Lesson Overview
The purpose of this unit is to provide students with an opportunity to examine and reflect on primary sources that document the internment of Japanese American citizens during World War II.
2-3 weeks.
Grades 5-8
Language Arts and United States History. This lesson is designed as an introduction to the study of World War II. The activities will provide students with background for reading related historical fiction such as Journey to Topaz, Under the Blood Red Sun, and Farewell to Manzanar.
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Although A Sacramento Odyssey is a self-contained unit, student learning will be enhanced through the literature connection. The following following titles are award-winning books on the topic of Japanese internment and are recommended for middle school students:
Chin, Steven A. When Justice Failed: The Fred Korematsu Story. Raintree/Steck Vaughn, 1992.
Houston, Jeanne Wakasuki. Farewell to Manzanar. Bantam Books, 1973.
Salisbury, Graham. Under the Blood Red Sun. Yearling Books, 1995.
Uchida, Yoshiko. Journey to Topaz. Creative Arts Book Company, 1985.
Software:
People of Sacramento CD-ROM
Internet Sources:
Refer to the sources listed in the student lesson.
Baseball Saved Us, by Ken Mochizuki, is a powerful picture book to use as introduction to the unit. The story is about a Japanese American boy who is interned during World War II. Through baseball, he discovers hope and self-respect - two qualities essential to surviving an overwhelming obstacle such as unjust imprisonment.
As the students begin to develop their fictional character and research the historical setting for the scrapbook, teachers may want to show documentary videos such as the oscar-winning film by Steven Okazaki Days of Waiting.
Since this is a partner project, students will need in-class research and work time.
The final student product - a scrapbook documenting the internment of a Sacramento resident at Tule Lake - can be evaluated using a class-generated rubric or the holistic or analytical social studies rubrics included on the People of Sacramento CD-ROM.
To "show case" the finished product, students could create a "living museum." Working in their teams, one student assumes the role of his/her internment character. The other student assumes the role of an interviewer or museum curator. Because of its emphasis on all four modes of communication (reading, writing, speaking, and listening), a living museum fits well with both language arts and social studies curricula.
At the heart of this lesson is the importance of students understanding their constitutional rights. As an extension, students could research a current right guaranteed by the Constitution (i.e. gun control) and defend or challenge the corresponding amendment.
Return to A Sacramento Odyssey
Lesson developed by Gail Desler, Elk Grove Unified School District