Unit II: Who are Heroes?
Identification and Study of Heroes
Note:
This lesson plan is an extension of Unit
I: What is a Hero? and is continued in
Unit
III: Heroic Actions.
Subject
Area: All
Grade
level: Adaptable
to all
Overview/Purpose:
After reaching an understanding
of what defines a hero, students are ready
to identify and study them. This portion
may take several days or extend throughout
the semester or school year, depending on
how you choose to use the topic and suggestions.
Objectives:
Students are expected to:
- Describe the characteristics
of a hero.
- Recognize the hero in
a story.
- Identify heroes in their
own lives and express why that person is
a hero to them.
- Distinguish between a
hero and a celebrity.
- Express verbally and in
writing why a person is a hero to them.
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Resources/Materials:
Internet-ready computers
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Activities
and Procedures:
Step
One: Review, Hero Folders and Beginning Activities
- Review the characteristics
of a hero as determined in Unit
I: What is a Hero?
- Write these characteristics
on a poster or overhead transparency.
- In their Hero Folders,
notebooks or journals, have students write
any additional hero characteristics. If
folders are used, students can include pictures,
photos, illustrations or decorations.
a. For kindergarten and
first grade, descriptive words can be
duplicated and cut out for students to
glue on pages. They may then draw a picture
of the hero doing something helpful.
b. Older primary students
may write their own descriptions and do
illustrations for their Hero Folders.
c. Hero Folders could
include the following sections:
1. Who is a hero?
2. What does a
hero do?
3. Who are some
heroes?
You may want to divide
this portion into sub-sections as you
pursue heroes in different areas.
d. Each section could contain brief hero
stories, including some the students write
about their personal heroes.
- Select from the following
“fun activities” as they fit
your time, student interest and curriculum
focus:
a. Write newspaper columns
featuring a specific hero.
b. Write letters to heroes.
c. Write nominations
of heroes for a major award.
d. Conduct a ceremony
honoring your school heroes.
e. Produce a “Living
Museum” in which each student plays
the role of a different hero and tells
something about that person and why he/she
is a hero.
f. Set up a “MY
HERO Museum” to display students'
work.
g. Interview a hero and
write a biography, newspaper article,
script for a TV program, or a movie documentary.
The information could come from an interview
with another student, or from information
gained through research.
Comments:
By the third grade, students can:
- Use the computer to access
www.myhero.com,
sign the Guestbook and read what others
have written about their heroes.
- Write their own hero
stories to submit for posting on the MY
HERO Website (submission optional).
When high school students
discuss the characteristics of a hero and
the distinction between heroes and celebrities,
the lines may seem blurred between the two.
For some teenagers, celebrities are heroes
because their names are well-known. Assure
students that both heroes and celebrities
have their place and importance, but that
there is a difference. Some heroes are not
well known, nor are they celebrities. Some
heroes are well-known, and some celebrities
have done heroic deeds and exhibit the characteristics
of a hero. Some celebrities are not in this
“hero category” because they
have not done heroic deeds.
Of course, each person is
free to have his/her own opinion as to who
is a hero and why. Often the positive impact
of an individual is a personal matter.
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Step
Two: Hero(es) in My Own Family
- Have the students identify
and write a paragraph about people in
their own families who are heroes and
why.
They may have more than
one hero in their families, if they choose.
Family members include grandparents, stepparents,
sisters, brothers, uncles, aunts, cousins,
caretakers, friends and adults who are “like
family.” Special care should be given
so children without mothers or fathers can
identify other role models in their personal
lives.
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Step
Three: Using MY HERO to Look at Other People's
Heroes
- Demonstrate to the students
how they will use the www.myhero.com
Website to look at what others have written
about their heroes. If you are not working
in a computer lab where students can access
the Internet, this demonstration can be
done satisfactorily with overhead transparencies.
See Reading
MY HERO Stories and other MY HERO
lesson plans for additional suggestions.
- Assign students (independently
or in teams of two) to call up www.myhero.com.
Choose or assign a story and print it
out. Have students tell the class about
this person and why he/she was considered
a hero. Refer to the class definition
of a hero, and compare this definition
to why the author of the story is saying
this person is a hero. Do the definitions
match? What are the similarities and differences?
- At this point, you may
choose to have students develop their
own hero stories and use the simple MY
HERO “Create” program to make
their own MY HERO Website. Refer to the
MY HERO main lesson plan menus for suggestions
and to “A
Teacher’s Guide to Using the Create
Program.” Writing stories and
making Web pages can also wait until the
end of this unit.
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Step
Four: Hero(es) in Our School Community
- Working in small groups,
have students decide who are heroes in
their classroom, in their school community
and explain why. Again, you will gear
this to the age level of your students
and the amount of time you have for the
topic. Students may want to recognize
their school support staff—safety
officers, nurses, custodians, lunch helpers,
office staff. They may choose volunteers,
teachers, administrators, alumni or others
who have made a difference to them.
a. Each person in the
group nominates a hero in whichever category
you choose and tells why that person is
a hero.
b. The group then reports
this to the class. The “why”
portion of the presentation is very important.
c. Students record this
activity in their notebooks/journals or
Hero Folders.
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Step
Five: Heroes in Our Community (Town/City)
Repeat the activity outlined
in Step No. 4 above, focusing on the whole
town or city.
- Students may want to
recognize people they feel make a positive
contribution to their community—police,
firefighters, community leaders, volunteers,
doctors, or nurses.
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Step
Six: Heroes in Our State, Nation, and the
World
- Repeat activity outlined
in Step No. 4. Considering the state,
nation and world as a whole, students
should identify people they feel have
made significant contributions to society.
- You can narrow this search
to specific time frames in the past or
present, or to specific areas of contribution.
- Using the MY HERO categorization
of heroes also helps students focus their
ideas. MY HERO categories include angels,
animals, artists, business people, children,
community activists, earthkeepers, explorers,
leaders of faith, freedom fighters, lifesavers,
parents, peacemakers, poets, scientists,
athletes, teachers, and writers. Whatever
the category, students are looking for
people they feel have made positive contributions
to humanity.
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Step
Seven: Writing Individual Hero Stories and
Creating Hero Web Pages
- If students did not write
and submit their hero stories earlier,
doing so now would be beneficial. The
simple-to-follow “Create”
program allows students to cut and paste
their written stories into a template
and make their own Web page. To facilitate
this project for your class, see the “Teacher’s
Guide to Using the Create Program”
and additional content-specific MY HERO
lesson plans.
Each individual has a right
to his/her own opinion. Be aware that MY
HERO will not post any hateful stories or
those intended to do harm. MY HERO encourages
freedom of expression regarding positive
differences made by others and by each of
us.
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Step
Eight: Revisiting MY HERO
Supplementing other
curriculum:
After studying heroes,
you may want to return throughout the
year as the topics you cover lend themselves
to the identification of specific heroes.
When you revisit the idea of being a hero,
you will want to return to the distinction
between heroes and celebrities.
Current Events:
MY HERO features selected
up-to-date stories from the AP Newswire
that tie in with current events, as well
as an archive of these stories.
Thematic Units:
The home page of MY HERO
frequently changes to align with the calendar
and present thematic groupings of stories.
There is an archive of these thematic
features as well as a calendar to tell
you when they will appear on the home
page.
Some additional ideas for
creating your own thematic units using MY HERO stories include:
- Heroes in sports;
- Heroes in
the entertainment world;
- Heroes in
history;
- Heroes celebrated
in school;
(i.e., those for which there are
school holidays)
- Heroes in
fiction (literature—characters or
authors);
- Heroes in
science;
- Heroes who
have been “life savers.”
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Created by Ann M. Hoffelder, Curriculum Consultant
and Allyx Schiavone
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