The
Process
Library of Congress PathFinder
- First, you'll be assigned to a team of 4 or 5
students.
- Once you're in a group, review various sections of
the WebQuest with your group (Introduction, Task, Evaluation, and
Conclusion).
- Begin research. Make sure to record your group’s process in a daily journal. This journal may include what you
researched that day, new things you’ve learned, and/ responses to
discussion questions.
- Given a $20,000 budget, research and secure a location, food, and
entertainment for your dinner party. Make sure to purchase decorations
that would be typical of the 1920s.
Compile all expenses in an organized budget to be included in your
group’s binder. For 5
extra credit points, find the value of a dollar in the 1920s and convert
your budget to 1920s dollar values.
Helpful
websites:
Loc.gov
http://www.angelfire.com/co/pscst/et.html
http://guweb2.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/enl311/1920m.html
Journal
Questions: What
type of entertainment was common in the Roaring Twenties? What music were people listening
to? What types of food did people
eat?
- After securing a location, hiring entertainment,
and locating a caterer, plan your
guest list. This list
should include 15-20 guests.
You are required to invite at least one historical figure, one
political figure, one author/poet, one mathematician, and one figure from
entertainment.
Helpful
websites:
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/browse/ListSome.php?timePeriod=1900-1929
http://kclibrary.nhmccd.edu/decade20.html#events
http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/westspringfieldhs/academic/english/1project/99gg/99gg4/lit.htm
Journal
Questions: Does the
size of your location fit the amount of guests you invite? What will your invitations look
like?
- After planning your guest list, prepare a seating chart. Include a rationale explaining why
you placed each guest in their specific seat. (Example: Al Capone cannot sit by
Calvin Coolidge because of prohibition laws, etc.)
Journal
Questions: How many
people will be sitting at each table?
How many tables will you need?
- Next,
research fashion trends from the 1920s. Be prepared to choose apparel your
group would like to wear in your final presentation, and keep in mind,
your guests are attending a dinnerparty – how will this affect what
they wear?
Helful
websites:
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/browse/ListSome.php?timePeriod=1900-1929
http://www.angelfire.com/co/pscst/fads.html
Discussion
Questions: What
would people wear to dinner parties?
What would they wear in everyday life? Who were popular clothing designers and
models?
- Compile budget,
guest list, seating chart, clothing choices, and journal of activities in
a binder,
making sure to include a table of contents and bibliography of your
sources (APA style). Make sure
your binder is organized, neat, typed, and lots of pictures are included! Be creative!
- Organize a
presentation
to be presented to your class.
Dress in 1920s apparel and use a creative visual aid (poster,
PowerPoint presentation, etc.).
This presentation will be video taped and the most creative and
also historically accurate project (as chosen by a panel of judges) will
be recreated in class.
Journal
Questions: Who will
present which part and why? What
clothing will you wear and where will you get it? How will you make this presentation
exciting?
6.
On
the last page of your group’s journal, make a final evaluation that
includes the answers to many of the following questions: What worked? What didn’t? What was the most interesting thing your
group learned? What would you change
if you had to do your project over?
What hints could you give next year’s class when they do this
project? How does this project
relate to the real world?
