National Migration Week 2007

Welcoming Christ in the Migrant
January 7-13, 2007
Educational Resources

Student Worksheet (.pdf format) Large Timeline (.pdf format)

Educational Objectives

  1. To help each student to develop greater self awareness and understanding of their own family's migrant roots.
  2. To help students develop empathy and respect for newcomers by sharing their own family experiences with each other and recognizing similarities as well as differences.
  3. To help older students see the "big picture" of American migration history by researching the history of various waves of migration, from prehistoric journeys across the Bering Strait to current inflows of migrants and refugees, marking significant periods on the timeline.
Preparation

  1. Print out the pages of the Large Timeline(pdf format) and tape together as follows:

    Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Page 5
    Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Page 9 Page 10

    Have the assembled Timeline hanging on the wall for the class activity.

  2. Print out at least one copy of the Student Worksheet (pdf format) for each student. [Students may want to have more than one copy in order to document maternal and paternal migration histories.]
  3. Send the Student Timeline Worksheets home in advance, so students will have an opportunity to interview family members and answer the questions as completely as possible. If old photos are available, encourage the students to bring those back with their completed worksheets.
  4. If students are unable to obtain exact information about their ancestor's migrations, encourage them to get general approximations of dates and region of origin.

    Example of specific information:

    My great grandmother, Nellie [Elizabeth] Long migrated from County Cork, Ireland in 1878 to Rochester, New York, to take a job as a nanny
    Example of general information:
    My grandfather came to the U.S. from Germany sometime around 1900. While we are uncertain where he first arrived he eventually settled in Kentucky, and worked as a sign painter.
Class Activity

  1. Have each student in turn share the migration story of one of their ancestors with the class.
  2. After sharing their story, have each student mark the point on the timeline when their ancestor arrived, and drawing a line from that point to either above or below the timeline, write in their ancestors' name, approximate date of migration, and country of origin.
Discussion Questions

  1. Where are there clusters of points on the timeline? Was the migration history of this class a continuous flow, or were there waves of migration?
  2. How many different ethnic origins are represented on the time line? Does the class all share the same heritage, or is there diversity?
  3. Which aspects of the each story are common to one another? Which are unique?
  4. What sort of work did their ancestors do when they first arrived in the United States? Was this a better job or harder job than they had in their old country? Why do you think this is?
  5. What reasons brought your ancestors (or yourself, if anyone in the class is a new migrant) to the United States? Did they choose to come on their own, or were they forced to come by circumstances?
  6. How do you think your ancestors felt about their migrant experience? How do you feel about it today?
  7. What do we share in common with migrants today? How can we celebrate our diversity?

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Migration & Refugee Services | 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington DC 20017-1194 | (202) 541-3352 © USCCB. All rights reserved.




Migration & Refugee Services | 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington DC 20017-1194 | (202) 541-3352 © USCCB. All rights reserved.