In this lesson, students will explore several primary sources addressing the treatment of people with mental illness at Blackwell Island in New York in the mid to late 1800s. After analyzing the sources, students will discuss our responsibility and the responsibility of government to people with mental illness and cognitive disability. Period film, photographs, maps, and a written account by…
![Wounded soldiers from World War I](/sites/default/files/2019-02/American-Wounded-WWI-300x217.jpg)
The lesson invites students to think about what life was like as a disabled veteran of WWI and to connect to background knowledge as well as personal experiences. The teacher will provide historical information and guide the class in a read-aloud from the perspective of a soldier wounded and recuperating in Italy from Ernest Hemingway’s “In Another Country.”
The lesson provides…
![Portrait of Dorothea Dix and Horace Mann from the 1800s](/sites/default/files/2019-02/Screen-Shot-2018-03-08-at-4.58.59-PM-300x197.png)
The instrumental role Dorothea Dix played in reforming prisons and mental institutions, and the actions of Horace Mann in his campaign for free public education are at the center of this lesson. How did improvements in conditions for people in the public charge, whether prisoners or people institutionalized because of disability, come about? How did the the idea of who gets to be educated…
![Red Cross and Veterans at White House](/sites/default/files/2019-02/Red-Cross-and-Veterans-at-White-House-300x217-300x217.jpg)
Care for veterans is relevant to understanding war and the role of government, and is critical to disability history. In this lesson, students gather information through a variety of primary sources on the experiences of veterans from the War of Independence through today. They ask, ‘How has U.S. government care for veterans changed over time?’ Using their evidence, students develop a proposal…
![Dust Bowl farmers, 1937](/sites/default/files/2019-02/Dust-Bowl-Farmers-283x300.jpg)
This lesson guides students in exploring the Great Depression of 1920-1940 with a focus on the Dust Bowl, migrant workers, and the status of people with disabilities. The lesson is conceived as a research project in preparation for reading John Steinbeck’s novella “Of Mice and Men”, and could also be an interdisciplinary unit linking American History, English Literature, and Disability History…