The Influenza Pandemic of 1918
A multidisciplinary lesson for
middle school students
By Warner Ferratier, John Kirkpatrick, and Hyung
Ro
Summer 2005
To download this lesson in PDF format, click here.
Goal: Students will use primary sources to explain the chronology of the Flu Epidemic of 1918 and the public's response.
Essential Questions:
Why is this epidemic
considered to be one of the deadliest plagues in human history?
How did this epidemic
change an American's daily life and attitudes about health care?
Lesson 1: Introduction
Lesson 2: Describe the flu epidemic
Lesson 3: Analysis of death certificates
Lesson 4: Writing a RAFT
Lesson 1: Introduction
1. Show photographs one at a time, in the
following order:
A. woman connected to a respiration device
C. miner
gargling in front of a "Gargle, Don't Catch Flu" sign
D. Wearing the
Gauze photo and poem
2. Using each picture, elicit student responses
to the following possible questions to start discussion:
Who is in the picture?
What clues help us determine some background information about the people in the picture?
(What do they do? Where do they live?)
When and where was this picture taken?
What clues lead you to a certain time period and location?
What types of actions are taking place?
Why are the people doing these specific activities?
After the discussion,
introduce the topic and the global and local effects of the Influenza Epidemic.
Lesson 2: Describe the flu epidemic
1. Ask the students for information on
what they already know about the flu virus. This portion of the discussion will result in coming up with
a description, symptoms, and effects of the influenza virus.
2. Read aloud a description of the virus
from The Great Influenza Epidemic of 1918.
3. In addition, or as an alternative,
students may research and locate other relevant primary and secondary documents
about the Flu Pandemic of 1918 with analysis and discussion of these documents
in small and/or large groups.
These questions could be:
Who
wrote this document?
Is
the document narrative, expository, or persuasive?
Who
was the intended audience?
What
is the perspective of the document?
How
does this document compare to other documents?
Lesson 3: Analysis of death certificates
Using the Champaign
County Death Certificates (from the Champaign County Historical Archives) from September and October of 1918, students will
create a database or chart on Excel or comparable software. Due to the number of certificates
listing cause of death as influenza or pneumonia, the work will need to be
divided in some way, such as groups or individual students working on specific
dates, etc. The information to
record will include the name, age, gender, occupation, date of death, and race
or ethnicity of the deceased.
Students could then analyze the impact of the flu on various communities
and groups.
(For further research
and analysis, students could research census data and/or other death
certificates from the same or other periods.)
Mapping it out: Using the data from the death
certificates, students will plot out where the victims lived on city and county
maps. Maps may be placed on
bulletin boards and individuals recorded using stickpins, possibly in different
colors representing different dates.
Other variations of recording the information on maps could be adapted
based on classroom resources and space.
This activity will give the students a visual representation that could
lead to further analysis exploring the patterns and proximity of cases.
Lesson 4: Writing a RAFT
Using the RAFT
technique, students will complete a writing activity. This will first be modeled by the teacher with the entire
class. As a group, select a role,
audience, format, and topic from the following list of options:
Role |
Audience |
Format |
Topic |
Doctor |
Patients |
Instructions |
Flu Prevention |
Mother |
Children |
Letter |
Care of the Ill |
Soldier |
Family |
Obituary |
Public Policy |
Public Health Official |
General Public |
Investigative Report |
Hospital Policy |
Newspaper Reporter |
Elected Officials |
Journal Entry |
Public Education |
You may choose to allow
the students to brainstorm more options to add to the list. After selecting and writing the RAFT as
a group, students may select from the topic choices to complete a prewriting
graphic organizer and a RAFT of their own.