New Hampshire Frameworks Correlations
When They Were Young:
A Photographic Retrospective of Childhood
A boy soldier in Tennessee, a girl raking leaves, Jewish children in Warsaw
Poland, English children in a ditch during a German air raid, a boy playing
with his shadow. This site from the Library of Congress tells the story of children
from across cultures, socio-economic groups, and eras with images.
Intended Audience: General Reading Level: N/A Teacher Section:
No Searchable: Yes Social Studies: History
Curriculum Standard 16
Students will demonstrate the ability to employ historical analysis, interpretation,
and comprehension to make reasoned judgments and to gain an understanding, perspective,
and appreciation of history and its uses in contemporary situations. Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade six students will be able to: -
Demonstrate an understanding that people, artifacts, and documents
represent links to the past and that they are sources of data from which historical
accounts are constructed.
Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade ten students will be able to: -
Analyze historical documents, artifacts, and other materials for credibility,
relevance, and point of view.
-
Examine historical materials relating to a particular region, society, or theme;
analyze change over time; and make logical inferences concerning cause and effect.
The Arts: Visual Art
Curriculum Standard 4
Analyze the visual arts in relation to history and culture.
Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade eight students will be able to: -
Compare the characteristics of works of art representing various cultures, historical
periods, and artists.
-
Describe and place
a variety of art objects by style and artist, and by historical and cultural
contexts.
-
Describe how a
given work of art can be interpreted differently in various cultures and time.
-
Analyze, describe,
and demonstrate how factors of time and place influence visual characteristics
that give meaning and value to a work of art.
Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade twelve students will be able to: -
Differentiate among a variety of historical and cultural contexts in terms
of characteristics and purposes of works of art.
-
Analyze relationships
among works of art in terms of history, aesthetics, and culture, using their
observations to inform their own art making.
-
Understand various
critical models of interpreting works from several historical periods and cultures.
-
Analyze common
characteristics of visual arts evident across time and among cultural/ethnic
groups to formulate analyses, evaluations, and interpretations of meaning.
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