Showing posts with label Gold Rush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gold Rush. Show all posts
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Website Spotlight: Gold Rush
Website URL: http://museumca.org/goldrush/fever.html
Introductory Note:
Welcome to one in a series of posts which spotlight quality websites that I use with my U.S. History survey course students at Azusa Pacific University to enrich the regular material in our learning modules.
In this post, I limit myself to those specific aspects of the website which I find fit particularly well within our face-to-face class sessions (each student is required to bring a laptop to class) or as the basis for the students' regularly-assigned written reactions.
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These are the specific sections I ask my students to work through:
Part 1
http://museumca.org/goldrush/fever01.html
a. Lure of Gold
b. California [especially the two subsections entitled "Californio" and "California Indian"]
c. Discovery
d. First Finds
e. The News
f. Across Land
g. By Sea
Part 2
http://museumca.org/goldrush/fever-part2.html
a. Elephant
b. Miner's Life
c. Prospecting [work through all five of the subsections]:
Chinese Camp
Arrastra
Miwok Mining Site |
Coyote Hole
Long Tom
d. Commerce [check out the Levi Strauss example]
e. Entertainment
~~For reviews of this website:
History Matters (The U.S. Survey Course on the Web)
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4915/
TeachingHistory.org (National History Education Clearinghouse)
http://teachinghistory.org/history-content/website-reviews/23069
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Concluding Note:
I hope you will use this blog post in conjunction with both the modules on my Learning Professor wiki and the numerous other posts in my Website Spotlight series.
1. The website spotlighted in this post fits within the following U.S. History survey course module on the wiki:
http://thelearningprofessor.wikispaces.com/Expansion
2. The other blog posts in my Website Spotlight series--chronologically displayed by U.S. History survey course module-- can be found on this wiki page:
http://thelearningprofessor.wikispaces.com/WEBSITE+SPOTLIGHT
Labels:
Expansion Module,
Gold Rush,
Oakland Museum,
Website Spotlight
Friday, December 30, 2011
Website Spotlight: Gold Rush
Website URL: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/
Introductory Note:
Welcome to one in a series of posts which spotlight quality websites that I use with my U.S. History survey course students at Azusa Pacific University to enrich the regular material in our learning modules.
In this post, I limit myself to those specific aspects of the website which I find fit particularly well within our face-to-face class sessions (each student is required to bring a laptop to class) or as the basis for the students' regularly-assigned written reactions.
++++++++++
I ask the students to work through the following links:
Gold Rush Introduction
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/
Special Features: Online Poll--Journey of the Forty-Niners
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/sfeature/poll.html
Over the Oregon-California Trail
http://pbskids.org/wayback/goldrush/journey_oregon.html
Panama shortcut
http://pbskids.org/wayback/goldrush/journey_panama.html
Around Cape Horn (the tip of South America)
http://pbskids.org/wayback/goldrush/journey_capehorn.html
Special Features: Gold Rush Game: Who Will Strike it Rich?
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/sfeature/game.html
1. White man from upstate New York
2. Californio man from Los Angeles
3. Chinese man
4. Chilean man
5. White woman from Missouri
Mexicans in the Gold Rush
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/peopleevents/p_mexicans.html
Chinese Immigrants and the Gold Rush
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/peopleevents/p_chinese.html
Stephen Spencer Hill and African Americans in the Gold Rush
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/peopleevents/p_hill.html
Map: 8 major "strikes" in the California Gold Rush
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/map/index.html
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Concluding Note:
I hope you will use this blog post in conjunction with both the modules on my Learning Professor wiki and the numerous other posts in my Website Spotlight series.
1. The website spotlighted in this post fits within the following U.S. History survey course module on the wiki:
http://thelearningprofessor.wikispaces.com/Expansion
2. The other blog posts in my Website Spotlight series--chronologically displayed by U.S. History survey course module-- can be found on this wiki page:
http://thelearningprofessor.wikispaces.com/WEBSITE+SPOTLIGHT
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