📖STANDARDS
NCSS theme – The study of people, places, and environments enables us to understand the relationship between human populations and the physical world.
Minnesota State Standard – History Sub-strand 4, Standard 15 “North America was populated by indigenous nations that had developed a wide range of social structures, political systems, and economic activities, and whose expansive trade networks extended across the continent.”
⏰ Time
40 minutes
📲 Technology needed
Internet connection on a PC or Chromebook laptop, tablet, or phone.
📃 Summary
This Ojibwe clan lesson for Grade 3 is focused on Ojibwe culture. Students learn where people and places are located and why they are there. They will become familiar with the causes, patterns and effects of Ojibwe settlement and migration. They will learn of the different population centers in Ojibwe society and investigate the impact of human activities on the environment.
📚 Lesson
The downloadable Google Slides presentation is available here. This has a digestible summary of the Ojibwe migration, and why and how it happened. The Ojibwe clans are introduced as well as the new lifestyles that the Ojibwe adopted after they migrated to the Great Lakes area and Ontario, Canada.
Game
Making Camp Bilingual can reinforce clans and culture studies using the Life section.
- Select the LIFE button from the main choice screen.
- From the LIFE choices, click on the box in the middle of the bottom row, the one with the four people, and watch the video about Ojibwe social structure. Answer the questions that follow the video.
- Next, select the box on the bottom right. Watch the overview video on clans and totems. Answer the questions.
- Students can also click on each individual clan totem icon to learn more about each Ojibwe clan and answer a question about each of them to earn points.
- Return to the wigwam and trade with the points earned in this lesson.
Students can use the language button to switch between English and Spanish while watching the videos.
Alternatively, students may also play Forgotten Trail, which is an adventure game that homes in on the Ojibwe migration. Two kids in the game retrace the Ojibwe migration on their own and learn more about Ojibwe history along the way.
Assessment
Teachers will be able to view student reports for Making Camp Bilingual to view how many modules students completed in the LIFE section and their scores for each one.
Related Lesson
“Ojibwe Clans and Migration” – The English Only version of the lesson plan above featuring Making Camp Premium.