Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Local History Final Assignment

Community Presentation

Final Project Assignment


This is 60% of your grade for the quarter. Presentation is 40%. Paper is 20%.


First Draft Due – Individual (10%): January 14th.

Practice Presentation Due – Group (10%): Wednesday, January 23rd.

Final Presentation Due – Group (20%): Monday, January 28th and Wednesday, January 30th.

Final Paper Due – Individual (20%): Friday, February 1st.

Total Points: 60% of total grade for the quarter.


As you may recall from the course syllabus, the goal of this class is to:



  1. Publicize, organize, and carry-out an on-location community event that illustrates the significance of a historical center of community. Students will invite knowledgeable community members and concerned organizations to take part in the presentation. Students will connect with local media organizations that may be interested including community radio, the Scanner newspaper, the Asian Reporter. The events will be filmed and become part of the student’s permanent portfolio.

  2. Create a 5-7 page essay (depending on age and skill level) as well as organize and deliver a speech and presentation in their research groups for the broader community.



The presentation is a group project. Your groups job is to explain the significance of the place you chose your selected community. Both your presentation and paper should answer the following questions:

  • Where is the historic place?

  • To whom was it important and when?

  • How did it come to be important to people?

  • What was it like to be there then? How did it look, sound, smell, feel?

  • How did it change and why?

  • Who were some of the specific people that lived there and/or were important to that community?


In order to do this, you must:


  1. Choose a community on which to focus: African-American or Japanese/Japanese-American. Students may choose another topic if approved by the instructor.

  2. Form a group with which to work on your project. Groups must be at least 4 people.

  3. In your group, choose an historic center of community, a place that is historically important to the community you are studying.

  4. Identify some things you already know about the community.

  5. List some questions you may need answered in order to know more about the community.

  6. List resources you already have or could use to answer those questions.

  7. Talk in your group about what your final project might look like. What parts do you think it might have? Speeches, sign boards, photographs, re-enactments, artifacts, etc.

  8. Decide what people's individual roles/jobs might be. What can each member due to get started? What, specifically, can each member due over the holiday break to bring to school on Monday, January 7th?

  9. Turn in the attached sheet with these answers to Ken today.


THE PAPER IS AN INDIVIDUAL PROJECT and is due on the last day of the term. Please note that 5% of your grade for the quarter is turning in a draft of your paper on Monday, January 14th. Papers should answer the questions listed above, but may take many formats. They could for example be:

  • Research essay.

  • Historical fiction story.


It is important that your paper, in whatever format, be historically accurate and describe the place in sufficient detail to take the reader there. What did it look, sound, smell, and feel like? You must also be sure to address why the place was important to the people who were there.


    Paper should be typed, double-spaced, Times New Roman 12 point font, with 1 inch margins.

All sources for the paper and the presentation must be properly cited and must include:

  • At least 1 interview

  • At least 3 primary source newspaper articles.

Length requirements depend on age level:

    • 9th graders: Minimum 5 pages.

    • 10th grader: Minimum 6 pages.

    • 11th graders: Minimum 7 pages.

    • 12th graders: Minimum 8 pages.

Timeline for remainder of term:

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

D16

D17

D18

D19

Nikkei Legacy Center Trip

D20

D21

D22

J6

J7

Guest Speaker/Interview.

Research

J8

J9

Guest Speaker/Interview.

Research

J10

J11

J12

J13

J14

First Draft of Paper Due.

Work on Presentations.

J15

J16

Get drafts back.

Work on Presentations.

J17

J18

J19

J20

J21

No School

MLK Day

J22

J23

Practice Presentation.


J24

J25

J26

J27

J28

Final Presentations

J29

J30

Final Presentations

J31

F1

Paper due






Final Presentation Group Assignments


  1. Community of focus: ________________________________


  1. Group Members and contact information. (Please identify a group liaison, someone that will be the contact person for the group. Put a star by that person's name.):

    Member Name

    Email

    Cell Phone Number

    Home Phone Number





































  1. Community Place ideas:



  1. Identify some things you already know about the community.







  1. List some questions you may need answered in order to know more about the community.








  1. List resources you already have or could use to answer those questions.








  1. Talk in your group about what your final project might look like. What parts do you think it might have? Speeches, sign boards, photographs, re-enactments, artifacts, etc.








  1. Decide what people's individual roles/jobs might be. What can each member due to get started? What, specifically, can each member due over the holiday break to bring to school on Monday, January 7th? For each group member fill information below:




Member Name

Duties. (Things you may do in/for the presentation.)

Things to accomplish over holiday break.

Things to bring to school on Monday, January 7th:


































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