What did Native Americans and Europeans trade with one another in the 1600s?

Similar documents
How do abiotic factors and physical processes impact life in the ocean?

Simulate an Oil Spill Cleanup

Monarch Butterfly Life Cycle and Migration

Non-Renewable Energy Resources How does the supply of non-renewable resources affect our supply of electricity?

Overview. Summary. Writing Skills

Human Impacts on the World Ocean

II. III. IV. RESOURCES A. Best Buy Bargain Books, Social Studies K-1 by Frank Schaffer ISBN

RENEWABLE OR NOT? ADVANCE PREPARATION MATERIALS

MAPS AND GLOBES: WHERE IN THE WORLD ARE WE?

Slavery in Charleston, South Carolina:

Guided Reading Level Ī - -

Instructional Technology & Distance Education

Ch.1. Name: Class: Date: Matching

Time and Seasons. Previsit Material. Program Overview. Special points of interest Math Science Listening Reading History Art

Grade 4: Module 2A: Unit 1: Lesson 5 Mid-Unit 1 Assessment: Inferring with Pictures and Text

Symbiotic Relationships in Marine Ecosystems

Teacher notes and activities

Chapter 8, Section 2 The Louisiana Purchase. Pages

TEACHING THE FIVE THEMES OF GEOGRAPHY THROUGH PICTURE BOOKS. Chris Frazier Oakbrook Elementary School Ladson, SC

Henry Hudson by Kelly Hashway

What behaviors are required for success in the workplace and how can we practice these behaviors in the classroom? MATERIALS

SECOND GRADE 1 WEEK LESSON PLANS AND ACTIVITIES

Mansa Musa s Pilgrimage Grade Seven

Currency and Exchange Rates

Fourth Grade Social Studies Content Standards and Objectives

Send all inquiries to: Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 8787 Orion Place Columbus, Ohio ISBN Printed in the United States of America

Answer Keys to Unit Tests

Local Government and Leaders Grade Three

Motivation: Igniting Exceptional Performance

Lesson 2 Social Skill: Active Listening

Colonial America Vocabulary

6: Take Me to Your National Park

Marine Ecosystems and Biodiversity

LILLIAN PITAWANAKWAT LESSON PLAN 2006 All Rights Reserved 4D Interactive Inc

Teaching Machine Based on the work of Judi Garratt

Investigation 6: What happens when plates collide?

Unit 2 Lesson 4 Early Human Migration and Stone Age Tools

Money: Week 1 of 2. Beginning Level (CASAS reading scores of )

Jamestown Settlement Family Gallery Guide From Africa to Virginia

Five Themes of Geography

FIRST GRADE 1 WEEK LESSON PLANS AND ACTIVITIES

Space Exploration Classroom Activity

Models for Dividing Fractions Grade Six

Scarcity and Choices Grade One

LEARNING THE LANDFORMS Grade Level: Third Presented by: Elizabeth Turcott, Endeavor Charter Academy, Springfield, Michigan Length of Unit: 14 lessons

Fur Trade. Target Group Grade 5

VBS 2016 Kids Craft Rotation

WE VE GOT THE WHOLE WORLD IN OUR HANDS: Geography Spatial Sense

LESSON 3: EXHIBITING A CIVIL WAR SOLDIER

World Map Lesson 4 - The Global Grid System - Grade 6+

KINDERGARTEN PLATE TECTONICS 1 WEEK LESSON PLANS AND ACTIVITIES

Materials History Timeline:

Form: Filled in table. Method: Peer assessment. Tool: Checklist. Form: Completed table. Method: Peer assessment. Tool: Checklist

Animals that move slowly, animals that move quickly

Rising and Setting of the Moon

Emergency Management

11A Plate Tectonics. What is plate tectonics? Setting up. Materials

High Flying Factors of Production LESSON 3 HIGH FLYING FACTORS OF PRODUCTION

Traveling on the Water Cycle

Chapter 2: Europe Looks Outward. Chapter 2.4: France and the Netherlands in North America

Adjectives Using Ocean Facts

How Do You Manage Money? Lesson 3a: How Do People Make Good Spending Decisions?

Tectonic plates have different boundaries.

Systems of Transportation and Communication Grade Three

Prentice Hall World Geography: Building a Global Perspective 2007

READING THE NEWSPAPER

Chapter 3: Early People of Ohio

SOCIAL STUDIES Geography/United States History Grade 8 The Oregon Country

6 th Grade Vocabulary-ALL CAMPUSES

Seventh Grade Social Studies. Unit 1: Geography of the Eastern Hemisphere

Acquisition Lesson Plan for the Concept, Topic or Skill---Not for the Day

Our Earth, Our Resources

How Do Oceans Affect Weather and Climate?

GRADE 4 TEST IN SOCIAL STUDIES

What are the Different Types of Landforms?

Economics. Worksheet Circular Flow Simulation

Overview. Mission Gate, ca. late 1700s Courtesy Texas Archeological Research Labs. Photo by Hunt Wellborn

Name of Lesson: Properties of Equality A Review. Mathematical Topic: The Four Properties of Equality. Course: Algebra I

Discovering Math: Exploring Geometry Teacher s Guide

A Correlation of. Pearson myworld Social Studies Grade 2 Florida Edition. To the Monroe County Curriculum Guide

SOCIAL STUDIES UNIT OUTLINES - SIXTH GRADE

Introduction to Geography

PUSD High Frequency Word List

The Age of Inventions

Soup From a Stone, Fancy That!

SECOND GRADE PLATE TECTONICS 1 WEEK LESSON PLANS AND ACTIVITIES

THE EARLIEST AMERICANS/CROSSING THE LAND BRIDGE

Kansas Board of Regents Precollege Curriculum Courses Approved for University Admissions

Unit One Study Guide

Changes in Our Sky Grade Two

Water Scarcity Ashley Schopieray

NTTI Media-Rich Lesson

Lesson 10 - The Circular Flow of Economic Activity

Level Lesson Plan Session 1

2. The student will be able to explain why and how people immigrated to the United States.

Desertification: Cause and Effect Students learn about the causes and effects of desertification threatening the African Sahel.

SOUTH AMERICA CONTENTS. What s in This Book Section 1: South America in the World Section 2: Political Divisions of South America...

Monuments and Landmarks Classroom Activity

Pacemaker World Geography and Cultures. correlated to. Florida Sunshine State Standards Social Studies Grades 6-8

Educator s Guide to Learning about Mexico Using Google Earth

Transcription:

This website would like to remind you: Your browser (Safari 7) is out of date. Update your browser for more security, comfort and the best experience on this site. Activitydevelop Trade in the 1600s What did Native Americans and Europeans trade with one another in the 1600s? Overview Students look at pictures of material goods from two world regions Eastern North America and Western Europe and simulate 17th century trade by moving goods across the Atlantic Ocean. For the complete activity with media resources, visit: http://nationalgeographic.org/activity/trade-in-the-1600s/ Directions 1. Analyze a map of the Atlantic Ocean. Use an overhead projector or interactive whiteboard to display the map Trading Across the Atlantic Ocean at the front of the classroom. Ask students to identify the two landmasses and the body of water on the map as you point to them. Use the language of the cardinal directions as you discuss each. For example, the landmass on the right (east) is the continent of Europe. The landmass on the left (west) is North America. The body of water in between the two continents is the Atlantic Ocean. Ask: Where on the map did the Dutch live in the 1600s? (Europe) Where did the Native Americans live? (North America) 2. Introduce the concept of trade. Explain to students that they will explore how Native Americans traded with Dutch Europeans in the 1600s. Ask students if they have ever traded, or exchanged, one thing for another thing. Prompt them to think about trading one type of food 1 of 7

for another, or money for an item they bought. Invite volunteers to give examples, and make sure all students understand the concept of trade. Then point out the huge distance across the Atlantic Ocean. Explain to students that 17th century traders carried goods all the way across the ocean, a journey that often took more than two months. Ask: Why do you think traders carried goods such a great distance? (to get new, useful things that they didn t have at home) 3. Examine items from the 17th century Native American and Dutch cultures. Give each student a copy of the worksheet Trade in the 1600s, which has pictures of Native American and Dutch material culture and trade goods. For each item, read aloud the label and discuss what the item is, what it was used for, and who sold it to the other Dutch Europeans or Native Americans. For example: The Dutch used a loom to make woven cloth. The Native Americans used seashells to make wampum beads, a form of money. The Dutch made jewelry from metal. The Dutch and other European groups used beaver pelts from the Native Americans to make fur hats. The Dutch produced metal pots and knives for cooking. The Native Americans grew corn for food. Discuss the motivations for trade between the two groups. Explain to students that Dutch Europeans wanted beaver pelts for making hats and corn to eat. Native Americans wanted metal tools to add to their supplies of stone tools, and woven cloth to add to the leather that they made from animal skins and used for clothing and blankets. 4. Simulate pre-colonial trade on a map of the Atlantic Ocean. Cut out one set of pictures from the worksheet Trade in the 1600s. Have students help you tape the cut-out pictures on the appropriate continents on the map of the Atlantic Ocean. Cut out the picture of a sailing ship on the worksheet A Sailing Ship in the 1600s. Tell students you will use the picture to move important trade goods across the Atlantic Ocean in the correct direction. Ask students to help guide you. For example, move beaver pelts and corn from North America to Europe; move knives, pots, and woven cloth from Europe to North America. Make sure students understand that Dutch traders carried goods to and from North 2 of 7

America on sailing ships, but that Native Americans did not cross the ocean on sailing ships at this point in history. Alternative Assessment Have students simulate trade between Native Americans and Dutch Europeans through role play. Assign students different cultural identities and trade goods. Have each draw a picture of their assigned item and describe what it is and what it was used for to the class. Then have students role-play trading the items. Objectives Subjects & Disciplines Geography Human Geography Physical Geography Learning Objectives Students will: use a map to identify North America, Europe, and the Atlantic Ocean identify where on the map two cultural groups, Native Americans and Dutch Europeans, were located in the 1600s explain the concept of trade and provide examples from their own lives describe some trade goods from 17th century Native American and Dutch cultures demonstrate geographic understanding of pre-colonial trade by simulating moving goods across the Atlantic Ocean Teaching Approach Learning-for-use 3 of 7

Teaching Methods Discussions Hands-on learning Visual instruction Skills Summary This activity targets the following skills: Critical Thinking Skills Analyzing Understanding Geographic Skills Acquiring Geographic Information Analyzing Geographic Information Organizing Geographic Information National Standards, Principles, and Practices National Geography Standards Standard 1: How to use maps and other geographic representations, geospatial technologies, and spatial thinking to understand and communicate information Standard 11: The patterns and networks of economic interdependence on Earth's surface Standard 17: How to apply geography to interpret the past National Standards for History 4 of 7

The History of the Students' Own State or Region (K-4) Standard 3: The People, Events, Problems, and Ideas that Created the History of Their State Preparation What You ll Need Materials You Provide Safety scissors Transparent tape Required Technology Internet Access: Required Tech Setup: 1 computer per classroom, Interactive whiteboard, Projector Physical Space Classroom Grouping Large-group instruction Resources Provided: Handouts & Worksheets Trading Across the Atlantic Ocean Trade in the 1600s A Sailing Ship in the 1600s 5 of 7

Background & Vocabulary Background Information In the 17th century, Native Americans and Europeans in New Amsterdam and other parts of eastern North America traded a variety of goods. These goods included metal tools and woven cloth from the Europeans, and beaver pelts and corn from the Native Americans. By studying these goods and the movement of the goods, students learn about important aspects of pre-colonial culture and trade. Prior Knowledge [] Recommended Prior Activities None Vocabulary Term Atlantic Ocean Part of Speech noun cardinal direction noun continentnoun culture noun 6 of 7 Definition one of Earth's four oceans, separating Europe and Africa from North and South America. one of the four main points of a compass: north, east, south, west. one of the seven main land masses on Earth. learned behavior of people, including their languages, belief systems, social structures, institutions, and material goods. good noun object or service that serves a human need or want. landmassnoun large area of land. trade noun buying, selling, or exchanging of goods and services. For Further Exploration

Books Maestro, Betsy and Giulio Maestro. The New Americans: Colonial Times, 1620-1689. Lothrop, Lee & Shepard: New York, 1996. Interactives The Hudson: The River That Defined America Partner Funder 1996 2016 National Geographic Society. All rights reserved. 7 of 7