Because this lesson involves family interviews, plan to use two different class periods to give students time to conduct an interview in between the two class periods. An alternative would be to invite one family member into the classroom and do a collective interview during a class session. Students could then conduct similar interviews with their own family members as an optional homework assignment.
Framework
Making connections between home and school environments
helps elementary students feel safe and productive while they are at school.
Learning specific strategies for talking to their families about what they are
discovering and discussing in school is one of the best ways to make such
connections. Particularly when a classroom community is working on talking
about issues pertaining to bias, it is essential for students to find common
ground between home and school.
This lesson aims to teach students interviewing skills so they can draw on their families’ histories and perspectives. Interviewing is also a necessary skill in conducting social studies research. Furthermore, by delving into their families’ narratives, students will contribute to diverse and rich classroom conversations.
Professional
Development
Interviewing is a crucial aspect of social studies research.
For more insight into how to bring interviewing and other authentic skills into
your social studies curriculum, read If
This Is Social Studies, Why Isn’t It Boring? by Stephanie Steffey and Wendy J. Hood. Similarly, Social Studies for Social Justice, by Rahima C. Wade, addresses ways to connect academic curriculum and issues of social
justice.
Strategies for Reducing Racial and Ethnic Prejudice offers a variety of ideas for dealing with themes of race and racial bias as they arise in schools and classrooms. How Schools Can Help also describes ways schools can actively fight racism. Assessing My Culture: Who Am I? helps teachers think about race and ethnic identity and how they play into our pedagogy.
Objectives
Activities will help students:
- understand and implement interviewing skills, including planning, asking questions, taking notes and reporting on interviews
- consider issues from multiple viewpoints
- make connections between their family’s values and the values of their school community
- develop vocabulary for discussing race, skin color, beauty and history
- gain oral language skills for reporting and discussing information
Essential Questions
- What is an interview? Why do we use interviewing as a research technique?
- What are values? What are beliefs?
- What is beauty? What does it mean to be beautiful?
- Do different people have different perspectives on race, skin color and beauty? Why?
- How can it help us to see an idea from different perspectives?
Glossary
color [kuhl-er]
(noun) the natural
appearance of something, including how bright it is and what shade it is
skin [skin]
(noun) the outer covering of a human or
animal body
skin color [skin kuhl-er]
(noun) the
coloring of a person’s face and skin
race [reys]
(noun) one of the
major groups into which human beings can be divided. As a social construction,
it relates to the grouping of people based on physical characteristics, such as
skin color, often for the purpose of creating the perception of a superior
race.
(Note: There are many different ways to
define the term “race.” We provide a working definition, but one of the goals
of this series of lessons is for students to come to individual and collective
understandings of the term that make sense to them and their personal,
developmental and communal needs.)
beauty [BYOO-tee]
(noun) the part of
a person—or thing—that makes us like how he or she looks
(Note: There are many
different ways to define the term “beauty.” We provide a working definition,
but one of the goals of this series of lessons is for students to come to their
own understanding of the term and concept.)
interview [IN-ter-vyoo]
(noun) a
conversation where one person tries to find out information or ideas from one
or more other people
value [VAL-yoo]
(noun) something
that a person or group of people thinks of as especially important or
worthwhile
belief [bih-LEEF]
(noun) something a
person thinks is true and important; something a person has faith or confidence
in
perspective [per-SPEK-tiv]
(noun) a way of
looking at things
Materials
- chart paper
- individual notebooks or journals
- small digital audio recording devices (optional)
Activities
- Values or beliefs are things that we think are important and true. For instance, some people really value honesty. Others value kindness above all. In diverse groups or with partners, have students name one or two things they really value or believe in. They should talk about where they think these beliefs come from and why they are important.
- Come together as a class. Explain that you will be discussing skin color, race and beauty as they relate to the students’ personal values and the values of their families. (Note: This is a good time to build on definitions your class has encountered in previous lessons about race and stereotypes. Help students understand that when they talk to their families, they will likely hear a variety of definitions and perspectives on race—and that is fine. These different perspectives are part of what help us understand race as a social construct.) What is race? What is skin color? What is beauty? Discuss these questions with the students. Help them understand the complexity of the questions and that there are no “right” or “wrong” answers. Chart student responses and ask them how they think the themes of race, skin color and beauty relate to the idea of values.
- Explain that one important source of our values is our families. As a class, help students come up with a list of questions they could ask a family member about their values and beliefs as they relate to skin color, race and beauty. Chart a large list of student questions. Some possibilities to get students started might be, “When do you first remember noticing the color of your skin?” or “Why do you or don’t you think race is important to talk about?” Kids might also have more specific questions based on what they already know about their families, such as, “How did immigrating change the way you felt about your race?”
- Once they have brainstormed a lot of questions, they should work with classmates to narrow them down to four or five really important questions. Students can work with the big questions on the chart paper. Older students may vary their interviews based on what they are interested in learning. In that case, they should be more independent in writing questions.
- Once your class has created a final interview, type and photocopy individual versions of the questions for students to take home. (Note: As your class brainstorms questions, or later as they conduct and report on their interviews, some students might share information that devalues a group of people or that may imply that one racial group is better than another, e.g., the white race as superior. It is important to follow students’ leads in this conversation, acknowledging their personal and family values but helping them see the harm in generalizations, stereotypes and perceptions of groups as either superior or inferior. At the same time, it is also crucial to remain aware of the feelings of students who are or who have been targets of negative remarks, teasing or bullying related to skin color, race or any other aspect of identity. These students may not choose to speak up, but you can recognize their feelings by reminding the whole class how hurtful and devastating it is to be a target.)
- Conducting an interview is an important research skill, a way to find out what another person thinks or believes. As a class, discuss some skills that are important for effective interviewing. Chart students’ responses and create a list of guidelines. These might include making eye contact, waiting through some silence, and, if your students do not yet write, thinking of strategies for remembering the interviewees’ responses.
- Using the questions you came up with as a class, allow students to practice interviewing skills with a partner. Encourage children to think about what they like and do not like about interviewing and being interviewed. Come together as a class to reflect on the experience.
- Have students take interview questions home and interview a family member using the questions you created. (Note: If your students are preliterate, you may want to send along instructions to the family member to read the questions aloud and jot down some responses. Even with older students, it would probably be helpful to send a letter home explaining the activity. Share with families the objectives of this series of lessons and explain what skills you are hoping they develop by conducting these interviews. Keep communication open between yourself and the families, just in case some family members may want to talk more in depth about the purpose of the lesson. If you have multiple home languages represented in your class, provide translations of the letter as well.)
- The next day give students the opportunity to share what they learned about their family’s values and beliefs about race, skin color and beauty in a small group. Be sure they listen to what their classmates learned as well. Discuss the different perspectives that came up as a result of these interviews. Do you think it’s complicated and challenging to define the term “race”? Why? What does race mean to different individuals?
- Come together as a class to share the main points students learned from their interviews and their partners’ interviews. Ask them if they think interviewing is a helpful tool for figuring out values and beliefs. How are their families’ beliefs and values similar to students’ own beliefs and values? Are they different in any way? What did students learn about race, skin color, beauty and themselves from doing this activity? Discuss these questions with your class.
ELL Extension (optional)
When you conduct your family interview, you may want to do
so in your home language. When you are finished, choose a few key phrases or
ideas that you would really like to learn how to say in English. Along with
your family member, research ways to express these words or ideas. You can use
a dictionary, other people or the Internet as some resources for doing this
translation. Practice the new phrases you learn. Challenge yourself to use them
when you report your interview back to your class.
Extension Assignment (optional)
Sometimes different people in one family might have totally
different viewpoints, values or beliefs. Interview another family member, using
the same questions. If you interviewed a man or boy the first time, try to
interview a woman or girl the second time. If you interviewed a sibling the
first time, try to interview a parent or grandparent the second time. Then
think about how the two interviews were similar or different. Challenge
yourself to think about why these similarities or differences exist. Share what
you learned with your class when you return to school.
APPLYING WHAT YOU’VE LEARNED
After conducting interviews, interviewers and other
researchers often send some sort of thank-you note to the people who have
helped them with their learning. The best kind of thank-you note shows
explicitly what you learned from conducting the research. Independently or as a
class, write a thank-you note to the family members you interviewed. Your note
should include answers to the following questions:
- Why do you think this interview activity was useful?
- What was the most important thing you learned as an individual from conducting these interviews?
- What was the most important thing you learned as a class from conducting these interviews?
- How did your interview affect or change your thinking about race, skin color and beauty?
- If you were to conduct the interview again, what extra question or questions would you add?
Make sure your note also includes a “thank you.”
Standards
Activities and embedded assessments address the following
standards from McREL 4th edition and Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts.
Language Arts
Standard 4. Gathers and uses information for research
purposes.
Standard 5. Uses the general skills and strategies of the reading process.
Standard 6. Uses skills and strategies to read a variety of literary texts.
Standard 8. Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes.
Civics
Standard 9. Understands
the importance of Americans sharing and supporting certain values, beliefs, and
principles of American constitutional democracy.
Level II [Grades 3 to 5]
1. Understands how Americans are united by the values, principles, and beliefs
they share rather than by ethnicity, race, religion, class, language, gender,
or national origin.
Standard 11. Understands the role of diversity in American life and the importance of shared values, political beliefs, and civic beliefs in an increasingly diverse American society.
Level II [Grades 3 to 5]
5. Knows some of the costs of diversity
(e.g., people sometimes discriminate unfairly against others on the basis of
age, religious beliefs, race, or disability; members of different groups
sometimes misunderstand each other and conflicts subsequently arise).
6. Knows conflicts that are caused by diversity (e.g., unfair discrimination on
the basis of race, ethnicity, religion, language, and gender; alienation of one
group from another; efforts to impose beliefs and customs on others).
Working With Others
Standard 1. Contributes to the overall effort of a group.
Standard 3. Works well with diverse individuals and in diverse situations.
Standard 4. Displays effective interpersonal communication skills.
Self-Regulation
Standard 2. Performs self-appraisal.
Standard 5. Maintains a healthy self-concept.
Common Core State Standards, English Language Arts
Speaking and
Listening
Comprehension and
Collaboration
Standard 1. Engages effectively in a range of collaborative
discussions.
Standard 3. Asks and answers questions about information from a speaker.
Presentation of
Knowledge and Ideas
Standard 4. Reports on a topic or text, tells a story, or
recounts an experience.
Standard 6. Speaks in complete sentences when appropriate to task and situation in order to provide requested detail or clarification.
Writing
Text Types and
Purposes
Standard 1. Writes opinion pieces on topics or texts,
supporting a point of view with reasons.


