Middle School Curricula

For Curricula within different grade levels, please visit the following pages:

Elementary School Curricula High School Curricula
Please choose from the following lesson plans:

Barter to Market or What's in Your Household? - Click Here
For the most part, in the 17th and 18th century agrarian societies, there was little or no money. Exchange of goods was completed through the barter or trade system. This gradually began to move to a market system. By examining trade records from the Fort Pitt Day Book (1765) and early inventories of households, we can discover what was being traded and what people relied upon in their homes. 

Breaking Down Misconceptions about Eastern Woodland Indians - Click Here
In these series of classroom activities, you will find 15 of the most ingrained misconceptions about Eastern Woodland Indians that we have encountered in schools throughout Western Pennsylvania, along with specific strategies on how to break down these misconceptions in the classroom. Nearly all of the images of Native Americans our students see as they are growing up are stereotypical Hollywood portraits of Western Indians. It is not surprising, then, that most students sitting in American classrooms today think that all Indians lived in teepees, that Native men were essentially simple-minded creatures running around the forest wielding a tomahawk, that Native women were all submissive, obedient wives who wielded no power in Indian villages, that nothing important took place in North America before the white man came, that the Indians were always a powerless people with no impressive technology, no "civilized" government, no knowledge that could equal the white man's, and that there are only a handful of Native Americans left in the U.S. today…who all live out west and speak broken English. 

After each misconception is discussed, teachers are provided with critical thinking activities, such as classroom simulations, hands-on projects, cause-effect thought-provokers, creative writing assignments, art projects, map reading, oral presentations, and role-playing activities. Lessons include simulating an Iroquois Council meeting, comparing and contrasting the U.S. Constitution with the Iroquois Constitution, using maps to teach Native linguistic and cultural diversity, playing history detective, analyzing historical art to break down misconceptions about gender roles, discovering Native contributions to modern medicine, composing and delivering an Indian speech, making Native artifacts, role-playing an 18th century journalist, writing a biographical sketch of a woman chief, developing native menus, using primary sources, doing a math  project to understand the vast size of Woodland Indian cornfields,  creating word games to understand the cross-cultural impact of the fur trade, writing historical fiction, and playing a "Facts in Five" game to find examples of Indian stereotypes in modern American culture.

Clash of Empires: A Historical Investigation of the French and Indian War - Click Here

The French and Indian War, unlike the other wars, began on North American soil and then spread to Europe, where Britain and French continued fighting.  Britain officially declared war on France in 1756.  Native Americans fought for both sides but primarily alongside the French, who were interested in expelling the English from the continent and regaining their ancestral lands.  Your students will be able to participate in unveiling the hidden mysteries of this war.

This lesson was designed to provide students with a variety of perspectives on the French and Indian War.   In addition, this lesson was designed to meet the NSS Standards for U.S. History to 1877 and therefore can be easily adapted to meet state standards.  More importantly, this lesson can be used as a general teaching resource with minimal modification.  Students will be able to interpret, analyze, and evaluate primary/secondary sources that are related to this historical time period.  As a result, students will be able to develop and refine an appreciation for the complexities of historical texts to investigate their relationship to a variety of archival and contextual materials.

Conflict, Cooperation, and the Frenh and Indian War - Click Here
Students will research, read, interpret, and evaluate primary and secondary sources on the French and Indian War in order to understand the effect of the new technologies of the French and English on the lifestyle of the Northeast Native Americans in the 1700's and how that lifestyle created a dependency that just about decimated both the Native Americans and the environment.

Native American History Database - Click Here
The Native American History Database is designed to provide primary sources for the purpose of facilitating teacher planning and student research on Native American History.

Picture Analysis: Conflict & Cooperation in the French & Indian War - Click Here
This lesson plan provides constructivist and direct instruction approaches to teaching about conflict and cooperation among Europeans and Native Americans in Western Pennsylvania at the time leading up to the French and Indian War.
 
Selected Bibliography: French & Indian War - Click Here
This annotated bibliography identified 60 books for elementary and middle school students that relate to the French & Indian War.

Smithsonian Artifact Auction - Click Here

Have you ever looked at a display in a museum and wondered how it was created?  How did the museum curator decide what artifacts to include?  Does the way the pieces are displayed make the display more interesting? Here is a lesson to give middle school students the opportunity to work in small groups to create their own museum style display poster. The lesson incorporates learning objectives related to primary sources, artifact analysis, themes in history and includes an economics driven competition.  This lesson may be adapted to fit any time period in history and may include one to twelve themes.  Students have access to a website of thousands of artifacts and may use the internet to create their museum displays. A plus delta evaluation allows the students to evaluate each other's work and the competition of the auction creates a lot of excitement. Your students will beg to do this lesson again.

Have you ever looked at a display in a museum and wondered how it was created?  How did the museum curator decide what artifacts to include?  Does the way the pieces are displayed make the display more interesting? Here is a lesson to give middle school students the opportunity to work in small groups to create their own museum style display poster. The lesson incorporates learning objectives related to primary sources, artifact analysis, themes in history and includes an economics driven competition.  This lesson may be adapted to fit any time period in history and may include one to twelve themes.  Students have access to a website of thousands of artifacts and may use the internet to create their museum displays. A plus delta evaluation allows the students to evaluate each other's work and the competition of the auction creates a lot of excitement. Your students will beg to do this lesson again.

Have you ever looked at a display in a museum and wondered how it was created?  How did the museum curator decide what artifacts to include?  Does the way the pieces are displayed make the display more interesting? Here is a lesson to give middle school students the opportunity to work in small groups to create their own museum style display poster. The lesson incorporates learning objectives related to primary sources, artifact analysis, themes in history and includes an economics driven competition.  This lesson may be adapted to fit any time period in history and may include one to twelve themes.  Students have access to a website of thousands of artifacts and may use the internet to create their museum displays. A plus delta evaluation allows the students to evaluate each other's work and the competition of the auction creates a lot of excitement. Your students will beg to do this lesson again.

Have you ever looked at a display in a museum and wondered how it was created?  How did the museum curator decide what artifacts to include?  Does the way the pieces are displayed make the display more interesting? Here is a lesson to give middle school students the opportunity to work in small groups to create their own museum style display poster. The lesson incorporates learning objectives related to primary sources, artifact analysis, themes in history and includes an economics driven competition.  This lesson may be adapted to fit any time period in history and may include one to twelve themes.  Students have access to a website of thousands of artifacts and may use the internet to create their museum displays. A plus delta evaluation allows the students to evaluate each other's work and the competition of the auction creates a lot of excitement. Your students will beg to do this lesson again.


Native American History Database - Click Here
The Native American History Database is designed to provide primary sources for the purpose of facilitating teacher planning and student research on Native American History.

Picture Analysis: Conflict & Cooperation in the French & Indian War - Click Here
This lesson plan provides constructivist and direct instruction approaches to teaching about conflict and cooperation among Europeans and Native Americans in Western Pennsylvania at the time leading up to the French and Indian War.
 
Selected Bibliography: French & Indian War - Click Here
This annotated bibliography identified 60 books for elementary and middle school students that relate to the French & Indian War.

Smithsonian Artifact Auction - Click Here

Have you ever looked at a display in a museum and wondered how it was created?  How did the museum curator decide what artifacts to include?  Does the way the pieces are displayed make the display more interesting? Here is a lesson to give middle school students the opportunity to work in small groups to create their own museum style display poster. The lesson incorporates learning objectives related to primary sources, artifact analysis, themes in history and includes an economics driven competition.  This lesson may be adapted to fit any time period in history and may include one to twelve themes.  Students have access to a website of thousands of artifacts and may use the internet to create their museum displays. A plus delta evaluation allows the students to evaluate each other's work and the competition of the auction creates a lot of excitement. Your students will beg to do this lesson again.

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