The Pack contains associated resources for the learning experience, typically in the form of articles and videos. There is a teacher Pack (with only teacher information) and a student Pack (which contains only student information). As a teacher, you can toggle between both to see everything.
Here are the teacher pack items for Case Studies of Cold War Conflict:
Overview In this experience, students react to a photograph of a duck-and-cover drill during the Cuban missile crisis. Over the next three scenes they are introduced to the Cuban missile crisis, Cold War conflicts in the Middle East, and the space race, and generate questions about them. Next they choose a Cold War topic, develop inquiry questions, and conduct research to answer them. Then they follow the writing process to create a written case study. Finally, they read about the Mutually Assured Destruction strategy and write an imaginary diary entry of a political leader faced with difficult decisions. Students conclude by evaluating their case studies using a rubric. Students were guided through the steps of choosing a topic, researching it, and writing a case study in a previous experience, “Case Study: Japanese Imperialism.” This experience summarizes the steps without going into detail, If necessary, refer students to the link in the Student Pack: Guidelines for Historical Research and Writing. There is no quiz at the end of the experience. Instead, students will self-evaluate their work using a rubric. The rubric is available in the Student Pack for students to review before they begin work on their case studies. At each stage, give students a time framework for their tasks. Be sure to set the duration of the experience to fit your projected time framework. Objectives
You have learned about two major military conflicts of the Cold War: the Korean War and the Vietnam War. As the two superpowers tried to prevent each other from expanding its influence, there were other crises. In this lesson you will learn about some of them and write your own case study.
Objectives
Duck and cover safety drill, 1951
The photo from 1951 shows a school safety drill. From what potential danger are the children learning to protect themselves? Answer in a word or short phrase.
Sample answers: bombs, nuclear weapons, atomic attack. Students may connect the drill shown in the photograph to their own active shooter drills in school. Give them a chance to discuss their own fears. The Student Pack contains an optional video teaching students how to “duck and cover.” The video runs over nine minutes. You may project it or have students watch it at home: Civil Defense for Schools: Duck and Cover.