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Source Task

Source
iEARN Collaboration Centre

Subject
Art

Grade Level
K, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Origami Project

In this task, students will learn patience by constructing Origami artwork.

This task includes:
1. Task Description
2. Additional Resources: Classroom activities, web resources, student work examples

Source
iEARN Collaboration Centre

Subject
Environmental Studies

Grade Level
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Our Rivers, Our World

In the Our Rivers, Our World task, students will study the impact of human behavior on river health in several countries. his project promotes active and responsible citizenship through international environmental science collaboration between science teachers and their students. Groups will participate in river excursions with "hands-on" water analysis, professional mentoring and networking, videoconferences, and workshop presentations.

Source
Stanford Education Assessment Laboratory (SEAL)

Subject
Science

Grade Level
6, 7, 8, 9

Paper Towels

In this task, students will conduct an experiment to determine which brands of paper towels can hold the least and most amount of water.

This task includes: 
1. Teacher Instructions
2. Student Notebook
3. Scoring Form

Source
iEARN Collaboration Centre

Subject
Interdisciplinary, World Languages and Cultures, English Language Arts

Grade Level
K, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Pen Friends

In the Pen Friends task, students will exchange letters with students in Japan. They will learn and understand about the culture, school life and so forth both their own country and others’. They also learn the skill of language and possibly make a life long friend.

Source
Stanford Beyond the Bubble

Subject
History/Social Studies

Grade Level
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Photographs of Working Children

This task assesses students’ ability to source, contextualize, and corroborate a document. Students are asked to consider how the contextual information affects the reliability of Lewis Hine's photography.  They then must consider how the content of the photograph could affect its reliability.  Finally, students must think of other information they would like to know about the photographer or the circumstances surrounding the photograph to further evaluate its reliability.

Resources available for this task include downloadable PDF versions of both the assessment as well as the Rubric with benchmark descriptors.

Source
iEARN Collaboration Centre

Subject
Art

Grade Level
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Photojournalism

The Photojournalism task is a digital media project supporting young people around the world to share images about issues and stories from their communities. In 2012 - 2013, the project focused on the theme of 'Images of Social Change.'  In 2013 - 2014, the project is focusing on the theme of 'Heritage, Hunger, and Food Security.'

Source
Stanford Beyond the Bubble

Subject
History/Social Studies

Grade Level
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Pickett's Charge

This task measures students’ ability to source a document.   This assessment gauges whether students understand an important aspect of sourcing: the time elapsed between when a document was produced and the event that it depicts- and how reliability may be affected.

Students who understand the importance of when a document was produced will see that the painting is of little use to historians who wish to understand the immediate circumstances around Pickett's Charge because it was produced over 30 years after the event. 

The task includes a range of supplementary materials, all accessible and available for download with the creation of a free account through the site:

Source
Stanford Beyond the Bubble

Subject
History/Social Studies

Grade Level
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Portrait of an Iroquois Leader

This task assesses whether students can source and contextualize a document.  Students must first examine a painting of an Iroquois man by a British artist, then determine which facts can help them evaluate the painting's historical reliability.  Strong students will be able to explain how the false impression that Hendrick was an emperor (Fact 1) and the alliance between the British and the Iroquois against the French (Fact 3) may have fostered the regal and flattering nature of the painting.

Resources available for this task include downloadable PDF versions of both the assessment as well as the Rubric with benchmark descriptors.

Source
Stanford Beyond the Bubble

Subject
History/Social Studies

Grade Level
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Post-Civil War South

This task assesses whether students can source and contextualize a document.  Students must first examine an interview about the slaves freed from a plantation, then determine which facts can help them evaluate the interview's reliability.  Strong students should be able to explain how the time elapsed between the interview and the events described (Fact 1) might affect the accuracy of his account.  They should also be able to explain how Carter's family's allegiance to the Confederacy during the Civil War (Fact 2) could have influenced his perspective and affected the information he chose to include.

Resources available for this task include downloadable PDF versions of both the assessment as well as the Rubric with benchmark descriptors.

Source
Stanford Beyond the Bubble

Subject
History/Social Studies

Grade Level
6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

President Grant and Horace Greeley

This assessment gauges students’ ability to source, contextualize, and corroborate a document.  Students must consider how the contextual information about John Defrees's pamphlet on Grant's presidency affects its reliability as historical evidence. Then, students must identify other information that would help them further evaluate the reliability of the pamphlet.

Resources available for this task include downloadable PDF versions of both the assessment as well as the Rubric with benchmark descriptors.

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