
| BARILLA TAYLOR |
Rental Kit for 8-12 Especially Suitable
for History,Social Science, English and Language Arts Classes |
| BOOTT
COTTON MILL | A lesson plan for Grades 5 -12. The Boott
Mill was a typical "cathedral of industry" where people from all over
the world toiled for the single purpose of mass-producing a consumer product:
textiles. | |
Curriculum Materials TEACHERS, PLEASE NOTE!! Our pre/post field curriculum materials- including an overview guide, suggested activities, and
bibliography-- are now available online for free.
If you would like a hard copy of the activity
and overview guides, call 978-970-5080 to order a packet ($5.00 handling fee)
or download the printable
order form.
Other Available Teacher Resources A
few items are for sale through the Eastern
National Bookstore online. For a complete listing of Teacher Resources
available for purchase, please download our Eastern National Bookstore catalog,
price list, and order form. Each of these guides is a PDF (Portable Document
Format) document and can be opened with Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available
for a free download from Adobe.com.

 | Curriculum
Packet -- "Cotton, Cloth, and Conflict: The Meaning of Slavery in a Northern Textile
City" Using this collection of primary source materials and
related activities, students investigate the relationships between the industrial
North and plantation South before the Civil War. Designed for grades 8 - 12. Available
at the Boott Museum Store (978-970-5015) for $9.95. Click
here for a printable order form. |
| Cobblestone "Mill Girls" Issue
"The Mill Girls: From Farm to Factory" provides students with an entertaining and informative look at
the life and work of Lowell's early workforce. "Mill Girls" includes background
pieces on early Lowell, several short works of historical fiction, primary sources
such as maps, mill girl letters, and images of factory and city life, various activity
pages, and an industrial history resource list. (March 2001 issue) Available at
the Boott Museum Store (978-970-5015) for $4.95. |  | The Ten-
Hour Movement: Women and the Early Labor Movement The Ten-Hour Movement
Curriculum Packet includes: * Historical Background Essay and Timeline * Eight
activities for classroom use * Thirteen Student Source documents to support the
activities Available at the Boott Museum Store (978-970-5015) for $6.95.
|  | Packet
-- Mill Girls In response to the many requests for basic
information about Lowell's famous "mill girls," we have developed
"Mill Girls" a packet that includes four historic documents and photographs that tell
the story of the young Yankee women who left their farms to operate machines in
Lowell's textile mills. Available at the Boott Museum Store (978-970-5015) for
$4.95. Poster -- A New England Cotton Mill With
this unique, award-winning poster, students can trace the steps of cloth production
in a water-powered mill. Available at the Boott Museum Store (978-970-5015) for
$4.95. An Activity Sourcebook: "Teaching Industrial
History through Science, Mathematics, and Technology" Looking for
ways to make your industrial history units more interdisciplinary? This sourcebook
contains 18 activities to help students explore scientific and economic concepts,
create and interpret charts and graphs, and use data to solve problems and reach
conclusions. Ideal for middle and high school. Available at the Tsongas Center
for $4.95. Click here for ordering information
or call (978)970-5080. Curriculum
Packet -- Making the World Better: The Struggle for Equality in 19th Century America
This is a free curriculum
packet produced in connection with the State House Women's Leadership Project
and the installation of HEAR US, a new work of art honoring the contribution of
women to public life in Massachusetts. The packet focuses on two of the State
House honorees, Lucy Stone and Sarah Parker Remond. Through primary source documents
transcribed and edited for use by middle school students, teachers can address
many of the learning standards recommended in state and national curriculum frameworks
as they engage students in exploring the struggle for equality. Available from
the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities website. For a free copy, please
visit: http://www.mfh.org/specialprojects/shwlp/site/curriculum/index.html Also
See |