New Hampshire Frameworks Correlations
Under
Fire: Images from Vietnam
This site captures the story of the Vietnam War through the lenses of the photographers
who often risked their lives to capture the war. Interviews with the photographers
provides additional perspective on this painful period of our history. Some
of the photographers featured at the site died in the war, interviews with their
colleagues and biographies profile their lives and their work.
Intended
Audience: General Reading Level: High School Teacher Section: No Searchable: No
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.
- Examine historical
documents, artifacts, and other materials and classify them as primary or secondary
sources of historical data.
- Understand the
significance of the past to themselves and to society.
- Display historical
perspective by describing the past through the eyes and experiences of those
who were there, as related through their memories, literature, diaries, letters,
debates, arts, maps, and artifacts.
- Frame useful questions
in order to obtain, examine, organize, evaluate, and interpret historical information.
- Use basic research
skills to investigate and prepare a report on a historical person or event.
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- Analyze historical
documents, artifacts, and other materials for credibility, relevance, and point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.
- Use historical
materials to trace the development of an idea or trend across space or over
a prolonged period of time in order to identify and explain patterns of historical
continuity and change.
- Develop and implement
research strategies in order to investigate a given historical topic.
- Critically analyze
historical materials in order to distinguish between the important and the inconsequential
and differentiate among historical facts, opinions, and reasoned judgments.
- Perceive past events
and issues as they were experienced by the people at the time to avoid viewing,
analyzing, and evaluating the past only in terms of the present (present-mindedness).
- Utilize knowledge
of the past and the processes of historical analysis to carry out historical
research; make comparisons; develop and defend generalizations; draw and support
conclusions; construct historical explanations, narratives, and accounts; solve
problems; and make informed decisions.
Curriculum Standard 17
Students will demonstrate a knowledge of the chronology and significance of
the unfolding story of America including the history of their community, New
Hampshire, and the United States.
Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade six students will be able to:
- Outline the chronology of major events in local, New Hampshire, and United States
history from the first arrival of humans to the present.
- Discuss the on-going
story of their community, state, and nation in terms of the contributions of
countless individuals.
Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade twelve students will be able to:
- Demonstrate an understanding of major topics in the study of World War II and
the Cold War (1939-1961) including the causes, conduct, course, and aftermath
of World War II; effects of the war on the homefront; the emergence of the United
States as a superpower; the origins of the Cold War; and postwar political developments
at home and abroad.
Curriculum Standard 18
Students will demonstrate a knowledge of the chronology and significant developments
of world history including the study of ancient, medieval, and modern Europe
(Western civilization) with particular emphasis on those developments that have
shaped the experience of the entire globe over the last 500 years and those
ideas, institutions, and cultural legacies that have directly influenced American
thought, culture, and politics.
Proficiency Standards
By the end of grade ten students will be able to:
- Demonstrate an understanding of the causes and worldwide consequences of
World War I, the Russian Revolutions, World War II, the Chinese Revolution,
the Cold War, and post-World War II conflicts.
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