Procedures 
  Description 
    of the lesson's five activities:
  Activity 
    One- Overview
     
  
  - Introduce 
    students to the lesson, "The Civil War through a Childs Eye. 
     
    
  
Activity 
  Two- Readers Theater
 
  Activity Three- American 
    Memory Collections
 
"American Memory is the on-line 
  resource compiled by the Library of Congress National Digital Library Program. 
  With the participation of other libraries and archives, the program provides 
  a gateway to rich primary source materials relating to the history and culture 
  of the United States." 
See http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/amabout.html 
  for more details about the number of items and goals of the program. 
Activity 
  Four- Photo Analysis
  - Direct students to locate the 
    photograph or daguerreotype of their child, which was selected from the gallery 
    of Images of Children from the Civil War Era.
- Suggest that students print the 
    image from the screen for their analysis.
- Introduce the Photo 
    Analysis Guide. Review the questions in the observation, knowledge, and 
    interpretation columns.
- Have students work individually 
    to analyze their selected image using the Photo Analysis 
    Guide.
Activity 
  Five- Literary Portrait
  - Introduce the Literary 
    Portrait Scoring Guide. Explain that the purpose of the literary portrait 
    is to reveal a childs perspective of the Civil War era. Discuss the 
    criteria for the preparation, content, and presentation components. Stress 
    the importance of using their responses to the photo analysis guide to compose 
    a literary portrait of their character. Emphasize that the literary portrait 
    needs to match the student selected image and the importance of vivid word 
    choice when describing the character. 
- Have students write a literary 
    portrait (a first person characterization) of the selected image. Encourage 
    students to identify the characters physical attributes, age, personality, 
    and other traits that were observed or inferred from the photo analysis. 
- Have students share their literary 
    portraits in the Readers Theater format.
-  After sharing the literary portraits 
    as Readers Theater, provide opportunities for students to revise and polish 
    the portraits for publication. The student selected photograph or daguerreotype 
    needs to accompany the final draft of the literary portrait.  
    
      -  Option 1. Publish classroom 
        volume of literary portraits.
-  Option 2. Publish students' 
        literary portraits on a web site.
 
Lesson 
  Overview | Teacher's 
  Guide | Student Page | Images