the native americans: powhtan - college of william & mary

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1 The Native Americans: Powhatan Indians of Virginia A Teaching Unit for Grade K Students Prepared By: Cassandra Surles Url: http://csurles.wmwikis.net/ Submitted as Partial Requirement for ED 405 Elementary Social Studies Curriculum Instruction Professor Gail McEachron The College of William and Mary Spring 2010 From John Smith's Map of Virginia, published in 1612.

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Page 1: The Native Americans: Powhtan - College of William & Mary

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The Native Americans: Powhatan Indians of Virginia

A Teaching Unit for Grade K Students

Prepared By: Cassandra Surles

Url: http://csurles.wmwikis.net/

Submitted as Partial Requirement for ED 405

Elementary Social Studies Curriculum Instruction

Professor Gail McEachron

The College of William and Mary

Spring 2010

From John Smith's Map of Virginia,

published in 1612.

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Table of Contents

Historical Narrative ……………………………………………..3

Lesson 1 – Map/Globe Skills………………………………….. 11

Lesson 2 – Critical Thinking/Art……………………………… 17

Lesson 3 – Civic Engagement/Biography…………………….. 22

Lesson 4 – Inquiry …………………………………………….. 28

Assessment 1………………………………………………….. 35

Assessment 2………………………………………………….. 37

Bibliography…………………………………………………... 38

Appendix A……………………………………………………..40

Expenses ………………………………………………………..42

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Historical Narrative

Introduction

The Powhatan Native Americans are an important area of study, because the lands

we are living in were first occupied by the Native Americans. As Wendell H. Oswalt

writes, “We tend to forget that we are most indebted to American Indians for our country

itself, because this land was theirs” (2002, p.4). Equally, it is important to learn how we

have been influenced by the Indian culture.

The Native Americans are the indigenous people, the first people to arrive in

North America. Prior to Columbus, as well as other settlers arriving in America, the

Native Americans had been here for thousands of years adapting to diverse climate

changes, and developing a diversity of cultures and complex societies (Pritzker, 1998).

Since the Native Americans were already here when the first Europeans arrived,

students would want to know, “How did they get here?” and “Where did they come

from?” Although the theories about the origins of Native Americans vary, the most

accepted theory is that, at the end of the Ice Age (about 15,000 to 40,000 or more years

ago), Paleo Indians migrated from Asia, across the Bering Strait, on a land bridge

between what is now Siberia and Alaska (Pritzker, 1998).

Their ancestors were nomadic hunters looking for herds of mammoths and giant

bisons, which are now extinct. The ancient Indians took over an enormous but untouched

land mass and learned to thrive in an extraordinary variety of habitats. By the end of the

Woodland period, the Powhatan culture had developed unifying the coastal Indian tribes

(Claiborne, 1973).

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The Powhtan tribes are important to study, because kindergartners need to know

and understand the significance of the interaction between the Powhatans and English

colonists. While studying about the Native Americans, students will learn about their

culture, diversity, and vital contributions to society. State and National Standards support

this topic because students will draw upon historical data about the Powhatans, learn of

historical accounts of Pocahontas, past events, holidays, and be able to distinguish

between past and present, as well as develop map and globe skills. (See Appendix A for

list of standards listed in this unit).

Key Ideas and Events

On May 14, 1607, the English colonists arrived, in Virginia, on three British

ships: the Susan Constant, Godspeed, and the Discovery. The previous year King James

I had granted a charter to a group of London entrepreneurs, the Virginia Company, to

establish an English settlement in the Chesapeake region of North America. The

colonist settled on a site near the James River, which they named Jamestown, in honor of

their king.

When a group of 104 colonists disembarked from three small ships to establish

the first permanent English settlement in North America, it sparked a series of cultural

encounters that has helped shape our nation and world. This settlement called

Jamestown is where the United States of America, as we understand it today, began

(Jamestown Settlement, 2006).

As a nation took root, the fall of the Powhatan Empire began. As author James

Axtell writes, “For the first decade of the seventeenth century what became the United

States began in Virginia as a fierce clash of empires” (1995, p.1). The British sought

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wealth, a trade route to the Orient, and precious metals. The Powhatans sought to protect

their land.

The Powhatan Indians were Algonquian-speakers who inhabited eastern Virginia

in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and early eighteenth centuries. They consisted of as many

as thirty-odd separate tribes, who shared similar languages and cultures, on the Virginia

coastal plain, including the Eastern Shore. All but the Chickahominies and the

Chesapeakes, belong to the general territory called Tsenacomoco. The name Powhatan

encompasses all of the tribes who were apart of the leader Powhatan paramount chiefdom

(Rountree, 1993).

Powhatan, known as Wahunsonacock, was the recognized paramount chief and

leader of the Powhatan. Powhatan society was matrilineal, with kinship and inheritance

passing through the female line. In the last quarter of the 16th century, through his

mother‟s line, Powhatan inherited the control of six tribes in the Tidewater area of

Virginia. Through intimidation or warfare, by 1608, Powhatan had created an empire that

consisted of thirty-five tribal groups, and had centrally located his headquarters at

Werowocomoco, on what‟s now the York River (Axtell, 1995).

During the 1520s, the Powhatan‟s empire encountered its first contact with

Europeans, when Spanish and Portuguese explorers arrived. However, it was not until

around 1560, that the Spanish unsuccessfully attempted to establish a colony in the area,

which resulted in the death of many missionaries and thirty Indians. In 1571, Don Luis, a

young Indian who had been kidnapped by the Spanish to serve as an interpreter, led a war

party to the mission of the Jesuits, killing all of them all except one young boy

(McDaniel, 1996).

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Initially, the relationship between the Powhatan Indians and the English was

mutually beneficial. In early 1608, Powhatan and English allies became trading partners.

The Powhatan provided the English corn and food, in exchange for metal and guns.

Both sides exchanged youths to learn the other‟s language and ways. Without the food

assistance of the Powhatan, the colonists were forced to admit that, “had the Savages not

fed us, we directly had starved” (Kupperman, 2000, p.1); more than 60 of the 104

colonist did not survive the first winter. However, a power struggle began when the

English wanted Powhatan to pledge allegiance to King James I, in a coronation

ceremony. Captain John Smith writes that Powhatan‟s response was: “If your king have

sent me presents, I also am a king, and this my land…. Your father is to come to me, not I

to him, nor yet to your fort” (The American Indians, 2010, p. 2). Thus, the relationship

slowly began to deteriorate as the English began to encroach on Powhatan‟s territory.

In December 1607, Captain John Smith, leader of the colonist, was captured by

Opechancanough, Powhatan‟s brother, and taken to meet Powhatan. According to Smith,

Powhatan threatened to kill him, but his daughter Pochontas intervened and saved his

life; however, scholars consider this unlikely. Powhatan offered to trade with the

English, and provide them with food in exchange for firearms (Feest, 1990).

During the winter of 1609, known as the “Starving Time,” the relationship

between Powhatan paramount chiefdom and the English grew more hostile. Captain

Smith returned to England because of a gun powder accident. One of the central

disagreements concerned the Indian provision of corn to the English. The region was in

the midst of a drought and corn was in short supply. The colonists, who consisted mostly

of gentry, had failed to plant crops, store grains, and had little food supply from England.

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The English, of which many died, were desperate for food. They raided nearby villages,

robbed graves, and ate corpses (Axtell, 1995).

In 1618, Chief Powhatan died. His brother, Chief Opechancanough assumed

control. The next two decades consisted of conflict and tense coexistence. By the year

1646, the cultural interactions between the Powhatans and colonists were strained due a

tenuous relationship and much warfare. In 1649, the empire that Powhatan built had

vanished. As Atwell states, “the haunting prophecy of a Powhatan priest that „bearded

men should come and take away their Country‟ had at last come to pass” (1995, p.40). By

the 1700s, the British population had increased to 100,000 colonists and the Powhatan

population had dwindled to fewer than 1,000 Indians due to war and disease (Feest,

1990).

In 1619, the arrival of the first Africans, twenty men and women, to Jamestown

colony, signified the beginning of plantation agriculture and the African slave trade. The

Africans were from a Portuguese colony in the Congo-Angola region of West Central

Africa. It is not known if they were considered slaves or indentured servants. It was

customary for all Portuguese slaves to be baptized and christened, before departing to the

New World. One such African woman was known as “Mary a Negro Woman” (Brown,

2000, p.13).

Men, Women, Youth & Children

In the Powhatan culture, women cooked, grew crops such as corn, beans, squash,

and tobacco, built and maintained houses. Men were hunters and warriors. They built

canoes, by hollowing out logs of wood with stone axes, and made fishing equipment.

They hunted deers, muskrats, squirrels, raccons, oppossums with wooden bows and used

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the skin for clothing. At an early age, children were trained for traditional Powhatan

duties. Boys were taught how to fish and hunt, while girls helped with weeding gardens,

pounding corn, and caring for younger children (McDaniel, 1996).

Girsl married at puberty. A man paid a bride price to the family of his future wife,

as compensation for the loss of her labor. Marriage was accompanied by exchanging gifts

and feasting. Men were allowed to have as many wives as they could afford (Feest,

1990).

When the Powhtan Indians were not working, they enjoyed singing songs, music,

dancing, and games. They would play music on their deerskin drums, reed flutes, and

dried-gourd ratteles. There was a song and dance for mourning, ceremonial feasting,

war, and social events. They enjoyed playing games like wrestling, running footraces,

and stickball, a game similar to soccer (Boraas, 2003).

The Powhtans lived in a ranked society of rulers, great warriors, priests and

commoners, with status being determined by inheritance or achievement. They used a

type of matrilineal succession, which means the title was passed through the female line.

In 1612, John Smith recorded the following observation about how inheritance of

Powhatan‟s paramount chiefdom was decided in Powhatan society: “His kingdome

descendeth not to his sonnes nor children, but first to his brethren…and after their

decease to his sisters. First to the eldest sister then to the rest and after them to the heires

male and female of the eldest sister, but never to the heires of the males.” (Jamestown

Settlement, 2006, p.2). Each tribe was ruled by a leader called a werowance or, if a

woman, a weronsqua. Werowances were the most prominent members of Powhtan

society. They had great wealth. Although political positions were inherited through

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women, little political authority was given to them except in the case of a female chief, or

“werowansqua.”

Powhatan Indians believed in two major gods. Ahone, the creator and giver of

good things, and Okewas, the evil spirit, whom they tried to appease with offerings of

tobacco, shells, copper, beads, furs and foods. In observance of the after life, the bodies

of dead werowances were housed and preserved in village temples by the

quiyoughcosucks, or priests, who were advisors to tribal leaders, also performed religious

rituals, (Feest, 1990).

The Powhatan people spoke a form of Eastern Algonquian, a family of languages

used by various tribes along the Atlantic Coast, from North Carolina to Canada, and had

no form of written communication. It did not survive as a spoken language, and no one

knows precisely what it sounded like (Jamestown Settlement, 2006).

Many famous individuals contributed to the founding of Jamestown. The state of

Virginia was named in honor of Queen Elizabeth I of England, the “Virgin Queen” (King

William Historical Society, 2010). Pocahontas, daughter of Indian chief Powhatan, is

probably the best known. She was born around 1595, to one of Powhatan's many wives,

where she was named Matoaka. The legend of Pochontas‟s rescue of Captain Smith is

well known but many historians think it is untrue, since this account did not appear in his

earlier writings. Pocahontas became a peace emissary between the Powhatans and the

English. In 1613, when she was 18 years old, she was kidnapped by the English for

almost a year. During that time, she learned the English way of life and was converted to

Christianity, taking on the name Rebecca. She fell in love with, and married John Rolfe,

bore a son, and traveled to England, where she died a few years later (Feest, 1990).

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As a means to encourage English men to become permanent settlers in

Jamestown, in 1619, the Virginia Company sponsored 147 English women, of elevated

social position, to come to Virginia with the hopes that English men would work harder,

and invest more into the colony. During the time of English women arrival, the tobacco

industry was thriving. It was not unusual for English women to spend part of their day

doing labor related to tobacco production (Brown, 2000).

Closing and Legacy

The founding of Jamestown is important to understanding humanity and Virginia

history. The Powhatans, the English, and the Africans each had their own separate

languages, traditions, and ways of life. As a result of the interactions of these different

cultures, a seventeenth century Virginia society was born. Although the fall of the

Powhatan Empire resulted in a lost of much of the Powhatan culture, the Powhatan tribes

continue to thrive today.

Almost every aspect of American life has been influenced by the Native

Americans, the indigenous people of America. Their contributions in agriculture, trade,

government, religion, arts, and craft have helped shaped America as we know it today.

The English colonist probably would not have survived their first winter without the help

of the Native Americans. Therefore, the significance of accepting and embracing others

of different cultures is essential to fighting intolerance and teaching our children about

social understanding and civic efficacy.

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Lesson plan preparer: Cassandra Surles

Lesson #1- Powhatan Village

Audience: Primary, Grade Kindergarten

Standards: National Geography Standard 1: How to use maps and other geographic

representations, tools, and technologies to acquire, process, and report information from a

spatial perspective.

Virginia Standards: K.3: The student will describe the relative location of people,

places, and things by using positional words, with emphasis on near/far, above/below,

left/right, and behind/in front. K.4 The student will use simple maps to, a) develop an

awareness that a map is a drawing of a place to show where things are located. K.5 The

student will develop an awareness that maps, a) show a view from above; b) show things

in smaller size; c) show the position of objects.

Materials, time, and space: The book “As the Crow Flies: A First Book of Maps”, the

classroom document camera, laser pointer, map handout of the “Powhatan village,

crayons, paper, multiple choice question handout, classroom space for whole-group,

(approximately 20 students); one hour.

Lesson Description:

Anticipatory Set: At the front of classroom, gather students and ask them what they

know about maps, what is a map, and how do they help us. Explain to students that maps

help us get around and keep us from getting lost.

The Objective and its Purpose:

1) Given teacher directions, students will draw a map of the Powhatan village. 2) Using

relative terms they will draw a picture of an Indian and place him or her in different

places on the map according to teacher-posed scenarios called out in the game “Simon

Said.” 3) Students will correctly answer one multiple choice question related to relative

directions and the structure of a Powhatan village.

Instructional Input: Tell students that they have been learning about the Powhatan

Indians. Today, you will use relative terms to locate different places on a map of a

Powhatan village. You will see these places from far above like a bird flying in the sky

this is called the birds-eye-view. Read the book, As the Crow Flies: A First Book of

Maps. Explain to students they will be like the crow in the book and they will see a

Powhatan village from a birds-eye-view like. Tell students you want them to pretend they

are birds or flying in an airplane seeing the village from below. Using a document

camera, display a picture of the Powhatan village (see attached illustration).

Model: Tell students you are pretending to be a bird flying over the Powhatan village, “I

see lots of Powhatan Indians below who look very small because they are so far away.

Some Indians are standing in front of their homes, behind their homes, some trees are

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far away and some are near. There is a camp fire on the left and Indians dancing on the

right. Use a laser point to show these relative locations.

Check for understanding: Using a laser pointer, shine the light on other objects on the map stating their relative

location. Ask students to give a thumbs up if what you say is correct; down if incorrect,

and to the side if they are not sure.

Guided Practice: Give paper to students to draw a map of the Powhatan village. Display

a picture of the Powhatan village. Draw an example map of the village on the document

camera. Playing the game “Simon Said”, tell students to: 1) Draw a red circle around the

long houses on the left. 2) Draw a blue circle around the corn fields on the right. 3) Draw

a yellow circle around the fire behind the Indians. After each direction, walk around

classroom to observe students work checking for accuracy. Prior to this lesson, students

will have learned about long houses, sources of food, and about the Powhatan culture.

Independent Practice: Tell class what a great job they have done so far with their maps.

Continue playing the game: 1) Draw a green circle around the Indians dancing in front of

Indians sitting below on the ground. 2) Draw a purple circle around the trees far away

from the Indians. 3) Draw an orange circle around the trees near the Indians. 4) Draw a

pink circle around the smoke rising above the fire. 5) Draw a brown circle around the

Indians sitting below dancing Indians.

Closure: Gather students in front of classroom to share their maps and talk about their

experience of seeing things from a birds-eye-view. Have students return to their seats to

complete work sheet with a multiple choice question about relative directions. Read the

directions aloud (see attached sheet). Collect when students finish.

Evaluation:

Formative: The teacher will observe students‟ attentiveness and participation during

modeling while they are working on their maps.

Summative: The teacher will evaluate the maps made by the students and performance

on multiple choice assessments.

Background information: The Powhatans lived in longhouses. Longhouses were made

of wooden poles covered with bark or grass mats. A longhouse would hold one or many

families. Wooden frames for sleeping lined the inside walls. An indoor fire was used for

warmth and for cooking in bad weather. Powhatans grew vegetables like corn, beans, and

squash. Many of these crops were dried or smoked by the Powhatan women for later use

during the lean winter months. They celebrated with dancing and feasts and had songs for

a variety of occasions like grief, war, and feasting. They made music with reeds, drums,

and dried gourds. Food was cooked by the women over outdoor fire pits (barbecues) and

soups and stews of corn, beans and squash simmered in large clay pots at the cook fire

and breads and corncakes were baked in the ashes of the cooking fire.

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Resources

Garrett, N. (n.d.) Algonquian language group Powhatan tribe. Retrieved February 27,

2010, from http://mal.sbo.hampton.k12.va.us/fourth/socstudies/indianwebquest/

algon.htm

Hartman, G. (1991). As the crow flies: A first book of maps. New York: Bradbury Press

Rockingham County Public Schools (n.d.) Kindergarten social studies technology

integration. Retrieved February 27, 2010, from http://web.archive.org/web/20051214

222702/richmond.k12.va.us/schools/thirteenacres/historyK1.htm

Virtual Jamestown (1998). Powhatan. Retrieved February 27, 2010, from http://www.

virtualjamestown.org/Powhat1.html

Kindergarten Social Studies Technology Integration

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Picture used in this lesson will only

contained the portion of the map

located below to allow students to

only focus on one area of the map.

This picture is not cropped because I

did not want to distort the image.

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A drawing of a map of a Powhatan village using relative directions.

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Directions: After the teacher dictates the questions to students, they will circle the correct

answers below.

Name ___________________________________________ Date _____________

(1) (2)

The ostrich is _______ the tree. The eagle is _____ the tree.

a) above a) below

b) far from b) in front of

c) behind c) above

d) on the right side of d) on the right side of

(3) (4)

The owl is _______ the tree The man is _____ the tree.

a) behind a) near

b) in front of b) far from

c) on the right side of c) above

d) on the left side of d) on the right side of

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Lesson plan preparer: Cassandra Surles

Lesson #2- Powhatan Pottery

Audience: Primary, Grade Kindergarten

The National History: History for Grades K-4—Historical Comprehension G: Draw

upon the visual data presented in photographs, paintings, cartoons, and architectural

drawings.

National Standards for Art Education (Visual Arts): (K-8) Content Standard 4:

Understanding visual arts in relation to history and cultures. 5: Reflecting upon and

assessing the characteristics and merits of their work and the work of others.

Visual Arts Standards of Learning in Virginia: 3.13 The student will discuss how

history, culture, and the visual arts influence each other. 3.17 The student will identify

how works of art reflect times, places, and cultures.

Materials, time, and space: Document camera, pictures of Powhatan pottery, Five (5)

pounds of self hardening gray clay, raffia, paint stirrers, glue, multiple choice question

handout, class room space for whole-group, (approximately 20 students); individual table

centers (approximately 6 students); one hour. Note: Gray clay, rather than red, is used

because it is not as messy and washes out easier).

Objectives:

1) After seeing representations of pottery used by the Powhatan, students will give

examples of what the pottery was used for by the Powhatan Indians.

2) Students will create their own clay pinch-pots representative of the cultural

practices used by the Powhatan Indians.

Lesson Description:

Introduction

Gather students in the front of classroom. Ask students what their parents use to cook

food with and what kinds of dishes do they use to eat and drink with. As students

generate ideas, write them on the white board. Bring out examples of pots, pans, pitchers,

and dishes we use today. Tell students that Powhatan Indians did not use these types of

dishes and pots to cook with. The Powhatan women used clay from the ground to make

pots for cooking and storage. Show students pictures of the different kinds of pottery

vessels used by the Indians.

Content Focus

Key Questions: Objective: What do you notice about the bottom of the pots? What kind

of designs do you see? How do you think they made these designs? Reflective: Do you

have a favorite bowl or dish to eat out of? Would it be the same as eating out of a bowl

made by the Powhatans? Interpretive: What do you think these pots were used for?

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Why are the bottoms cone-shaped? Decisional: Would you like to make your own clay

pinched pot?

Closure: Gather students in front of classroom and have them share the various ways

they will use their clay pinch-pots. Have students return to their seats to complete work

sheet with a multiple choice question about Powhatan Indian pottery. Read the directions

aloud (see attached sheet). Collect when students finish.

Evaluation:

Formative: Student‟s participation during discussion of the uses of pottery.

Summative: The teacher will evaluate the students‟ created clay pinch-pots and their

performance on multiple choice assessments.

Background information:

The women were responsible for making pottery and wooden plates. They made pots and

dishes out of clay that was put out in the sun to dry and hardened. Pots were made with

cone shaped or rounded bottoms, which allowed for placement into soft and hot coals of

fire for an even heat distribution when heating or cooking food. This shape goes back

thousands of years in this region of the country (A. Hardister, personal communication,

March 22, 2010).

The clays used by the Powhatans were found usually by streams, creeks, and riverbanks.

The Powhatans dug the clay from these locations and removed pebbles, rocks, or twigs

by sifting. After cleaning the clay, water was added and the clay was kneaded into a

workable lump. Powhatans used two methods to shape clay: the pinch method and the

coil method. The pinch method is the easiest and requires a minimum amount of clay and

little equipment other than your hands. This method only worked for small vessels,

although the Powhatans used the pinch method as the beginning of a coil pot, which was

the method used for making large cooking vessels. In order for clay vessels to hold water,

they must be heated or fired for a long period of time. One of several methods the

Powhatans may have used is carefully stacking the air-dried pots and then surrounding

them with branches of different sizes, like creating a pyre. The pyre would be very slowly

burned and more fuel added gradually, over a day or more. Sometimes the fire was

smothered with leaves or soil to reduce the heat and help cool the pots. The Powhatans

did not glaze their pottery. The reason for this is because the clay mixture and firing

process that the Powhatans used were sufficient means of providing them with vessels

that were used in cooking and holding liquids. Woodland pottery derived its color from

the natural minerals contained in the clay, such as iron, which gave the clay a reddish

hue. Pots also had some type of surface treatment derived from the technique used to

make the pot. A cordage wrapped paddle was used to help keep the sides of the pot the

same thickness. It was wrapped with cordage made out of dogbane, yucka or woven

fabric to cut down on surface cohesion and sticking while paddling. There is no evidence

that the Powhatans purposely decorated their pottery except for a narrow band of cordage

around the rim (Triantafillos, 2008).

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Resources

Triantafillos, Anastasia (2008). Making Pottery. Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation.

Clay pinch-pot (gray)

Cord wrapped paddle made out of raffia used to make designs on clay pots

Clay pinch-pot

(Note: Photos taken at Jamestown Settlement, Powhatan Village, Williamsburg, VA)

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A student representation of clay pinch-pot and cord wrapped paddle

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Directions: After the teacher dictates the question to students, they will circle the correct

answer below.

Name ______________________ Date _______________

What was this Powhatan pot made out of?

a) plastic

b) clay

c) rubber

d) sand

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Lesson plan preparer: Cassandra Surles

Lesson #3- Pocahontas Biography

Audience: Primary, Grade Kindergarten

Virginia Standards: K.1: The student will recognize that history describes events and

people of other times and places by (a) identifying examples of past events in legends,

stories, and historical accounts of Pocahontas. K.2: The student will describe everyday

life in the present and in the past and begin to recognize that things change over time.

K.8: The student will demonstrate that being a good citizen involves (e) practicing

honesty, self-control, and kindness to others; (f) participating successfully in group

settings.

National State Standards: Standard 3A: The student understands the history of

indigenous peoples who first lived in his or her state or region and is able to (b) Draw

upon legends and myths of the Native Americans who lived in students' state or region in

order to describe personal accounts of their history.

Materials, time, and space: The book, My name is Pocahontas by William Accorsi,

chart paper, markers, crayons, and drawing paper, multiple choice question handout, class

room space for whole-group, (approximately 20 students); individual table centers

(approximately 6 students); one hour.

Objectives:

3) After read aloud, students will identify ways in which Pocahontas was a

peacemaker and good citizen.

4) Students will draw two pictures: a) Pocahontas being a friend to the settlers, and

b) One showing how the student is a good friend to others in the class.

Introduction

Gather students in the front of classroom. Ask students to raise their hands if they have

seen the Disney movie, Pocahontas. Tell them the movie was about a real person who

lived long ago but most of it was not true. It was fiction. Ask students if they know what

fiction means. For example, Pocahontas was not in love with John Smith. She was a

young girl about 10 years old and he was old enough to be her father. Tell students that

Pocahontas was a real Indian girl who was friendly with settlers and lived in a village not

far from here in a place that the English settlers named Jamestown which is not far from

here. Tell them that they will learn about the real life of Pocahontas and how she was a

peacemaker for the Powhatan Indians and the English settlers who had come from

England to start a new life in America. Ask students to raise their hands if they know

what the word “peacemaker” means. Tell them a peacemaker is someone who helps solve

problems. Read the book aloud to class. Write on chart paper facts learned from the

story.

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Content Focus

For this portion of the lesson, bring the book and the chart paper used in the Introduction

to the group table. Explain to the students that history relates events that have already

happened, and teaches people about the interesting lives of people long ago. Introduce the

terms long ago, past, and present. Explain that Pocahontas lived long ago in the past and

is no longer living. Ask students if they remember what a peacemaker is. Have them

give you a thumbs up if they think Pocahontas was a peacemaker. Ask students to name

ways in which Pocahontas helped the English settlers living in Jamestown. Write their

responses on the chart paper. Tell students that Pocahontas was also a good citizen

because she was kind to the English settlers and did nice things for them. Refer back to

students‟ responses on the chart. Have students give you an example of things they can

do in the classroom to show that they are also good citizens. Possible responses are taking

turns, sharing, and being honest, and being kind to others. After discussing the story

together, allow students time to draw two pictures: one of Pocahontas being a friend to

the settlers, and one showing how the student is a good friend to others in the class.

Closure: Gather students in front of classroom. Have them tell you one way they can

keep or make peace at home, in the classroom, in the school and in the community. For

example, sharing instead of fighting with classmates and/or siblings, including people in

the games they play, following classroom, school and city rules and laws. Have students

return to their seats to complete work sheet with a multiple choice question about

Pocahontas. Read the directions aloud to students and collect when finish.

Evaluation:

Formative: Student‟s participation during read aloud and discussion of Pocahontas.

Summative: The teacher will evaluate the students‟ two drawings and their performance

on multiple choice assessments.

Vocabulary: fiction, long ago, past, present, and citizen, and peacemaker

Background information:

Pocahontas, daughter of Indian chief Powhatan, was born around 1595 in present day

Gloucester County, Virginia. She was named Matoaka, which means "Little Snow

Feather." This was a name used only within the tribe because it was believed that if

anyone spoke your name outside of your tribe you would become curse. She was given

the nickname of Pocahontas which means “playful one.” Many people are familiar with

the Disney cartoon, Pocahontas. However, most of it is fiction. The legend of

Pocahontas‟s rescue of Captain Smith is well known but many historians think it is

untrue, since this account did not appear in his earlier writings. However, it is true that

Pocahontas befriended the English settlers, brought them food, and taught them her

language. In 1613, when she was 18 years old, she was kidnapped by the English for

almost a year. During that time, she learned the English way of life and was converted to

Christianity, taking on the name Rebecca. She fell in love with, and married John Rolfe,

bore a son, and traveled to England, where she died a few years later. Pocahontas was a

peacemaker between her people and the English. She will always be remembered for her

kindness and help given to her own people and the English settlers.

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Resources

Accorsi, W. (1992). My name is Pocahontas. New York: Holiday House.

Feest, C.F. (1990). The Powhatan tribes. New York: Chelsea House Publishers.

Strandberg, D. (2009). Pocahontas. SPECTRUM Home & School Magazine. Retrieved

March 27, 2010, from http://www.incwell.com/Spectrum.html.

Teacher Link (2010). Retrieved March 27, 2010, from http://teacherlink.ed.usu

edu/tlresources/units/Byrnes-famous/poca.html#Objectives

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A drawing of Pocahontas being a friend to Captain Smith and a student being a

friend to their classmate.

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Directions: After the teacher dictates the question to students, they will circle the correct

answer below.

Name___________________________________ Date ________________

Pocahontas helped keep peace between the Powhatan Indians and English settlers by

a) being kind to the English settlers.

b) fighting with the English settlers.

c) teasing the English settlers.

d) running away from the English settlers.

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Lesson plan preparer: Cassandra Surles

Lesson #4- Inquiry Lesson

Audience

Kindergarten, whole group/independent activity; 2 hours; 20 students

Standards/Objectives

Standards:

National History Standard K-4:1: Historical Analysis and Interpretation: Students will

(A) Formulate questions to focus their inquiry or analysis.

National Standards for Art Education, Understanding the Visual Arts in Relation to

History and Cultures: a) Students will know that the visual arts have both a history and

specific relationships to various cultures.

Objectives:

1. Given a mystery box as a catalyst, the students will make guesses about its

contents.

2. Given an ear of corn with a feather in mystery box, the students will generate

questions about its form, function, and history.

3. Given a class-generated list, students will investigate one question by selecting

task card with activities for historical research, construction, or playing the

Powhatan‟s Aiming Game.

Materials, time, and space: Mystery box with ear of corn with feather placed inside, 20

ears of dried corn, 20 feathers (type of feather varies based on what is available), vine

hoop, laptop computer w/access to Internet, white board, chart paper, markers; class room

space for whole-group (approximately 20 students), 3 individual table centers

(approximately 6 students); 2 hours.

Content & Instructional Strategies

Introduction: Show students decorated mystery box. Shake so they can hear the contents.

Tell students that you are holding a mystery box that has something inside of it. Their

mission is to guess what is inside by asking questions and that everyone must take turns

asking a question about the box you are holding in your hand. Write on the whiteboard

the words: who, what, where, why, when. Tell students they can ask questions that begin

with these words. Tell them no guessing is allowed until everyone asks a question.

Using chart paper, write down the questions posed by students. After all of the students

ask a question, and then ask if anyone would like to guess what the object is. Listen to all

responses before telling them what it is.

Content Focus

Show the studens the corn cob dart and explain that is used in a Aiming Game played

outside. The corn cob dart is thrown through a vine made hoop hanging from a tree

branch. Explain to students that this game is like a dart game that may have been played

by the Powhatan children. Ask students if they know what a dart game is and if they have

ever played a dart game. Tell students that in a Powhatan village you could find lots of

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corn and feathers. Explain to them that using the questions they asked earlier they can

find out more interesting facts about corn and feathers. Talk to students about how asking

questions can be fun and that they can learn a lot by doing so. Tell them that today they

will become “master questioners.” Let students know by asking questions we all

(including the teacher) can learn together because there are some questions for which the

teacher may not have answers to. Explain to students that there are things in the

classrooom that will help them in their search. Encourage students to keep their thinking

caps on and as a “master questioners” they are always thinking of questions. Ask

students to create and write them on the chartpaper. Group children into three groups: (1)

Corn and Feathers Researchers, (2) Corn Cob Dart Maker, and (3) Aiming Game Players.

Have the (2) teacher assistants and/or cooperating teacher assist students with the

activities relevant to investigating their questions (see activity cards for three groups).

Closure: Ask students what was it like being a “master questioner” and what did they

learn at each of the stations as they went on their search for answers to their questions.

Evaluation:

Formative: Student‟s participation during the generating of questions portion of this

lesson and how they engage in the process of inquiry.

Summative: Essay question (attached)

Background Information

Answers for Card #1: The Powhatan Indians lived on land that was rich and abundant

with a variety of plant and animals. There were lots of animals including turkey, ducks,

deer, bears, raccoons, foxes, and wolves. The soil was very rich which made it easy to

grow vegetables. Growing vegetables was very important to the Indians because they got

about half of their food through farming. During the summer months, the women and

children planted corn, beans, and squash. The Powhatans did not have a refrigerator to

keep their food fresh so they dried it. Corn was one of the most important crops and was

dried and preserved for later use throughout the year. The Powhatan men were

responsible for hunting for food. There were plenty of deer and turkeys located

throughout the land. They used bows and arrows for big animals and snares and traps

for smaller animals. Turkey feathers were worn by the Powhatan Indians. They wore

turkey feathers in their beaded headband. The mantles and cloaks they wore in the winter

were also made of turkey feathers.

Sources: (1) http://www.historicjamestown.com/learn/pdf/elementaryschool/4-

5powhatan_living.pdf (2) http://www.historyisfun.org/pdf/Living-with-

Indians/LivingwiththeIndians.pdf (3) http://www/denacwilliams.com/

/nativeamericans.htm#powhatanfood (4) http://mal.sbo.hampton.k12va.us

/fourth/socstudies/indianwebquest/algon.htm

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Answers for Card #2: Corn Cob Dart Maker. With the assistance of the adult at this

center, students will make corn cob darts. The following are the steps: (1) Take a piece

of dry corn cob about 10cm long, (2) Insert feathers in the end of dry corn cob.

Source: (1) N. Hardister, personal communication, April 2, 2010). (2) http://www.wnit.

.org/OutdoorElements/pdf/corncobdarts.pdf

Answer Card #3: Aiming Game. Native American children were taught life skills,

survival, and social and physical development through games they learn. They played

many games using corn since they had lots of it. One of the games they played was a

game called Corn Cob Dart. It is a game that requires eye and hand coordination. Have

students generate questions about the game. Write responses on white board. Tell

students how the game is played. The following steps are: (1) Make a target ring from

grapevine, branches, or corn husks. (2) Hang the ring from a tree branch or place on the

ground. (3) Throw the corn cob through the ring or, (4) Toss corn cobs into circle on

ground, if ring is on ground to score points. Take students outside to play the Aiming

game..

Source: (1) N. Hardister, personal communication, April 2, 2010 (2)

http://www/turtletrack.org/Issues03/Co01112003/CO_01112003_Games_1.htm (3)

http://www/ehow.com/facts_5558627_kinds-indian-children-play-past.html

Inquiry Cards

Activity Card #1 – Corn and Feathers Researchers.

Questions: How did the Powhatan Indians get corn? Where did the feathers come from

that was used by the Powhatan Indians?

Ask your teacher to explain how corn was preserved and what kind of animal‟s feathers

was used by the Powhatan Indians.

After watching a WebQuest about the types of food used by the Powhatan and hearing

your teacher read a primary document written by William Strachey about how the

Powhatan gathered food, write three interesting things you learned on a separate sheet of

paper. Using your “master questioner” thinking brain, write down two more questions

you can think of.

Answers to Activity Card #1:

1. During the summer, the Powhatan women and children planted corn and it was

dried so they could eat it all year long.

2. Powhatan men hunted and caught plenty of turkeys.

3. Turkey feathers were worn by Powhatan Indians.

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Additional Questions:

1. What did they use corn for?

2. Why did they use turkey feathers?

Note: Teacher or adult helper will dictate students‟ responses.

Activity Card #2 – Corn Cob Dart Makers

Questions: How is a corn cob dart made? What is it used for?

Ask your teacher to help you make a corn cob dart.

Record the two steps for making a corn cob dart on a separate sheet of paper.

Record two additional questions you have about corn cob darts or how they are used.

Answers to Activity Card #2:

1. Stick a feather into a dry corn cob.

2. Corn cob darts are used to play a game.

Additional questions:

1. Can you use other animals‟ feathers?

2. How do you play the game?

Activity Card #3 – Playing the Aiming Game

Questions: How did playing the Aiming Game with corn cob darts help Powhatan boys

learn how to be good hunters?

Ask your teacher to take you outside to play the Aiming Game.

As you think about playing the game, write down three questions you have about the

game.

Possible Answers to Activity Card #3:

1. It helped Powhatan boys practice their aiming and throwing which made it easier

to learn to use the bow and arrow.

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Following is an excerpt from a primary source which refers to the way the Powhatans in

Virginia in the 1600s gathered food. The writer was Englishman William Strachey, who

settled at Jamestown. This was written in 1609.

“… albeit they have great store of turkeys; nor keep birds, squirrels, nor

tame partridges, swan, duck, nor geese. In March they live much upon

their weirs and feed on fish, turkeys, squirrels, and then, as also in May

they plant their fields and set their corn, and live after those months most

off acorns, walnuts, chestnuts, chechinquamins, and fish.”

Translation for kindergarten students:

An English colonist named William Strachey saw lots of turkeys running around the

village where the Powhatan Indians lived. He also noticed that the turkeys, ducks, birds,

and squirrels were not kept in a fence but allowed to run around freely. When the

Powhatan Indians needed food to eat, they would go out and catch the animals. During

the month of May, he saw the Indians planting corn in their fields.

Source: http://www.historicjamestown.com/learn/pdf/elementary_school/4-

5_powhatan_living.pdf

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Mystery Box as a catalyst

Corn Cob Dart

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Directions: After the teacher dictates the question to students, they will draw a picture.

Name____________________________ Date ________________

Essay Question

Draw a picture of Powhatan boys playing one of their favorite games.

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Assessment #1

Directions: After the teacher dictates the question to students, they will circle the correct

answers below.

1) (2)

The ostrich is _______ the tree. The eagle is _____ the tree.

e) above a) above

f) far from b) in front of

g) behind c) below

h) on the right side of d) on the right side of

(3) (4)

The owl is _______ the tree The man is _____ the tree.

e) behind a) near

f) in front of b) far from

g) on the left side of c) above

h) on the right side of d) on the right side of

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5. What was this Powhatan pot made out of?

e) plastic

f) rubber

g) clay

h) sand

6. Pocahontas helped keep peace between the Powhatan Indians and English settlers by

a) being kind to the English settlers.

b) fighting with the English settlers.

c) teasing the English settlers.

d) running away from the English settlers.

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Assessment #2

Directions: After the teacher dictates the question to students, they will draw a picture.

Essay Question

Draw a picture of Powhatan boys playing one of their favorite games.

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Bibliography

The American Indians. (2010). Capt John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail.

Retrieved February 17,2010, from http://www.smithtrail.net/native-

americans/natives-and-smith/smith-powhatan-pocahontas.aspx

Axtell, J. (1995). The rise and fall of the Powhatan empire: Indians in the

seventeenth-century Virginia. Williamsburg: The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.

Boraas, T. (2003). The Powhatan: A confederacy of Native American tribes.

Mankato: Bridgestone Books.

Brown, K.M. (2000). Women in early Jamestown. Retrieved February 17, 2010, from

http://www.virtualjamestown.org/essays/brown_essay.html

Claiborne, R. (1973). The emergence of man: The first Americans. New York: Time-

Life Books.

Feest, C.F. (1990). The Powhatan tribes. New York: Chelsea House Publishers.

Jamestown settlement. (2006). Jamestown- Yorktown Foundation. Retrieved February

17, 2010, from http://www.historyisfun.org/Jamestown-Settlement.htm

King William Historical Society. (2010). Retrieved February 17, 2010, from http:

http://kingwilliamhistory.org/historic_timeline.html

Kupperman, K.O. (2000). Indians and English meet on the James. Retrieved February

17, 2010, from http://www.virtualjamestown.org/essays/kupperman_essay.html

McDaniel, M. (1996). The Powhatan Indians. New York: Chelsea House Publishers.

National Center for History in the Schools. (2004). National standards for history for

grades K-4. Retrieved February 17, 2010, from http://nchs.ucla.edu/standards/

dev-k-4.html

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Oswalt, W.H. (2002). This land was theirs: A study of Native Americans. Boston:

McGraw Hill.

Pritzker, B.M (1998). Native Americans, An encyclopedia of history, culture, and peoples

(Vol. 1). Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO.

Rountree, H.C. (1993). Powhatan: Foreign relations 1500-1722. Charlottesville:

University Press of Virginia.

Virginia Department of Education. (2010). Testing and standards of learning (SOL).

Retrieved February 17, 2010, from http://www.doe.virginia.gov

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Appendix A: Standards

Introduction to History and Social Science

History

K.1 The student will recognize that history describes events and people of other

times and places by

(a) identifying examples of past events in legends, stories, and historical

accounts of Pocahontas.

(b) identifying the people and events honored by the holidays of Thanksgiving

Day.

K.2 The student will describe everyday life in the present and in the past and begin

to recognize that things change over time.

Geography

K.3 The student will describe the relative location of people, places, and things by

using positional words, with emphasis on near/far, above/below, left/right, and

behind/in front.

K.4 The student will use simple maps and globes to

a) develop an awareness that a map is a drawing of a place to show where

things are located and that a globe is a round model of the Earth;

b) describe places referenced in stories and real-life situations;

c) locate land and water features.

K.5 The student will develop an awareness that maps and globes

a) show a view from above;

b) show things in smaller size;

c) show the position of objects.

National State Standards

Standard 1A: The student understands family life now and in the recent past; family life

in various places long ago.

Standard 1B: The student understands the different ways people of diverse racial,

religious, and ethnic groups, and of various national origins have

transmitted their beliefs and values. Standard 2A: The student understands the history of his or her local community

a) Create a historical narrative about the history of the Native Americans.

b) Identify historical figures in the local community and explain their

contributions and significance.

Standard 3A: The student understands the history of indigenous peoples who first lived in

his or her state or region and is able to

a) Draw upon data in paintings and artifacts to hypothesize about the

culture of the early Hawaiians or Native Americans who are known to

have lived in the state or region.

b) Draw upon legends and myths of the Native Americans who lived in

students' state or region in order to describe personal accounts of their

history.

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Standard 3B: The student understands the history of the first European, African, and/or

Asian-Pacific explorers and settlers who came to his or her state or region.

a) Examine visual data in order to describe ways in which early settlers

adapted to, utilized, and changed the environment.

b) Analyze some of the interactions that occurred between the Native

Americans and the first European explorers and settlers in the students'

state or region.

Standard 4D: The student understands events that celebrate and exemplify fundamental

values and principles of American democracy and is able to

a) Describe the history of holidays, such as Thanksgiving

Standard 6A: The student understands folklore and other cultural contributions from

various regions of the United States and how they help to form a national

heritage is able to

a) Describe regional folk heroes, stories, or songs that have contributed to

the development of the cultural history of the U.S.

b) Draw upon a variety of stories, legends, songs, ballads, games, and tall

tales in order to describe the environment, lifestyles, beliefs, and struggles

of people in various regions of the country.

National Standards for Art Education (Visual Arts)

Visual Communication and Production

3.17 The student will identify how works of art reflect times, places, and

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Expenses

There were no expenses incurred in preparing this unit. All supplies were donated.