An Immigrant’s Journey: Drawing Connections Across the Curriculum
Source/Author: Rachel Martin, Director of Marketing & Communications
March 03, 2016
Taking inspiration from the popular Flat Stanley stories of the early grades, a fifth grade project at Shorecrest reimagined the iconic character to help students study the immigrant experience at Ellis Island in the late 1800s.
Charged with creating a character and developing a story for him or her, the students took to the school library to begin their research. “Remember, these characters’ stories must be authentic,” reminded fifth grade Social Studies teacher Sandy Janack. “What country is she from? What did she wear? What did his parents do for work? Why were they immigrating?”
Just as the students were charged to share resources and ideas, so too were their teachers as Social Studies, Language Arts, Studio Art, and Technology faculty collaborated across disciplines. Mrs. Janack reinforced elements from a storytelling unit in Language Arts class, “We discussed the importance of story elements such as how the setting in the story would change. The character needed an authentic problem that was historically accurate, and the students needed to resolve the character’s problem in a reasonable way.”
Once their stories were in place, the project moved to the art studio where teacher Cindy Williams supported the students through the process of hand-drawing the characters for their stories. Next, the characters were digitized in Technology class and imported into one of a number of apps including Book Creator and Comic Life, to overlay over real photo backgrounds from the original research sources.
In addition to drawing connections between subject areas, the project had a still deeper impact. “A number of students came back and told me about conversations they’d had at home with their parents about their family origins,” says Janack. “Even more than connecting to the subject matter, the project also connected the students to their heritage.”
According to one of the Shorecrest fifth graders, “One of the things that I enjoyed about this project was learning about all the history that happened at the Statue of Liberty. When I went to go see her I didn't know what she really meant to people back then, now I do."
View two of the comic-book style projects here and here.
View two of the comic-book style projects here and here.