Jamestown Fort: Finding History
About | K-12 Objectives | Materials Needed | Procedures | Assessment | Related Resources
Procedures:
Other ways to set up this lesson include a graphic demonstration of the archeological dig at the Jamestown site and a preview of artifacts found at the Jamestown Fort site.
Graphic demonstration of the dig site - Display or have students
visit, The Virtual
Jamestown Inside the Fort tour. This page requires Quicktime to
view.
Pictures of the site - A second option for setting the lesson would be to have students visit Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities Jamestown Rediscovery archaeological project. By viewing the pictures and graphic representations of the Jamestown fort, students will be ready to proceed with the lesson.
Note - An on-line version of this lesson is available for students
Inquiries on the Jamestown Fort
Student writing directions
Step 1 - Identify historical characters for your story. Captain John Smith's records contain the names and occupations of the original Jamestown Fort inhabitants.
Step 2 - Secondary historic accounts of the landing, building , and first years of the fort should help you develop a story line or a plot for your story.
Step 3 - Pictures of some of the artifacts found at the site of the Jamestown Fort hold clues about what life was like for the inhabitants. Look at these pictures to help conceptualize what life was like for the inhabitants of the Jamestown Fort.
Step 4- Organize your work using a writing organizer.
Step 5- Write your story. It should be 2 - 5 pages. The story must include historic figures, incidents, and concepts, about the story timeline should be fiction.
Center for Technology and Teacher Education, University of Virginia, This module was created by John K. Lee University of Virginia