Description
- Overview:
- Imagine trying to cut your hair without metal tools. How would you do it? Join JPPM's Educator Nate Salzman as he uses experimental archaeology to answer the question "How did Native Americans cut their hair before metal tools?" Use to support the Maryland Social Studies Framework for grades 3, 4, and High School. To support the grade 3 content topic "Cultural Change Over Time," have students compare the advantages/disadvantages of the results of this experiment and how they receive a hair cut; for grade 4 topic "Native Cultures," have students either hypothesize and research how Native American tribes who did not have access to shells may have cut their hair or respond to the prompt "why did European colonists use metal tools for cutting their hair while the Native Americans used shells? Would some hair styles be easier to cut with one type of tool than the other?"; finally for HS topic "Exploration, Colonization, and Global Interaction, have students respond to the prompt "with the introduction of metal tools, how might the role of 'barber' have changed within a Native American tribe? If you evaluate or use this resource, consider responding to this short (4 question) survey at bit.ly/3G6RxUa
- Subject:
- World Cultures, History, Anthropology, Archaeology, Ethnic Studies
- Level:
- Lower Primary, Upper Primary, Middle School, High School
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab, Case Study
- Author:
- JPPM Admin
- Provider:
- Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum
- Date Added:
- 12/02/2021
- License:
-
Creative Commons Attribution
- Language:
- English
- Media Format:
- Video
Standards
Evaluations
No evaluations yet.
Comments