Links for laptop oriented stations:
Harlem Renaissance
http://exhibitions.nypl.org/harlem/ click around!
Poets - read a few from different people https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/browse#page=1&sort_by=recently_added&school-period=155 , If we must die - https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44694/if-we-must-die , Harlem: poem in a picture book format- http://www.childrenslibrary.org/icdl/BookPage?bookid=myrhrlm_00260006&pnum1=1&twoPage=true&route=text&size=0&fullscreen=false&lang=English&ilang=English
Pop Culture
Baseball - http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/history/tch_wjec/usa19101929/3culturesocietychanges5.shtml
Movies http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/topic_display.cfm?tcid=124 , https://www.imdb.com/list/ls001890689/
Leisure time
Celebrity
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/crash-roaring-20s/ click through slideshow - pictures w/ captions!
Notes - from each station, answer at least two or three of the following:
For visuals:
Who created this primary source?
Where does your eye go first?
What powerful words and ideas are expressed?
What feelings and thoughts does the primary source enact in you?
What questions does it raise?
Who created this primary source?
Where does your eye go first?
What powerful words and ideas are expressed?
What feelings and thoughts does the primary source enact in you?
What questions does it raise?
For any:
What was the creator’s purpose in making this primary source?
What does the creator do to get his or her point across?
What was this primary source’s audience?
What biases or stereotypes do you see?
What was the creator’s purpose in making this primary source?
What does the creator do to get his or her point across?
What was this primary source’s audience?
What biases or stereotypes do you see?
No HW