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Showing 343 results for Ohio Erie Canal ...
Ohio & Erie Canal: Teacher Resources
Ohio & Erie Canal Virtual Program - Grades 3-5
- Type: Distance Learning
- Grade Levels: Upper Elementary: Third Grade through Fifth Grade
Opening the Gates to Change: the Erie Canal and Woman’s Suffrage
- Type: Lesson Plan
- Grade Levels: Middle School: Sixth Grade through Eighth Grade
In this lesson from the Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor, students will analyze the impacts of the Erie Canal on development of 19th century social reform movements, particularly women’s rights. Students will examine historic examples of groups who struggled for equality and will compare past movements to contemporary issues. Students will consider their own capacities as change-makers.
When War Hits Home: The Ohio & Erie Canal Town of Peninsula, and the Civil War Election of 1864
Women’s Rights are Human Rights
- Type: Lesson Plan
- Grade Levels: Upper Elementary: Third Grade through Fifth Grade
In this series of four lesson plans from the Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor, students will be able to explore the development and growth of the American women's rights movement. This includes lessons about the Seneca Falls Convention, the Erie Canal, and the later women's rights movement. Developed by educator Lynn Girven of the Rochester City School District.
The Building of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
Revolutionary Roots: the First Women’s Rights Convention held at the Wesleyan Chapel in Seneca Falls, NY
- Type: Distance Learning
- Grade Levels: Upper Elementary: Third Grade through Fifth Grade
Through the Oneida Carrying Place: Travel, Trade, and Conflict
- Type: Lesson Plan
- Grade Levels: Upper Elementary: Third Grade through Fifth Grade
How did European/Native contact on the New York frontier influence the development of early America? When this virtual tour is complete, students will have a brief overview of European/Native relations in early American history. Including how trade, war, and politics on the New York frontier affected both sides.
Low Bridge, Everybody Down
- Type: Field Trips
- Grade Levels: Upper Elementary: Third Grade through Fifth Grade
- Type: Lesson Plan
- Grade Levels: Upper Elementary: Third Grade through Fifth Grade
Students play the role of caribou and the habitat elements (food, shelter, and water) that they need to survive, exploring how limiting factors influence wildlife population size through time. This is adapted from lesson 8 in the Hoofin’ It! online curriculum unit from Noatak National Preserve. The full unit can be accessed via the National Park Service education portal. It is based on the Oh Deer! Lesson from the Project Wild curriculum guide, published by the Council for Environmental Edu.
Oh, Moose!
Self-Guided Field Trip to Cuyahoga Valley's Station Road Bridge Area
- Type: Field Trips
- Grade Levels: Middle School: Sixth Grade through Eighth Grade
The Station Road Bridge area is a great place to bring students to see and learn more about Ohio's only national park. From this location, students can see the Cuyahoga River, walk on the historic Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail, and maybe even spot a bald eagle, which are known to nest nearby. Introduce your students to the Cuyahoga Valley through this self-guided field trip.
How Devastating Can It Be?
- Type: Field Trips
- Grade Levels: Middle School: Sixth Grade through Eighth Grade
The often dramatic and voluminous eruptions that occur on Kīlauea volcano can wipe out forest far from the actual eruption site. Using this field trip guide, students examine the aftermath of one such eruption on location; using scientific practice and historical evidence to understand the changes caused by the eruption, and how the land in the area is still changing today.
Home on the Canal
The Cuyahoga Valley National Park Poetic Toolkit
- Type: Student Activities
- Grade Levels: Middle School: Sixth Grade through Eighth Grade
We invite teachers, students, writers, and community members to craft poems based on the stories of Cuyahoga Valley National Park. Themes include the first people in the valley, the park’s geologic history, and the Ohio & Erie Canal. Learn more about this powerful tool for creative expression developed by the Wick Poetry Center at Kent State University.
Discover Ohio's National Parks
- Type: Distance Learning ... Field Trips
- Grade Levels: Upper Elementary: Third Grade through Fifth Grade
Can You Identify Me?
- Type: Lesson Plan
- Grade Levels: High School: Ninth Grade through Twelfth Grade
Students will have the opportunity to study and identify fish as really wildlife biologists. They will watch clips taken of salmon swimming up stream through the Silver Salmon Weir in Lake Clark National Park. Their job will be to use their identification cards and see how many salmon they can identify as they swim past. Be careful -- some salmon look awfully similar!