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Here's the story
on historical fiction in my classroom: It illuminates time periods, helps
me integrate the curriculum, and enriches social studies. Just take Amy's
word for it. At the end of our westward-expansion unit, while modeling
her journal entry after a fictional account we'd read, this fifth grader
wrote: "Dear Diary, July 30, 1852: This journey has been heart-wrenching,
thirst-quenching, and most of all, an adventure I will never forget."
Blending stories into a study of history turns the past into a dynamic
place.
Of course, historical
fiction doesn't stand alone in my instructional program; even the best
literature cannot address skills and processes unique to social studies
that kids must learn. I have students balance fiction with fact, validate
historical hypotheses with research. Historical fiction is the spice.
To help you build
good fiction into your social studies program, below you'll find:
Seven Reasons I Teach
With Historical Fiction
- It piques kids'
curiosity. Although I sometimes begin units with chapter books, more
often I start with picture books because they're engaging and full of
information. Before I read aloud, we make a class list of what students
already know about the topic, and then I say: "When I finish reading,
I'd like each of you to ask a question related to the story. The only
rule is, no question can be asked twice." Afterward, I launch investigations,
saying, "Now that we've looked at what happened to one pioneer family,
let's find out if their experience was typical or unusual."
- It levels the playing
field. Some kids come to class with a deep background knowledge to draw
upon, while others have just shallow reservoirs. Reading historical
fiction promotes academic equity because comparing books from one unit
to the next provides kids with equal opportunities to develop historical
analogies. I ask, "How is the story we read for this unit similar to
and different from the one we read last month?"
- It hammers home
everyday details. Picture books today provide visual and contextual
clues to how people lived, what their speech was like, how they dressed,
and so on. When accurately portrayed, these details are like a savings
account that students can draw on and supplement each
deposit of information provides a richer understanding of the period.
- It puts people
back into history. Social studies texts are often devoted to coverage
rather than depth. Too often, individuals no matter
how famous or important are reduced to a few sentences.
Children have difficulty converting these cryptic descriptions and snapshots
into complex individuals who often had difficult choices to make, so
myths and stereotypes flourish. Good historical fiction presents individuals
as they are, neither all good nor all bad.
- It presents the
complexity of issues. If you were to draw a topographical map of an
issue, there would be hills and valleys, because most issues are multifaceted.
Yet traditionally, historical issues have been presented to children
as flat, one-dimensional, or single-sided. Historical fiction restores
the landscape of history, warts and all, so children can discover that
dilemmas are age-old. My kids often make lists of the costs and benefits
of historical decisions. For example, they draw two posters one
encouraging American colonists to join the Patriots, the other urging
them to stay loyal to King George. They also write 35- to 45-second
infomercials for each side.
- It promotes multiple
perspectives. It's important for students to share their perspectives,
while respecting the opinions of others. Historical fiction introduces
children to characters who have different points of view and offers
examples of how people deal differently with problems. It also informs
students about the interpretive nature of history, showing how authors
and illustrators deal with an issue in different ways.
- It connects social
studies learning to the rest of our school day. Historical fiction,
while enhancing understanding of the past, can help you integrate social
studies across the curriculum.
Tips for Choosing
Good Historical Fiction
There's an abundance
of historical fiction in libraries, catalogs, and bookstores. To help select
the best, use the following criteria and check out the resources listed
below.
Criteria
The historical fiction you choose should:
- present a well-told
story that doesn't conflict with historical records,
- ortray characters
realistically,
- present authentic
settings,
- artfully fold in
historical facts,
- provide accurate
information through illustrations, and
- avoid stereotypes
and myths.
Reliable Resources
- Notable Children's
Trade Books in the Field of Social Studies, compiled annually since
1972 by the Children's Book Council in cooperation with the National
Council for the Social Studies (NCSS). This is the most reliable list
I've found. Careful attention is paid to authenticity and historical
accuracy. Single copies cost $2. Send a check and a self-addressed,
stamped (3 oz.) 6-by-9-inch envelope to the Children's Book Council,
568 Broadway, Suite 404, New York, NY 10012.
- Social Studies
and the Young Learner, a quarterly magazine published by NCSS,
features a regular column on books appropriate for elementary social
studies and suggestions for use. To subscribe ($15/year), contact the
National Council for the Social Studies, 3501 Newark St. NW, Washington,
DC 20016; (202) 966-7840.
- An Annotated
Bibliography of Historical Fiction for the Social Studies, Grades 512,
by Fran Silverblank, published by Kendall/Hunt for the National Council
for the Social Studies, $14.95; (800) 228-0810.
Fifteen Fabulous
New Historical Fiction Books
It's a challenge
to select titles that are authentic, have a fresh slant, represent diverse
groups, are easily readable, are of high literary quality, and are enriched
with illustrations. The following reviews of 1994 titles are excerpted
from Notable Children's Trade Books in the Field of Social Studies,
compiled by practicing teachers and published by the National Council
for the Social Studies (NCSS) in cooperation with the Children's Book
Council (CBC). I have added my own teaching strategies to each.
PRIMARY
Casey Over There by Staton Rabin, illustrated by Greg Shed
(Harcourt); 32 pages; $15
This is a touching story of two brothers whose lives were affected
by World War I. Casey fought and his younger brother, Aubrey, waited
and worried. Aubrey's letter to Uncle Sam initiates a sensitive response
from the president. The illustrations add intensity to the story.
Teaching Strategy: I make a template of a T-shirt
out of a file folder for students to create T-shirts for characters
in books. Make one for each of the brothers in the story with a slogan
and a symbol, then hang T-shirts with clothespins on a clothesline
suspended in your classroom.
In America
by Marissa Moss (Dutton); 32 pages; $14.99
Walter's grandfather tells the story of immigrating to America. Walter
learns about his grandfather's village in Lithuania and about courage
through his grandfather's experience.
Teaching Strategy: Storyboards tell lots about what
kids understand. For this story, fold a piece of drawing paper into
eight panels: a title panel, six depicting what Walter learns about
Lithuania, and the final panel for what he learns about courage.
PRIMARY/INTERMEDIATE
Seminole Diary: Remembrances of a Slave by Dolores Johnson
(Macmillan); 32 pages; $14.95
Libbie, a slave, tells of the peaceful coexistence of African-American
slaves and the Seminole Indians. In the Seminole villages, runaway
slaves found a haven of mutual respect.
Teaching Strategy: I recommend pairing off students
and having them write poetry for two voices: one voice for the African-American
and one voice for the Seminole Indian. Have the kids share their poems
with the class.
The Sad Night:
The Story of an Aztec Victory and a Spanish Loss by Sally Schofer
Mathews (Clarion); 40 pages; $16.95
In text surrounded by Aztec codices, the story of this ancient civilization
is recounted. Told from the Aztec perspective, this book connects
the past with a modern-day discovery.
Teaching Strategy: I have my class practice writing
newspaper headlines from different perspectives. This book lends itself
to four perspectives Aztec, Spanish, past, and present.
Hilde and
Eli: Children of the Holocaust by David A. Adler, illustrated
by Karen Ritz (Holiday House); 32 pages; $15.95
Children of the Holocaust are like any others: Hilde Rosenzweig loved
to ride her tricycle and play with dolls; Eli Lax studied hard and
loved animals.
Teaching Strategy: Discuss how the lives of the characters
in this story compare or contrast with the lives of the children today
or with the fictional account in the book Doesn't Fall Off His
Horse(below).
Doesn't Fall
Off His Horse by Virginia A. Stroud (Dial); 32 pages; $14.99
Narrative prose and exceptional artwork trace this dangerous adventure
back to the Oklahoma Territory of the 1890s. Readers experience the
life of a Kiowa boy, as told by a very old man to his great-granddaughter.
Teaching Strategy: As a class, we often create a
hands-head-heart chart. List what the Kiowa boy does in one column
(hands), what he knows in the second column (head), and how he feels
in the third (heart). Then ask: What are some generalizations we can
make about life for a Kiowa boy?
INTERMEDIATE
Pink and Say by Patricia Polacco (Philomel); 48 pages; $15.95
Two young Union boys from very different backgrounds are caught up
in the travesties of war in Confederate territory. This is a poignant
Civil War story passed down through generations, including the generation
of the author.
Teaching Strategy: My students and I brainstorm a
list of questions characters might be asked in a magazine interview.
Then I have each student choose a character and seven questions to
answer about him in writing. Or I have students work in pairs, posing
as an interviewer and interviewee.
Steal Away
Home by Lois Ruby (Macmillan); 176 pages; $14.95
History, drama, and mystery are interwoven in two overlapping stories:
one of the Underground Railroad of the 1850s and the other of a young
girl in Lawrence, Kansas, in the 1990s.
Teaching Strategy: After introducing kids to different
kinds of graphic organizers, I ask them to draw a Venn diagram showing
the events and characteristics of 1850s, those of the 1990s, and those
the two eras share.
Clouds of
Terror by Catherine A. Welch, illustrated by Laurie K. Johnson
(Carolrhoda); 48 pages; $11.95
This fictional account of an 1870s invasion by Rocky Mountain locusts
of a Swedish-American family's farm in Minnesota is gripping and realistic.
Central themes are life on a l9th-century prairie, economic hardship,
family coping responses, and children's roles.
Teaching Strategy: One of our language arts goals
is to write friendly letters. Ask students to write letters to make-believe
relatives in Sweden about the experiences of each family member in
the story.
Stranded
at Plimoth Plantation 1626 by Gary Bowen (HarperCollins); 88
pages; $19.95
Via his journal entries and woodcuts, young Christopher Sears recounts
the daily life of the Pilgrims of Plimoth Plantation in 1626 and 1627.
Teaching Strategy: I ask kids to imagine a Pilgrim
as a busy executive with a tight schedule and then have them create
a planner for him or her for a day. Kids verify the accuracy of the
schedule using other resources we find in the library. I extend the
activity by asking kids to schedule other days, such as the Sabbath,
three days around the first Thanksgiving, and so on. Then I ask: What's
similar to our lives today?
The Shadow
Children by Steven Schnur, illustrated by Herbert Tauss (Morrow);
96 pages; $14
The ghosts of Jewish children haunt a rural village in post-World
War II France in this powerful and moving tale of a boy and his grandfather.
Teaching Strategy: Use a T-chart to separate fact
from fiction.
ADVANCED
With Every Drop of Blood: A Novel of the Civil War by James
Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier (Delacorte/BDD); 228 pages;
$15.95
In this first-rate novel, two young men are caught up in the Civil
War: Johnny is on a bold mission to supply Rebel troops, while Cush,
a Yankee, is a runaway slave. They form an unlikely alliance during
the final days of the war.
Teaching Strategy: I feel that getting kids to look
at things from more than one point of view is important. One way to
do this for this novel is to have kids write journal entries from
each boy's point of view. Kids fashion journals out of half sheets
of paper. This seems to stimulate creativity, because staring at a
whole sheet of blank paper can be intimidating!
Under the
Blood-Red Sun by Graham Salisbury (Delacorte/BDD); 192 pages;
$15.95
As Japanese-Americans living in Hawaii, Tomi and his family face prejudice
and hatred after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Father is taken to an
internment camp and Grandfather disappears. Tomi discovers how people
respond to crisis.
Teaching Strategy: My students spend a math period
constructing a survey to see what members of the community know about
Japanese-American internment. They pool their information; do simple
statistics with mean, mode, and median; and create charts.
The Captive
by Joyce Hansen (Scholastic); 128 pages; $13.95
This novel chronicles the life of a young Ashanti boy from his captivity
in West Africa to his life as a slave in Salem, Massachusetts, and
then to freedom with African-American ship captain Paul Cuffe.
Teaching Strategy: I have students create symbols
for the major events in the main character's life. I give them enough
exposure to the time period so that their symbols are culturally accurate
as well as intellectually on target. Then I have students organize
the symbols into a pictorial time line.
The Glory
Field by Walter Dean Myers (Scholastic); 288 pages; $14.95
This novel is about the experiences of five generations of an African-American
family on Curry Island, South Carolina. The book encompasses the Lewis
family's joys and challenges, beginning with the first slave boat
that landed on the island.
Teaching Strategy: It's fun for students to compose
a five-generation newspaper. I divide the class into five groups,
assign each group a generation, and cut a piece of notebook paper
lengthwise for each student. Each student writes an article on his
or her strip representing experiences and points of view of the generation.
Kids use black felt-tip pens to write their final drafts, I tape the
articles together, and we photocopy the newspaper.
Is Pocahontas
Real?
Discovering
Where History Stops and the Story Starts
It's easy to discern fact from fantasy in a Disney movie just
wait until the animals break into song. Less than obvious is what's
historically accurate and what isn't. Our students are faced with the
same dilemma when we teach with historical fiction. How can we help
them differentiate between make-believe and history, and recognize the
interpretive nature of historical reporting? Here's what I do.
- Raise
students' awareness. I alert kids that historical fiction
and written accounts of history are different genres. I tell them:
As you are reading throughout the year, see if you can find differences
between these two kinds of books.
- Bring
in resource people. Invite experts into your classroom
so kids have an opportunity to discuss their observations and explore
questions. Remember, an expert can be a grandmother who was interned,
an uncle who has traveled extensively, or a local lawyer who can
tell your kids how trials really work.
- Integrate
skills across the disciplines. I fold reading practice such
as distinguishing between fact and opinion, and fiction and nonfiction into
social studies.
- Investigate
sources. When I read a book aloud to my class, I model
how to examine the sources of information used by the author and
illustrator. Author's notes are particularly valuable. When kids
read independently, we frequently conference about the sources used.
It's also critical to read more than one kind of resource so students
have the opportunity to discover multiple perspectives.
- Facilitate
access to resources. To aid in student inquiry, I enlist
the help of our public librarians who make an "all call" on books
throughout the county. Given a couple of weeks notice, they frequently
gather 30 to 40 books that I can keep for up to three weeks. In
three years of using this resource, we haven't lost a book yet!
- Observe
illustrations. When possible, find photographs to compare
with illustrations. Look for incongruities as well as confirmations,
what's been included and/or left out, and so on.
- Consult
primary documents. I photocopy primary documents and we
analyze them for reliability. We develop questions regarding the
strengths and weaknesses of various sources, and identify possible
biases and inaccuracies. We also talk about what distinguishes primary
documents (written by the actual person) from secondary accounts
(written by a historian interpreting events) from historical fiction
(written by an author dramatizing the historian's interpretation).
- Develop
criteria. Help students create their own criteria for evaluating
informational books and historical fiction. Also have students identify
and compare specific characteristics. For example, the order of
events can't change in biographies or history books, but made-up
events can be inserted in historical fiction.
- Test
generalizations. Be alert for inaccurate assumptions your
students make, such as "Kids in the past had it easier than we do
today." Give these generalizations a litmus test: "Is Jeri's statement
absolutely always true, absolutely always false, or somewhere in
between? What evidence do you have?"
- Encourage
questions. Develop a classroom environment where no one
knows all the answers and let's find out are the three words you
say most frequently. Get kids comfortable with ambiguity so they
know it's okay to have questions. For too many years we packaged
social studies with a fancy wrapper, which has led to oversimplification.
- Use
graphic organizers. Help students analyze assumptions,
scrutinize facts, and discern patterns through graphic organizers.
Lists, diagrams, wheels, and charts help students assimilate information
from diverse resources and encourage critical thinking.

Terry
Lindquist (Social Studies), who was recognized by the National Council
for the Social Studies as National Elementary Teacher of the Year, is
a fifth-grade teacher on Mercer Island, Washington.
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