Movements for Change Students learn about how small actions connect to bigger movements for change and how bigger movements manifest themselves in people’s individual and family lives.
Theme: Movements for Change | Grades 9 – 12
1910’s Rogarshevsky Family
The Rogarshevsky Family story features a Jewish American family and their 1911 tenement home. Students will learn about the economic and political conditions that prompted the Rogarshevsky’s to move from the Russian Empire and the immigration policies that impacted immigration at this time. Through an interactive exploration of the family’s recreated apartment, historical photographs, and the 1900 census, students will investigate how the family balanced work and tradition. Students will analyze the efforts to improve working conditions through labor unions with the actual experiences of Bessie Rogarshevksy, a teenage daughter in the family. Students will debate her involvement in the Shirtwaist Strike of 1909 and understand how the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire affected the family, neighborhood, and country at large. Students will debate how the movements of the turn of the last century connect to movements today.
Themes: Culture and Identity, Industrialization and Labor, Movements for Change
Topics: European Immigration
Duration: 60 minutes
Connections to our Curriculum:
- Rogarshevsky Family Story
- 1910 Census ft the Rogarshevsky Family
- Census Analysis for High School Students
- Photograph of Picketing Women on strike 1911
- Tenement Museum Podcast How to Be an American Episode 4: Sing Like An American
- Online Exhibit – Tenement Women: Agents of Change
- Online Exhibit – The Census: Reading Between the Lines
1960s Saez Velez
The Saez Velez Family story features Puerto Rican family and their 1968 Tenement home. With the help of Puerto Rican migration scholars, students learn about the history of Puerto Rico, its relationship to the United States, and how it affected the Saez Velez’ journey to New York City as American citizens. Through exploration of the recreated apartment, video interviews, family and neighborhood photos, and other primary source documents, students will examine the ways the Saez Velez family established themselves in the culturally and racially diverse Lower East Side of the 1960s. Against the backdrop of the Civil Rights movement and the Vietnam war, students will examine how different generations of the family exercised citizenship at home, school, work, and beyond. Students will discuss how the family’s efforts made a difference on a larger scale and reflect on their understandings of citizenship.
Themes: Culture and Identity, Immigration Policy, Movements for Change, Industrialization and Labor
Topics: Puerto Rican Migration
Duration: 60 minutes
Connections to our Curriculum:
- Saez Velez Family Story
- Oral History: A memory from José Velez about helping his mom
- Photograph of Wong, Epstein and Saez Velez Families
- 103 Orchard Online Exhibit ft. the Epsteins, Saez Velez, and Wong families
- Online Exhibit – Tenement Women: Agents of Change
Teaching Resources
We offer teacher-designed, teacher-tested lesson plans where students learn to interpret objects, oral histories, and primary sources while making modern connections. Find unit plans, lesson plans, primary sources, and non-fiction family stories, made for flexible use in your classroom.
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