
Introduction
This First World War curriculum is aimed at getting
students to think beyond causes, major battles and ramifications
of the conflict. The textbook and lecture should
lay out a political, diplomatic, and military overview
before or while teachers implement pieces of this curriculum.
Since the First World War marks such a dividing line
in modern European history, it is important that students
examine the process and effects of the war on different
segments of the population, beyond the political, diplomatic
and military framework of the war.
Objectives
1. To help students understand the war from the
point of view of soldiers in the trenches through analysis
of photographs, war poetry and memoirs.
2. To encourage students to explore the
power of visual images, including propaganda posters,
political cartoons and postcards, that emphasize how
governments and civilians prepared for "total war."
Pre-Class Prep
Have students browse one or more of the memoirs suggested
below. They should write up a brief description
of warfare through the eyes of the soldier(s) to hand
in and/or share with their classmates.
Have students pick a particular type of advertising
to analyze, i.e. print media, television advertisements,
radio advertisements. Have them write up short
descriptions of 2-3 ads, focusing on the imagery (if
visual in nature), wording and emotions the ad evokes
(if any). Also, have them speculate why the product/event
is advertised the way it is.
Lesson Plan
1. Life in the trenches:
How to do it:
1. Have the students share what they learned
about how warfare affected soldiers, both short-term
and long-term from reading the memoirs provided on the
websites below. If this curriculum is used in
conjunction with providing an overview of major battles,
have students contribute information during lecture
as to how and why the war was fought in the manner it
was.
2. Divide the students into small groups, assigning
each student a war poet and a piece of his/her poetry
from the websites listed below. Poems should be
given to students on an overhead transparency, so the
rest of the students can read them as they are discussed
by the entire class. Each group should analyze
its assigned poem, explaining the imagery involved and
its overall message. Once small group work is
complete, call the class back together and discuss each
poem as a group.
3. Either while explaining major battles and/or
in conjunction with the poetry discussion, hand students
overheads of some of the photographs and drawings linked
to below. If done in conjunction with lecture,
they can be used to illustrate various facets of trench
warfare. If done in conjunction with the poetry
analysis, the teacher could lay out 15-10 photographs
and then have students choose ones which reinforce imagery
from the poem they are analyzing, further enriching
class discussion and student's understanding.
4. Discuss with students the positive and negative
aspects of using these types of historical sources.
How do they reinforce information in the textbook?
Do they make learning about the First World War more
realistic and/or interesting? Are they, as sources,
more or less authentic/valid as information presented
in the textbook?
Memoirs and personal recollections:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/worldwarone/
http://lu.softxs.ch/mackay/RLM_Diary.html
World War I poetry:
Rupert Brooke, War Sonnets: http://www.emory.edu/ENGLISH/LostPoets/Sonnets.html
Eva Dobell, Pluck: http://info.ox.ac.uk/jtap/tutorials/intro/women/#pluck
John McCrae, In Flanders Field: http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/mccrae.html
Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum Est: http://www.emory.edu/ENGLISH/LostPoets/Dulce.html
Isaac Rosenberg: Break of Day in the Trenches:
http://www.emory.edu/ENGLISH/LostPoets/Break.html
Siegfried Sasson, Survivors: http://info.ox.ac.uk/jtap/tutorials/intro/sassoon/
Alan Seeger, Rendezvous: http://www.emory.edu/ENGLISH/LostPoets/Seeger.html
Photographs/Drawings:
http://www.gwpda.org/photos/greatwar.htm
http://www.worldwar1.com/tlbtw.htm
2. Analysis of visual images: cartoons, postcards
and propaganda posters
How to do it:
1. Provide a good overview of life on the home
front, including the reality of mobilizing a civilian
population for total war, the increased power of centralized
governments, and the role played by patriotism and nationalism,
i.e. how to explain, at least in part, the enthusiasm
with which the war was greeted.
2. Divide the students into small groups, assigning
each group one of the following types of sources: political
cartoons, propaganda posters and postcards. Have
each group analyze their assigned images, paying careful
attention to chronological order if that information
is provided. Have the students find common trends
in the materials across different countries. Have
them also track if or how the message of the images
changed as the war continued. Lastly, have the
students examine how the opposing side is characterized
in the images.
3. Have the students pick one or two of their
images to share the answers to the questions posed above
with the entire class.
4. Following student-led discussions of images,
bring the exercise to a close by linking back to the
lecture of point one.
Cartoons:
http://www.boondocksnet.com/gallery/wwi_intro.html
British propaganda posters:
http://gulib.lausun.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/britpost/posters.htm
French propaganda posters:
http://www.firstworldwar.com/posters/france.htm
German propaganda posters:
http://www.firstworldwar.com/posters/germany.htm
United States propaganda posters:
http://www.library.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/amposter.htm
http://www.the-forum.com/posters/warpost1.htm
Postcards celebrating the strength of alliances:
http://www.ww1-propaganda-cards.com/
Propaganda Leaflets: http://www.lib.byu.edu/~rdh/wwi/1915/propleaf.html |