Resource: Who gets to tell history?
Our Fellow, Stephanie Graham, curated these resources to help you uncover the story behind the mural. As you review, consider who gets to tell history?
Our Fellow, Stephanie Graham, curated these resources to help you uncover the story behind the mural. As you review, consider who gets to tell history?
“In the current teaching and understanding of indigenous peoples, students in my school feel very removed from the stories. I have seen this in my high school art classes in the superficial use of imagery in their practice of making objects. I also see it in their lessons in social studies, where the knowledge is presented as history and not as living culture that continues to be affected by westernized notions of stories, practice, and object relevance. Students should be taught to understand their role in the relationship between past atrocities and the current climate of injustice… However, the ideas are almost too abstract for children to understand because they lack a sense of connection to the land, stories, and practices of their place of living and learning. Our land is not only tied to indigenous history, it is also the home of important figures in black history, including Mumbet, Dubois, and others. It is through that connection to “place” that students will better understand their identity, which is necessary in developing a sense of empathy towards the people from whom the place was stolen.”
Curated resources to help you uncover the story behind the mural.
Fellow Designed Art Projects:
The Mohican People: Their Lives and Their Lands
A Curriculum Unit for Grades Four to Five