Last updated: December 28, 2022
Lesson Plan
Political Parenthood: Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Remembers
- Grade Level:
- High School: Ninth Grade through Twelfth Grade
- Subject:
- Social Studies
- Lesson Duration:
- 60 Minutes
- Common Core Standards:
- 9-10.RH.1, 9-10.RH.2, 9-10.RH.3, 9-10.RH.4, 9-10.RH.5, 9-10.RH.7, 9-10.RH.8, 9-10.RH.9
- State Standards:
- Massachusetts Social Studies Curriculum Frameworks
USI.T6
Rebuilding the US: Industry and Immigration
USHII. T2
Modernity in the US: Ideologies and Economics
USHII. T4
Defending Democracy: The Cold War and Civil Rights at Home - Additional Standards:
- National Curriculum Standards for Social Studies
1. Culture
2. Time, Continuity, and Change
3. People, Places, and Environments
4. Individual Development and Identity
5. Individuals, Groups, and Institutions
6. Power, Authority, and Governance
Essential Question
How is history created?
Can a person narrate their own story for history?
Objective
By the end of the lesson, students should be able to:
Identify who Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy was and what role she played in how President Kennedy is remembered.
Evaluate the ways that historians form a complex picture of persons from history.
Background
Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy: A Life to Remember
Commemorating Camelot: Three Women Who Shaped JFK’s Legacy
Section - A Mother's Memory
A History of 83 Beals Street, Brookline, Massachusetts: Birthplace of John Fitzgerald Kennedy
Sections - Becoming a National Historic Site, and John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site
NPS Photo Gallery: Dedication Day
Photos from the dedication of the John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site, Brookline, MA, May 29, 1969.
Preparation
Read the Introduction Quote as a class and discuss the related questions.
Break class into groups or pairs, to read additional quote(s) about Mrs. Kennedy and answer related questions.
Student Groups or pairs read the transcript or listen to the audio tour for two of the rooms in the John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site Audio Tour. Groups take notes and answer related questions.
Breaking from groups, students individually read Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. Site Bulletin and answer questions.
Students complete the creative writing activity to create a tour of their own homes from both an outside perspective and their own. A classroom discussion of the questions follows.
Procedure
Introduction:
Inquiry Quote & Question:
“I have always enjoyed living and working, and I believe I have had a great life, I consider myself very lucky. I had a wonderful youth; my father gave me the stimulation of travel [and] zest - curiosity and interest and enthusiasm for life. My mother bestowed on me Faith and common sense. I fell in love young and married the man I loved, and lived a full life with him – from finance to the movies to politics to diplomacy. I have been ideally happy with my children.”- - Rose Elizabeth Fitzgerald Kennedy
Resource 1: 7 Quotes of Mrs. Kennedy
With your group, describe Mrs. Kennedy based on your assigned quote(s).“I looked on child-rearing not only as a work of love and duty but as a profession that was fully as interesting and challenging as any honourable profession in the world and one that demanded the best that I could bring to it.”
- Mrs. Kennedy, Times To Remember, 87
- Mrs. Kennedy, Times To Remember, 77
“When Joe became Ambassador to the Court of St James’s and we all went over there the English Press treated my card file as a phenomenon of the magnitude of Henry Ford’s assembly line. My dutifully kept box of file cards thus became a symbol of ‘American efficiency’. Actually, it had just been a matter of ‘Kennedy desperation’.”
- Mrs. Kennedy, Times To Remember, 91
- Mrs. Kennedy, Times To Remember, 93
- Mrs. Kennedy, Times To Remember, 86
- Mrs. Kennedy, Times To Remember, 300
- Mrs. Kennedy, Times To Remember, 135
- Referencing your quote, how would you describe Mrs. Kennedy?
Resource 2: Mrs. Kennedy’s Audio Tour of John F. Kennedy’s Birthplace
Audio Tour (and Transcripts) with photos.Students choose two of the rooms to read about/listen to and take notes with a partner. As you learn about your rooms, think back to the quotes you’ve just read. Also think: is there someone in your life that fits this mold?
Discuss your notes and answer the following prompt with your partner:
- What values (ideas or types of behavior that one believes are important) did Mrs. Kennedy try to instill in her children?
- What items in the house show these values?
- What connections can you make between the values from your Mrs. Kennedy quote and your room from her house tour?
Resource 3: Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. Site bulletin: Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.: Patriarch of the Kennedys
While Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy contributed to the creation of the site, Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. was incapacitated with a stroke. How do you think Mr. Kennedy would have described daily life and the importance of the objects in the house?Final Activity: A Tour of My Home
Have students complete the following creative writing activity: Think of a home where you have lived and imagine that someone is giving a tour of it. It can be either a place you have lived before or where you currently live. Write a script that imagines how a tour guide who does not know you might describe the home. Now, write a script that shows how you would give a tour of the home.After students have written their scripts, discuss the following questions:
- What are some ways that your two scripts are different?
- Do your scripts describe different significance in the same items, or do they comment on different items altogether?
- Encourage students to share examples from their individual work. How can knowing personal stories help people to understand historic places?
- What place do historians have or not have in interpreting personal stories of historic places?