LESSON PLAN OUTLINE
Pearl Harbor
OVERVIEW
This lesson is about CITIZENSHIP. Specifically, this lesson is about the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 and how this event made many United States citizens critically think about the question:
What does it mean to have your citizenship taken away?
LESSON OBJECTIVES
After finishing this lesson, students will be able to:
- Describe the major facts about the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
- Analyze the effects of the bombing of Pearl Harbor, specifically on Japanese Americans living in Hawaii.
- Explain the concept of citizenship in their own words.
- Evaluate primary source historical information.
- Determine the impact of the environment, community, and family on people's sense of citizenship.
Duration: TBD
RESOURCES - ORAL HISTORY CLIPS
First-hand recollections of the attack on Pearl Harbor
![]() Daniel Inouye |
![]() Ed Ichiyama |
![]() Edward Kanaya |
Feelings of internal conflict
![]() Dick Hamada |
![]() Edward Kanaya |
![]() Masato Doi |
Incidents of discrimination
![]() Stanley Akita |
![]() Daniel Inouye |
![]() Fred Ida |
Effects on military personnel
![]() Kunio Fujimoto |
![]() Dick Hamada |
GROUP ACTIVITY
One idea is to have students create a Web 2.0 multimedia story/presentation about citizenship and Pearl Harbor (e.g., Animoto music video). Good list of Web 2.0 tools here: http://cogdogroo.wikispaces.com/StoryTools
Another idea: Have student dyads create a documentary movie about citizenship and Pearl Harbor using oral history clips, historic footage, and present day news clips using http://www.remixamerica.org.
(Please suggest some other possible ideas!)
ASSESSMENT
(Please suggest some possible ideas!)
Please email your ideas to randy@goforbroke.org.







