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"I Would Have Just Lived": Surviving Japanese Internment During WWII (Part 2)
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CC BY-NC
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“‘I would have just lived’: Surviving Japanese internment during WWII (Part 2)” is the second of a two part series that features the oral history testimony of Mitsue Salador and was written, researched, and recorded by Tatiana Bryant, with the support of the Pedagogy Lab at the Center for Black, Brown, and Queer Studies. Listeners should note in advance that this audio Open Educational Resource includes themes of grief, xenophobia, racism, and war.

In the early 1940s, Japanese American teenager Mitsue Salador was directed to go to college for nursing because Japanese women weren’t hired as teachers at white schools. Dismayed, she entered college in Portland, OR to study nursing briefly, before she was forced into an urban detention center for people of Japanese heritage after Pearl Harbor. Mitsue organized a loophole escape from the detention center by applying to a college in the Midwest where she would be deemed as less of a potential threat away from active war theaters. Isolated from her family, she continued her education while her parents and youngest sibling survived an internment camp and older siblings navigated college and active military service.

In Part 2, Mitsue Salador of Long Island, NY via Hood River, OR, talks about her lived experience as a college student and daughter of Japanese immigrants forced to relocate to a detention center after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Subject:
Ethnic Studies
History
Social Science
U.S. History
World History
Material Type:
Lecture
Reading
Provider:
The Pedagogy Lab
Provider Set:
2021 Pedagogy Fellowship
Author:
Tatiana Bryant
Date Added:
04/01/2021
Immigration Mapping Project
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Created by NHPRC Teacher Participant/Creator Jeremy Mellema, for his US Government class, Adaptable to other courses and grades. This immigration mapping project asks the student to create 3 maps, and to gather data through research and conducting an interview. Finally, students write an essay connecting what they have learned from this project to American Democracy, and to current immigration law or events.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Date Added:
09/29/2019
Immigration Stories: Using family history to learn about global history
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Created by NHPRC Teacher Participant/Creator Michelle Barretta Fallon for her Global History class. Adaptable to US History as well. She offers a scaffolded 3-part assignment to allow students to connect research from family history to research about Global History. Part 1 (Family Interview) and Part 2 (Country Research) could be used separately.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
History
World Cultures
World History
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Date Added:
09/28/2019
Inclusive Spectrums
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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Preliminary Research Exhibition

Short Description:
This exhibition presents the preliminary major research project ideas of OCAD University’s Inclusive Design 2019/2021 cohort. These projects explore a spectrum of themes, ranging from healthcare, to sensory experiences, to storytelling and services for cultural communities, to neurodiversity, and finally, to design practices and processes themselves.

Word Count: 28442

(Note: This resource's metadata has been created automatically by reformatting and/or combining the information that the author initially provided as part of a bulk import process.)

Subject:
Applied Science
Architecture and Design
Arts and Humanities
Business and Communication
Career and Technical Education
Computer Science
Education
English Language Arts
Film and Music Production
Graphic Arts
Graphic Design
History
Information Science
Social Science
Special Education
Material Type:
Textbook
Date Added:
08/09/2020
Les Conversations Mises à Jour
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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Les Conversations Mises à Jour is a collection of authentic conversations in French that targets mostly intermediate and advanced learners of French. Each conversation highlights the shared experience of two native or near-native French speakers and provides both an oral history of that experience and a trove of cultural references.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
Languages
Material Type:
Assessment
Lesson
Provider:
University of Texas at Austin
Provider Set:
COERLL
Author:
Beatriz E. Schleppe
Melissa E. Skidmore
Date Added:
01/17/2017
Queerama and Telling Queer Stories
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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This is the first of three open educational resources inspired by the Daisy Asquith's film Queerama (2017).  Queerama marks the 50th anniversary of the Sexual Offenses Act, which partially decriminalized private homosexual acts in England and Wales. The documentary was created from footage from the BFI National Archive and captures the relationships, desires, fears and expressions of gay men and women. You can follow the three learning blocks in order or pick and choose.This resource uses resources from the JISC funded project 'Observing the Eighties' and is OER produced under a CC-BY license.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
Film and Music Production
Material Type:
Module
Author:
Lucy Robinson
Date Added:
06/05/2017
Remembering Jim Crow
Read the Fine Print
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Remembering Jim Crow is a companion to a radio documentary, and examines the system that, for much of the 20th century, barred many African Americans from their rights as U.S. citizens. Read personal histories of segregation. See a sampling of Jim Crow laws. Learn how African Americans fought economic hardships imposed by Jim Crow and how they built social institutions to combat segregation.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lecture
Lesson Plan
Reading
Provider:
American Public Media
Provider Set:
American RadioWorks
Date Added:
04/27/2004
Research Based Student Podcasting
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CC BY-NC-SA
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A guide to a University course, including assessment rubrics, where students produce a research-based (OER) podcast. Taught at the University of Leeds by Antonio Martínez-Arboleda.

Subject:
Anthropology
Arts and Humanities
Career and Technical Education
Educational Technology
History
Journalism
Languages
Literature
Social Science
World Cultures
Material Type:
Assessment
Student Guide
Syllabus
Author:
Antonio Martínez-Arboleda
Date Added:
04/21/2022
Rise and Fall of Jim Crow
Read the Fine Print
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That Jim Crow was a tremendously important period in United States history is undisputable. Less obvious is how to properly address the violence, politics, and complexities that mark the era. This site looks at the century of segregation following the Civil War (1863-1954). Jim Crow, a name taken from a popular 19th-century minstrel song, came to personify government-sanctioned racial oppression and segregation in the U.S. This website describes pivotal developments during that time дус the Emancipation Proclamation, the Compromise of 1877, the Brown v. Board of Education decision, and others.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson Plan
Provider:
PBS
Provider Set:
PBS Learning Media
Date Added:
07/10/2003
Seminar in Historical Methods
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CC BY-NC-SA
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This course is designed to introduce students to fundamental issues and debates in the writing of history. It will feature innovative historical accounts written in recent years. The class will consider such questions as the words historians use, their language, sources, methods, organization, framing, and style. How does the choice of each of these affect the historian's work? How does the author choose, analyze, and present evidence? How effective are different methodologies?

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
History
Material Type:
Full Course
Provider:
MIT
Provider Set:
MIT OpenCourseWare
Author:
Wood, Elizabeth
Date Added:
02/01/2002
Territory and Treaty Making: A study of Tribes, Westward Expansion, and Conflict
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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This unit is focused on the examination of a single topic, in this case, the Native Americans of the inland Northwest and conflict that arose when other non-native people started to settle in the northwest, and to specifically address the native populations that lived in the inland northwest. The materials were created to be one coherent arc of instruction focused on one topic. The module was designed to include teaching notes that signal the kind of planning and thinking such instruction requires: close reading with complex text, and specific instructional strategies or protocols are described that support students’ reading and writing with evidence are described in enough detail to make it very clear what is required of students and how to support students in doing this rigorous work. Materials include summative assessment of content and process, central texts, key resources, and protocols that support and facilitate student learning.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Unit of Study
Author:
Leslie Heffernan
Date Added:
02/16/2018
Tsunami Stories: Learning from Oral Histories from Around the World
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CC BY-NC-SA
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In this jigsaw activity, students are placed in groups. Each group reads a different written record of an indigenous oral history about tsunamis. These indigenous stories are from around the world. To guide their interpretations, students answer activity questions. They study how the tsunami is described (tsunami characteristics) and any safety information that is described in the story. Then the groups are mixed, with at least one representative of each story in each new group. Students share what they learned from each story. Groups compare stories. They discuss: Are there any similarities in the warning signs, descriptions of the tsunami waves, or damage and did the traditional stories contain any safety information? Students will learn the importance of preserving and utilizing traditional knowledge.
This activity leads into future instruction on tsunami science and safety. Lessons from the stories that students read can later be integrated into lessons on modern scientific understanding of tsunamis (causes and characteristics) and tsunami safety (natural warning signs).
Instructors can also tie this lesson into hazard management. Students learn that disaster management personnel are using traditional knowledge to improve local hazard preparations.

Subject:
Anthropology
Career and Technical Education
Environmental Studies
Social Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
Science Education Resource Center (SERC) at Carleton College
Provider Set:
Teach the Earth
Author:
Sarah Glancy
Date Added:
01/20/2023
Using Oral History to Explore the Lives of Everyday Americans
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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This lesson lets students examine social history topics through interviews recounting the lives of ordinary Americans. Students also develop their own research questions and conduct oral history interviews with members of their communities.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
Library of Congress
Provider Set:
American Memory
Date Added:
07/07/2000
Voices from the Heart of Gotham: Guttman Community College
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CC BY-NC-SA
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As producers of knowledge with a particular focus on social (in)justice, racial, gendered and transnational journeys, Guttman Community College scholar-activists have constructed a new digital canon that offers New Yorkers the opportunity to contribute testimonies of tumultuous times. Curated by Dr. Samuel Finesurrey, Guttman undergraduates Elsy Rosario, Tigida Fadiga, Luz Hidalgo, Phisarys Sidemion, and Sadaf Majeed and digitized by Guttman staff members Joanna Wisniewski, Ivan Mora, and Kristina Jiana Quiles, this collection democratizes the production of knowledge by empowering community college students, largely deriving from immigrant households, to shape the narratives told about their communities and their generation. Organized into five themes, with testimonies gathered in six languages, this archive documents a diverse set of New York experiences. Funded by the American Council of Learned Societies and the Mellon Foundation, this exhibition helps us rethink struggles and movements of the past and present, to unearth the human networks that carry all New Yorkers in difficult times.

Subject:
History
Material Type:
Data Set
Primary Source
Author:
Samuel Finesurrey
Date Added:
01/10/2022
Voices of Virginia: an Auditory Primary Source Reader
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Voices of Virginia pulls together stories from oral history collections from across decades and archives to create an all-audio source companion for Virginia’s high school and college students. The "album" is only two hours long, but contains dozens of short oral histories from eyewitnesses to key moments in American history, from the end of the Civil War to the 1980s. The excerpts are downloadable, accessible by smartphone, and accompanied by a transcript. Audio clips are also available on Soundcloud. You’ll also find a brief introduction to each narrator, historical context adapted from experts at Encyclopedia Virginia, American Yawp, and Public Domain sources, and helpful classroom tools like discussion questions, activities, and lesson plans that fit into both the Virginia high school and college U.S. History curriculum. By following the larger national story with narratives from across the Commonwealth, Voices of Virginia grounds students in how history guides and is guided by everyday people and their experiences.

This material is aligned to the History and Social Science Standards for Virginia Public Schools - March 2015.

The collection was curated by Jessica Taylor, Ph.D. with Emily Stewart.

Feedback regarding this collection is welcome at https://bit.ly/VoicesOfVirginia

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson Plan
Primary Source
Reading
Provider:
Virginia Tech
Provider Set:
VTech Works
Author:
Emily Stewart
Jessica Taylor
Date Added:
03/23/2020
Where Do I Fit into the Story of World History?
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Created by NHPRC Teacher Participant/Creator Stephen Spear for AP World History Adaptable to other grades. Over the school year we worked together exploring the history of the world by analyzing the causes of events, the contexts in which they occurred, comparing events, and understanding general patterns of continuity and change over time. In our last unit, we will employ three of these methods of analysis to conduct individual research on the relationship of our families or ancestors to the events of world history.

Subject:
History
World History
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Date Added:
09/27/2019
Why is my family’s story an important chapter in history?
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Created by NHPRC Teacher Participant/Creator Jennifer Stalec for AP World History Adaptable to other grades, and timelines. Four-part project (conducted over 4 weeks at the end of the year) that asks students to conduct individual oral history and secondary source research, reflect on research, creatively express and engagingly present family-history and world-history source materials.   .

Subject:
World History
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Author:
Kathryn Shaughnessy
Date Added:
01/01/2020
World Wa
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
0.0 stars

This is a group of narrative from a soldier who served in both World War II and the Korean War.

Subject:
History
Material Type:
Primary Source
Reading
Date Added:
07/01/2017