By
Nina Kendall
March
is Women’s History Month. Celebrating
Women’s History Month reminds Educators of the painful truth that including the
history of women in classrooms is still a challenge. Here are a few digital
tools and unique resources you can use to put more women’s history in your
lessons.
The
Progressive Era Women Interactive at the National Women’s History Museum website combines group artifacts and
classifying items with the examination of events in movements in the
Progressive era. A unique way to interact with text this activity could be used
to help student test their knowledge and understanding of the era.
The
Oregon Blue Book is sponsored by the Oregon Secretary of State. The Web Exhibit
about Women’s Suffrage celebrates the centennial of suffrage in Oregon. The
collection of digital artifacts provides students with the opportunity to interact
with primary sources as individual or as a class. These sources are applicable
at the state levels or as exemplars at the national level.
This
interactive is hosted by the Smithsonian and illustrates the growing role of
women in the 20th century. This would be a fun and empowering choice
activity to add to a unit about Modern America. Learn about 4 women who made the
move from the home to the boardroom expanding on traditional roles.
The Teaching with Documents: Woman Suffrage and the 19th Amendment
webpage features the Failure Is Impossible script created for the 75th
anniversary of women’s suffrage. Now you can download this story to dramatize
it in your own classroom. Bring the struggle for suffrage alive.
How
did the cult of domesticity oppress and empower women in the nineteenth
century? Use these carefully selected
primary sources and graphic organizer to learn more about the Cult of
Domesticity. Later in your year follow
up with the lesson Women, Temperance Reform, and the Cult of Domesticity.
Looking
for a source for a specific topic? Try this database. Search by topic, keyword,
or state.
See
footage from the period and learn more about Rachel Carson and her work from
Bill Moyers Journal. Find the roots of the environmentalist movement.
All photos in this blog were
taken at the Smithsonian Museum of American History and the Smithsonian Museum
of Air and Space.
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