Lesson Plan

You Decide: Roanoke the Lost Colony by NNWP
Subject
English Language Arts (NYS P-12 Common Core)
Grade Levels
Elementary, Intermediate, 3rd Grade, 4th Grade, 5th Grade
Description
The students will come up with a theory of their own based on the story Roanoke The Lost Colony, An Unsolved Mystery From History. This
lesson will give students an opportunity to become a detective and
evaluate historic events on a timeline and clues given throughout a
children's story. The students will evaluate clues to determine their
own theory about what happened to the Lost Colony at Roanoke.
- The students will use clues, a timeline and word lists from the story in order to determine a final outcome.
- The students will make predictions based on evidence throughout the story.
- The students will write a theory based on what they think happened to the lost colony of Roanoke.
- The students will create a newspaper article with the headline about the missing colony and include their theory in it.
Website(s)
The Northern Nevada Writing Project: HistoryFix
The Northern Nevada Writing Project: WritingFix
Writing skills (traits) to stress while teaching this lesson
- Idea Development (writing with a clear, central idea or theme in mind, putting researched ideas into one's own words)
- Organization (beginning the writing with a strong introduction, ending the writing with a satisfying conclusion by linking the
conclusion back to the introduction)
- Voice
(conveying passion towards the message of the writing or the topic;
thinking about and making decisions to acknowledge the intended
audience)
Duration
This lesson will take one hour for two or three days.
Author
This writing across the curriculum lesson was created by Nevada teacher Christy Hodge.
Materials
Background Information
Roanoke the Lost Colony was a group of English people who came
to America around the year 1585, just 22 years before the Jamestown
colony and 37 years before pilgrims set foot in Massachusetts. They
came to America in order to start a new colony that would bring many
settlers to the new world. In 1585 Englishmen John
White and Thomas Harriet were sent to Roanoke Island, off the coast of
North Carolina to record life of the Algonquin Indian. In 1587 White
returned to be the head of the colony of settlers, welcomed with a
feast from the Croatoans, the native people of the island. Virginia
Dare, White's granddaughter, was born and was the first English baby
born in North America. In 1588 White returned to England for supplies.
He was to return a year later, but war between England and Spain
limited ships to the war effort . Almost three years later he returned
only to find the colony had deserted the island. The word CROATOAN was
carved on a post and CRO carved on a tree. The Roanoke settlement of
117 men, women and children disappeared without much of a trace and
became known as The Lost Colony. Today it still remains a mystery.
Step-by-Step Procedure
-
The teacher will begin by going over the list of vocabulary words that are presented in the story.
-
The teacher will then read the story Roanoke The Lost Colony, An Unsolved Mystery From History,
and write down clues on a chart paper that are given in the story. The
teacher should write the timeline given at the end of this piece of
literature on the chart paper.
-
The chart paper will help students find important information necessary for the writing lesson.
-
When the teacher has completed the reading the class will share out what they think might have happened to The Lost Colony.
-
The teacher will give the students a newsletter template, the primary
source document script of the original notes taken by John White, and
this writing prompt: Suppose you lived in
the year 1590 and suppose there had been newspapers during that time.
Write a news headline that discusses Roanoke and the disappearance of
the first colony to be established. In the headline you will need to
tell your theory of what happened to this colony. Include important
details and information that would allow you and the reader to believe
this theory and news story to be true. Be sure to use six new
vocabulary words within the text in order to spice up your writing.
-
On the template, have the students write a rough draft for a news
article about John White finding the colony deserted. Have the students
include key facts that you have charted down and other facts from the
timeline. They can read the script of the original notes and include
key information from that. This news article should be written under
lead story. In the Secondary headline have the students write: "Historian [Student's Name] believes..."
and continue by writing the theory of what they think happened. In the
sides they have to make it look like a real paper and add headlines
from that time period
-
After
the students have organized and perfected the news article, have them
type or re-write it on to a piece of white construction paper. The idea
is to make it look like a real newspaper article following the format
of the template.
-
Be
sure the students have used voice, organization and idea development in
this news article. The students need to have a good hook, a beginning,
middle, and end, and specific information from the story. Having the
students use vocabulary words from the text will help them spice up the
article and make it more realistic and from the time period.
-
Have
the students share their work with the class. They will enjoy hearing
each others theories and predictions of what may have occurred causing
the entire colony to disappear without a trace.
Content Provider
The Northern Nevada Writing Project: WritingFix