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Lesson Plan - Gold Fever!
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Learning Objective
Students will understand how the discovery of gold in California 175 years ago helped reshape the United States.
Text Structure
Cause and Effect
Content-Area Connections
U.S. History
Standards Correlations
CCSS: R.1, R.2, R.3, R.4, R.5, R.6, R.7, R.8, R.9, R.10, L.4, SL.1, W.1
NCSS: Time, Continuity, and Change; People, Places, and Environments
TEKS: Social Studies 5.4, 6.1
1. Preparing to Read
Watch a Video: The California Gold RushDiscuss: What risks did gold prospectors take when they headed to California?
Preview Words to KnowProject the online vocabulary slideshow and introduce the Words to Know.
Set a Purpose for ReadingAs students read, have them think about how the Gold Rush affected California.
2. Close-Reading Questions
1. The article says the Gold Rush changed the U.S. forever. How did it do this? The Gold Rush caused California’s population to boom. This led to Congress making California a state in 1850. And many people who came to seek gold, particularly Chinese immigrants, later helped build America’s railroads. R.5 Cause and Effect
2. What is meant by the phrase “gold fever” in the headline? “Gold fever” was the desire to get rich by finding gold. It motivated many people to make their way to California. L.5 Figurative Language
3. What term was used to describe people who went to California during the Gold Rush? Why? The term forty-niners was used to describe these people because a huge number of them flocked to California in the year 1849. R.1 Text Evidence
3. Skill Building
FEATURED SKILL: Analyzing a Primary SourceUse the Skill Builder “Seeking Gold” to analyze a news article from 1848. Explain that a news article can be a primary source, an account of a historical event from the time when it happened.R.9 Analyze a Primary Source
Multilingual Learners Use the Skill Builder “What I Learned” to assess comprehension. Sentence stems and other question formats help scaffold understanding.
Striving Readers Review the Words to Know slideshow. Then help students define and illustrate other domain-specific words in the article (migration, immigrants, etc.).
Writing Extension Invite students to imagine themselves as figures involved with the Gold Rush, like James W. Marshall, a prospector, or a California innkeeper. Have them write journal entries describing what they see, hear, and experience.