Lesson Plan:
Grade Level: 9-12
Subject: Social Studies/Ethnic Studies
Duration: 55 minutes
Essential Question: How do Somali cultural products, practices, and perspectives reflect the values and identity of the Somali people throughout history?
Learning Objectives:
- Students will be able to recognize and explain Somali cultural products, practices, and perspectives.
- Students will be able to analyze the interconnections between these cultural elements.
- Students will be able to create a visual representation of a cultural artifact or practice.
Standards
- Geography
Culture: Investigate how sense of place is impacted by different cultural perspectives.
Benchmark: Investigate one’s multiple identities based on location, place, culture and in relation to others. (9.3.17.1)
- History
Causation and Argumentation: Integrate evidence from multiple historical sources and interpretations into a reasoned argument or compelling narrative about the past.
Benchmark: U.S. History Era 8: Civil Rights Struggles – Explain the difference between an immigrant and a refugee. Describe various immigrant migrant and refugee groups, focusing on Hmong, Somali, Indian, Ethiopian, and Latinx people who have come to the United States. Examine different responses to immigration and the growing diversity of the United States. (9.4.21.15)
- Ethnic Studies
Identity: Analyze the ways power and language construct the social identities of race, religion, geography, ethnicity, and gender. Apply these understandings to one’s own social identities and other groups living in Minnesota, centering those whose stories and histories have been marginalized, erased, or ignored.
Benchmark: Describe and analyze examples of how religions develop and change over time in response to differing social, historical, and political contexts, including, but not limited to Shamanism/Animism, Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Indigenous religious traditions in Africa and the Americas, and African diasporic religions. (9.5.23.6)
Materials Needed:
- Access to computers or tablets with internet access
- Projector and screen for presentations
- Whiteboard and markers
- Art supplies (paper, colored pencils, markers, magazines) for extra credit drawing
- Printouts of the assignment guidelines
- Google Slides for this lesson.
Lesson Outline: Exploring Somali Culture
Note: “DOK” throughout refers to Dept of Knowledge questions (Level 1: recall; Level 2: skills and concepts; Level 3: strategic thinking; Level 4: extended thinking)
|
Estimated Time |
Content |
Materials |
|
10 mins. |
Introduction (“Ignite”)
|
Slide #1 Slide #2 Slide #3 Slides #4 & #5 |
|
20 mins. DOK 1 DOK 3 DOK 3 DOK 4 DOK 3 |
Small Group Exploration (“Chunk”) Activity: Have students work in groups (3-4 students) to explore the Somali Museum website (or museum itself, if possible!)
Circulate around the room to assist and answer questions. |
Slide #6 Slides #7, #8 #9, #10 |
|
20 mins. |
Discussion (“Chew”)
|
Slide #11 |
|
5 mins. |
Closing (“Review”)
|
Slide #12 |
Assessment: through “Do Your Part”.
- Participation in group discussions and exploration.
- Completion of the assignment with identified cultural elements and connections.
- Creativity and effort in the visual representation (for extra credit).
Differentiation:
Provide additional resources or assistance to students who may need support with navigating the website or understanding cultural concepts.
Ensure that students work at their own pace and provide options for various types of visual representations (e.g., digital art, collage).
Challenge/Extension: Visual Representation
Have students choose one cultural artifact or practice from which to create a visual representation. They can either find an image online or create their own drawing. (OR create digital art or a collage). Consider offering students extra credit for creating their own drawing.