Harriet Tubman: An American hero
Learning outcomes
The goal is to introduce students to that time in American history when slavery was legal and accepted in society and business.
Students will:
- listen to and view appropriate materials about Harriet Tubman’s life and discuss
- re-tell parts of Harriet Tubman’s life as they create a class chart or diagram with the teacher
- select events from Tubman’s life that illustrate why she is considered an American hero
- write a follow-up paper to take home and share with their parents
Teacher planning
Time required for lesson
2 45-minute class periods
Materials/resources
- Appropriate picture biographies of Harriet Tubman’s life
- TV and VCR player (or DVD player).
- Computer and TV that interface (or a computer with a data projector).
- White board and markers.
- Video: Harriet Tubman from Animated Hero Classics, NEST Entertainment, Inc. Length is thirty minutes.
Technology resources
Computer and TV which interface and are internet accessible.
Pre-activities
- The students should have some understanding about African-American History and Cultural Heritage Month.
- Classroom teacher should introduce American slavery and plantation life, especially in North Carolina and other agrarian states in the South.
Activities
Day 1 (45 minutes)
- Class discussion: what is a hero? Make a class list of attributes.
- Ask students what they know about Harriet Tubman. Ask who, what, when, and where questions.
- Show video. Make it interactive, stopping at appropriate places to explain unfamiliar vocabulary, to discuss feelings, to emphasize actions of characters, to predict next events, etc.
- After the video, make a class graphic organizer of the events from Tubman’s life that students recall.
- Send a letter home with students explaining that they are learning about Harriet Tubman in recognition of African-American History and Cultural Heritage Month and ask them to retell Harriet’s story to their parents.
Day 2 (45 Minutes)
- Review the previous lesson, the list of attributes that make a hero, and the graphic organizer of events of Harriet Tubman’s life.
- Read aloud a short biographical picture book and fill in any holes in the “events” organizer.
- Prepare a class chart reflecting the students’ thoughts as to why Harriet Tubman is considered an American hero.
- At the computer-television station (or with the data projector), show the students the Harriet Tubman timeline. Explain to the students that these timelines were done by students working with Kid Pix and other drawing software programs in a setting very much like the computer lab at school or the computer stations in the classroom.
- Ask the students to comment on the parts of these two lessons that they enjoyed most. Use a think-pair-share strategy.
- Ask the students to recall some of the facts about Harriet Tubman’s life. Again, use a think-pair-share strategy.
- Ask students to explain to their parents why Harriet Tubman is considered an American hero.
Follow-up activity: With the classroom teacher, choose another prominent African American (such as George Washington Carver to research and construct a pictorial timeline using Kid Pix or Microsoft Paint. These illustrations might be published on the school’s web page or printed and displayed on a class bulletin board.
Assessment
Rubric