learning from U.S. History

A fifth grade social studies curriculum

This fifth grade U.S. history curriculum is built upon primary sources and is an alternative to textbooks that are often one-sided or politicized. This curriculum is one example of how historians and educators can work together to de-center a singular perspective and to offer elementary social studies with greater historical accuracy. This is a work-in-progress curriculum that will change as new primary sources emerge and historical interpretations shift.

Please cite, compensate and show appreciation to those we link whenever possible.

To cite this curriculum: Berry, D.R., Adair, J.K., and Green, E. (2021). Learning from U.S. History: A Fifth Grade Curriculum. https://sites.google.com/view/learningfromushistory

Aaron Carapella - Tribal Nations Maps

Land Acknowledgement

We would like to acknowledge that we are writing this curriculum on the indigenous lands of Turtle Island, the ancestral name for what is now called North America.

We would like to acknowledge and pay our respects to the Alabama-Coushatta, Caddo, Carrizo & Comecrudo, Coahuiltecan, Comanche, Kickapoo, Lipan Apache, Tigua Pueblo, Tonkawa, Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo all the American Indian and Indigenous Peoples and communities who have been or have become a part of these lands and territories in Texas.

the authors/Curators

Dr. Daina Ramey Berry

Professor and Chair of History

www.drdainarameyberry.com

Dr. Jennifer Keys Adair

Associate Professor of Education

www.jenniferkeysadair.com

Erin Green, M.Ed

Doctoral Student

www.msgreensclass.com

UMA

Student at St. Francis School

Gideon

Student at St. Francis School

Additional Curriculum Contributors


  • Dr. Katherina Payne, UT Austin

  • Dr. Anna Falkner, University of Memphis

  • Pamela Mathai, Navarro Early College High School

  • Dr. Esther Kim, William and Mary College of Education

  • Dr. Noreen Naseem Rodríguez, UC Boulder

Complete List of Contributors to the UT Elementary Social Studies Methods Course, which greatly informs our work.

"The way to right wrongs is to turn the light of truth upon them.” - Ida B. Wells