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 | For teachers and students 
 
      The following are samples of the kinds of questions and projects that 
        may help teachers use this site in productive and meaningful ways. They 
        have been organized into categories related to the grade level of the 
        students using the site and include some Tips about how to search for 
        the answers. 
       GENERAL APPROACHES: Students of all ages and in a number of different 
        courses can use the site to find out more about all sorts of topics: race, 
        ethnic, and gender issues, the urbanization and suburbanization of the 
        United States, the role of government in people's lives - the list is endless. 
        Special topics, which are found in each of the content areas, are jumping 
        off places for research on those topics. The documents that have already 
        been linked to those special topics are usually just the tip of the iceberg 
        of documents related to that topic. Different information and conflicting 
        points of view may be found in other places, and it is important to conduct a
        word or keyword searches to flesh out the information found in the special 
        topics documents that we have provided. 
        
        
        Question: How have the kinds of games that children played and 
        the toys they played with change during the last 150 years? 
        Research Tip: Make a list of the toys and games that you and 
        your friends are familiar with and do a word search for those toys and 
        games. See which ones turn up. There are also several "keywords" related 
        to toys and games. You can also compare different periods of time by choosing 
        specific decades when you do your searches. 
        Question: This is a slightly different question: How have the 
        hobbies and sports that Milwaukee children enjoy changed over time? How 
        have the ways that children and their parents thought about these activities 
        changed over the years? 
        Research Tip: Choose one of your favorite past times  a sport, 
        music, dancing  and do a "word search" for it. Show the different ways 
        that newspapers have covered certain activities, the ways schools and 
        parents have encouraged or discouraged them, or the importance society 
        has placed on them. 
        Question: Choose a week, a year, or a decade in Milwaukee history. 
        Look at all the newspaper articles or other documents you can from that 
        period of time and write a story—not a report—about a fictional 
        child living at that time. 
        Research Tip: Limit your keyword and word searches to certain 
        documents and certain decades. 
        Question: Compare the part of Milwaukee County in which you live 
        to that same area during an earlier time. What events and organizations 
        and activities are the same? Which are different? Has the people who live 
        there changed (their race, ethnic group, wealth)? 
        Research Tips: You can limit word and keyword searches by "neighborhood." 
        Ask you teacher to help you use the map and the "boundaries" guide. You 
        can start researching your neighborhood by doing word searches of streets, 
        churches, schools, or even families. 
        Question: How have schools changed since your grandparents were 
        children? 
        Research Tips:  There are a number of ways to research this question. 
        One way is to do an oral history with your grandparents and compare their 
        experiences to your own (for ideas about the kinds of questions that you 
        could ask in your interview, read a number of the oral histories in "Through 
        Children's Eyes"). You could also check out the yearbook articles and 
        pictures in the "Schooling" section and compare them to your school's 
        most recent yearbook. Or you could compare the evidence related to "curriculum" 
        (the classes planned by the school to give students the skills and knowledge 
        that administrators and teachers think are important for children to learn) 
        and see how the classes taken by students changed over the years. 
        Question: Children have always tried to contribute to their communities. 
        Examine the ways that children of any age have tried to "make a difference." 
        Research Tips: What programs can children participate in? How 
        do schools use "service learning" to educate children? How do groups like 
        the Boy and Girl Scouts, churches, the Red Cross, and others try to help 
        children help others? Next, work backward in time to discover how Milwaukee 
        children have, over the years, contributed to the well-being of their 
        neighborhoods and of the city. Do a word search for "volunteer" or "service" 
        or other words that describe efforts to help others (but remember that 
        these words have other meanings and some of the documents your search 
        will turn up will not help you). 
        Question: Technology—machines, sources of energy, transportation, 
        communication—affects our lives every day, at home, at school, at 
        work, and at play. How have they affected children? 
        Research Tips: List the three or four most important technologies 
        in your life. Then find out if those technologies were important in the 
        past. For instance the spread of automobiles made children's lives easier, 
        but also made them more dangerous. Radio and television have enriched 
        the lives of children, but have also made them consumers through advertising. 
        Question: Children have always had to work—on farms, in 
        the home, and in factories. But the kinds of work they've done and the 
        reasons they've done it have changed. Using the documents found on CUAP, 
        make a list of as many forms of children's work as you can find. Which 
        ones do children still do today? 
        Research Tip: Although there are many documents related to children's 
        work in the "Work" section, you may find more in other sections. Search 
        the entire site, not just "Work," and check out the keyword list for topics 
        connected in some way to work. 
        Question: Attitudes about children have changed many times in 
        our country's history. What events and ideas caused those changes in attitudes? 
        Research Tip: Figure out which institutions and organizations 
        might show the way that society feels about its children, then do a word 
        search using the names of those organizations and institutions. 
        
        Question: How did the way that newspapers and magazines "cover" 
        children change between the 1850s and the 1980s? 
        Research Tip: Search the newspaper file for articles related 
        to a certain topic (like "crime," "play," or "orphans"). You can measure 
        the changes in newspaper coverage by contrasting: the number of published 
        stories about children, the reporters' points of view (whether they blame 
        the children themselves or "society" when children become criminals, for 
        instance), and the kind of news about children that editors decided they 
        should include. Then check out a week's issues of the Milwaukee Journal 
        Sentinel to see how those issues are covered today. 
        Question: For many years, historians have debated when "modern" 
        childhood was created; some believe that children were treated as "little 
        adults" until as recently as the mid-nineteenth-century, while others 
        believe childhood has been considered a separate stage of life for centuries. 
        In your opinion, what ideas and experiences make up "modern" childhood? 
        What factors made it possible for urban children to live that kind of 
        childhood? 
        Research Tip: You may decide that two of the most important factors 
        in the formation of modern childhood is lengthening the period of time 
        in which children attend school and postponing the time when they begin 
        full-time work. In the "Schooling" section, search for information about 
        school attendance or graduation rates. In the "Work" section, survey the 
        different kinds of jobs performed by children at specific points in time 
        and determine if these jobs were vital to the family's well-being or merely 
        allowed children to make a little spending money for themselves. 
        Question: Milwaukee youths have always "dated," but the meaning 
        and the forms of dating have changed. How have the relationships between 
        boys an girls changed over the last century? And how have institutions 
        like schools, families, and even the government reacted to dating? 
        Research Tip: Of course, this question forces you to ask another 
        question: how do historians find out about things like this? You might 
        try to discover the following: the earliest use of the term "dating" in 
        the documents collected on CUAP; the effects of the automobile on dating; 
        the ways that school newspapers, yearbooks, memoirs, and other documents 
        produced by children (or by people who were children in Milwaukee) reported 
        on dating. 
        Question: Identify the greatest threats faced by children in 
        Milwaukee to their health, their mental well-being, and their happiness. 
        Determine how those threats differed according to the age, gender, and 
        place of residence of children. What organizations, institutions, and 
        government agencies have responded to those threats? 
        Research Tip: First identify the threats facing Milwaukee children 
        today, and what organizations try to help. Then work backwards in time 
        with word and keyword searches of specific decades. 
        Question: Children have always tried to contribute to their communities. 
        Examine the ways that children of any age have tried to "make a difference." 
        Research Tips: What programs can children participate in? How 
        do schools use "service learning" to educate children? How do groups like 
        the Boy and Girl Scouts, churches, the Red Cross, and others try to help 
        children help others? Next, work backward in time to discover how Milwaukee 
        children have, over the years, contributed to the well-being of their 
        neighborhoods and of the city. Do a word search for "volunteer" or "service" 
        or other words that describe efforts to help others (but remember that 
        these words have other meanings and some of the documents your search 
        will turn up will not help you). 
        Question: Technology — machines, sources of energy, transportation, 
        communication — affects our lives every day, at home, at school, at work, 
        and at play. How have they affected children? 
        Research Tips: List the three or four most important technologies 
        in your life. Then find out if those technologies were important in the 
        past. For instance the spread of automobiles made children's lives easier, 
        but also made them more dangerous. Radio and television have enriched 
        the lives of children, but have also made them consumers through advertising. 
        Question: Children have always had to work—on farms, in 
        the home, and in factories. But the kinds of work they've done and the 
        reasons they've done it have changed. How has society's attitude about 
        child labor changed since 1900? 
        Research Tip: Although there are many documents related to children's 
        work in the "Work" section, you may find more in other sections. Search 
        the entire, not just "Work," and check out the keyword list for topics 
        connected in some way to work. 
        Question: Attitudes about children have changed many times in 
        our country's history. What events and ideas caused those changes in attitudes? 
        Research Tip: Figure out which institutions and organizations 
        might show the way that society feels about its children, then do a word 
        search using the names of those organizations and institutions. 
        Question: How have national events—wars, economic problems, 
        racial conflict—been reflected in the lives of young Milwaukeeans. 
        Research Tip: Begin with some of the special topics related to 
        major events and trends. But think creatively, too; consider national 
        trends in areas like music, science and health, and technology. 
        
        Question: Politicians, writers, and cultural critics have argued 
        for a number of years that traditional "family values" have deteriorated 
        since the 1950s. Is it possible to define what "family values" meant to 
        men, women, and children in the past? If so, how have those values shaped 
        the lives of children over the generations? Has the importance of family 
        values in Milwaukee declined since the Second World War? 
        Research Tip: No single category in the CUAP defines family values. 
        Determine in your own mind their most important characteristics. If you 
        believe that family values include a strong religious component, search 
        for information about Sabbath School curricula or family activities sponsored 
        by churches or synagogues. If you believe that true family values requires 
        stay-at-home mothers, search for information about the problems reported 
        among children attending day care. 
        Question: Historians have debated the extent to which social 
        and political reforms are actually "liberal" or "conservative"—was 
        Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, for instance, an attempt to fundamentally 
        alter the structure of American government and society or merely an effort 
        to preserve the status quo through superficial change. How has the history 
        of social activism and government intervention in the lives of children 
        Research Tip: There are virtually unlimited ways of answering 
        this question. If you want to focus on reformers' efforts to end child 
        labor, search the "Work" section. If you choose to focus on institutional 
        responses to children in distress, search the "Health and Welfare" section. 
        Focus not only on the laws passed and policies designed, but also on their 
        actual effects on children (through their memoirs and oral histories). 
        Question: Identify the greatest threats faced by children in 
        Milwaukee to their health, their mental well-being, and their happiness. 
        Determine how those threats differed according to the age, gender, and 
        place of residence of children. What organizations, institutions, and 
        government agencies have responded to those threats? 
        Research Tip: First identify the threats facing Milwaukee children 
        today, and what organizations try to help. Then work backwards in time 
        with word and keyword searches of specific decades. 
        Question: Children have always tried to contribute to their communities. 
        Examine the ways that children of any age have tried to "make a difference." 
        Research Tips: What programs can children participate in? How 
        do schools use "service learning" to educate children? How do groups like 
        the Boy and Girl Scouts, churches, the Red Cross, and others try to help 
        children help others? Next, work backward in time to discover how Milwaukee 
        children have, over the years, contributed to the well-being of their 
        neighborhoods and of the city. Do a word search for "volunteer" or "service" 
        or other words that describe efforts to help others (but remember that 
        these words have other meanings and some of the documents your search 
        will turn up will not help you). 
        Question: Technology—machines, sources of energy, transportation, 
        communication—affects our lives every day, at home, at school, at 
        work, and at play. How have they affected children? 
        Research Tips: List the three or four most important technologies 
        in your life. Then find out if those technologies were important in the 
        past. For instance the spread of automobiles made children's lives easier, 
        but also made them more dangerous. Radio and television have enriched 
        the lives of children, but have also made them consumers through advertising. 
        Question: Children have always had to work—on farms, in 
        the home, and in factories. But the kinds of work they've done and the 
        reasons they've done it have changed. One of the most important—and 
        most difficult—reform movements of the early 20th century was the 
        fight against child labor. What evidence could reformers and their opponents 
        present to support their arguments, based on the experiences of Milwaukee 
        County children? 
        Research Tip: Although there are many documents related to children's 
        work in the "Work" section, you may find more in other sections. Search 
        the entire, not just "Work," and check out the keyword list for topics 
        connected in some way to work. 
        Question: Historians would argue that American society has become 
        more "child-centered" over the past 150 years. Indeed, some experts predicted 
        in the early 1900s that the 20th century would be the "Century of the 
        Child." Define what you believe the phrase "child-centered" means, then 
        find evidence supporting and/or contradicting that notion. 
        Research Tip: Search for documents found in the Play and Leisure 
        section—or any section, for that matter—contrasting the information 
        found in documents from two decades (1900 and 1960, for instance). 
        
	
 
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