Edsc 304 Digital Unit Plan Template
Edsc 304 Digital Unit Plan Template
Edsc 304 Digital Unit Plan Template
Grade Level: 11
The failure of post- World War I policies culminated in the emergence of World War II.
The United States policy if isolationism during the 1930s allowed for the rise and growth of totalitarian governments in Germany, Italy,
Japan, and the Soviet Union.
3. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor took American forces by surprise and involved the destruction of naval, land, and air forces.
4. Pearl Harbor initiated the United States entrance into World War II.
5. The attack on Pearl Harbor led to the internment of Japanese-American citizens and the deprivation of their civil rights.
Unit Goals and Objectives:
1.
Students will be able to identify the American rationale behind the decision to remain neutral in World War II prior to the attack on Pearl
Harbor.
2. Students will be able to recall that the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor targeted American naval, land, and air forces.
3. Students will be able to demonstrate that Pearl Harbor directly led to the internment of Japanese-American citizens and depict their
inhumane living conditions.
Unit Summary:
To begin the unit, students will be formed into small groups and asked to discuss American foreign and domestic policy immediately following World
War I. Questions to discuss will be provided. After talking with their partner, the class will regroup and discuss the information together. Following
this, the class as a whole will brainstorm why they think the United States entered World War II.
After discussing the prelude to the attack on Pearl Harbor, the lectures on American neutrality during the 1930s and the attack on Pearl Harbor will
be provided. After the lectures, students will demonstrate their gained knowledge by creating a journal entry and flash cards. After this, the class
will go to the computer lab in order to visually rank significant events and dates that are related to the attack on Pearl Harbor. Finally, a pop quiz at
the end of that class will examine student knowledge of the material.
In order to assess the overall student comprehension of the unit, students will be expected to create a presentation that indicates the knowledge
they have gained about the United States entrance into World War II. Students will also be expected to read Farewell to Manzanar during the unit
and will be expected to write an essay that correlates the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor to the American governments decision to create
Japanese-American internment camps. Finally, students will be given a comprehensive exam at the end of the World War II unit plan that will
measure their knowledge of American participation during the war.
Assessment Plan:
Entry-Level:
Formative
Summative:
Lesson 1
Student Learning
Objective: Students will
be able to identify the
American rationale behind
the decision to remain
neutral in World War II
prior to the attack on
Pearl Harbor.
Acceptable Evidence:
Assessment: Students
take a short quiz that
demonstrates their
knowledge of American
neutrality prior to the
attack on Pearl Harbor.
Instructional
Strategies:
Communication
Presentation
Lesson Activities:
Students will be given class time to make flash cards for key
terms.
Acceptable Evidence:
Assessment: Students
create a presentation
(poster or brochure) that
Instructional
Strategies:
Collection
Interaction
Lesson Activities:
Lesson 2
Student Learning
Objective: Students will
be able to recall that the
Japanese attack on Pearl
indicates their
knowledge of the United
Students will be given class time to make flash cards for key
terms.
Students will go to the computer lab and in groups will
complete a simulation that shows the destruction of the
attack on Pearl Harbor.
Students will complete a webercise that is designed for this
course.
Students will be given a homework assignment that involves
them finding outside sources on Americas entry into World
War II.
Students will then create a poster or brochure in groups that
demonstrate their knowledge of the United States entrance
into World War II.
Lesson 3
Student Learning
Objective: Students will
be able to demonstrate
that Pearl Harbor directly
led to the internment of
Japanese-American
citizens.
Acceptable Evidence:
Assessment After
completing the book
Farewell to Manzanar,
students will be expected
to write a short essay that
links the attack on Pearl
Harbor to the decision by
the American government
to create JapaneseAmerican internment
camps.
Instructional
Strategies:
Collaboration
Organization
Lesson Activities:
Unit Resources:
For information related to the American policy of neutrality during the 1930s. Please visit this U.S. department of State website.
We will be watching part of the Hollywood movie Pearl Harbor during the class. This website will provide background information to students on the
film.
If you are interested in viewing a timeline of what occurred during the attack at Pearl Harbor, this Scholastic website is very informative and
contains a variety of primary source images.
This website contains the U.S. Navy museums official Pearl Harbor fact sheet. It contains a breakdown of the casualties that occurred as well as
containing the outcome of the various ships attacked that day.
If you are interested in hearing accounts from crewmembers present at the time of the attack, pearlharbor.org contains a variety of them.
For information related to President Roosevelts Day of Infamy speech, please look at this National Archives website. It contains an audio
recording of the speech in addition to a text version.
If you have been to or are interested in the Pearl Harbor war memorial, this webpage contains a variety of resources and information. It is the
Useful Websites:
The
The
The
The
The
Library of Congress is the official research library of the United States Congress. It contains a ton of primary source evidence.
National Archives and Records Administration website is a source for many documents related to American history.
Center for History and New Media website contains a list of historical sources and possible research topics.
National World War II museum website contains many useful primary source documents.
National History Education Clearinghouse has a variety of student based learning resources.