Utah history and rewrite it as those of a different background may have experienced it. If the point in history is current, interviews may be conducted to record how different backgrounds have experienced it. Author: Created Date :
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