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Folklife Resources for Educators

Materials Related to Hazardous occupations

There are 2 titles in this list.

 

Pilebutts: Working Under the Hammer – Study Guide
by Maria Hetherton
http://www.folkstreams.net/context,267

Study guide for middle and high school students to accompany the film “Pilebutts: Working Under the Hammer,” created by Maria Brooks and Archie Green in 2003. The 28-minute film, available as streaming video on folkstreams.net, features the camaraderie and tough, risk-laden work of men and women of Oakland, California’s Pile Drivers Local Union Number 34, who drive the pilings for structures such as bridges, docks, freeways, and skyscrapers in the San Francisco Bay Area. The guide can be integrated into social studies and language arts curricula and serves as an introduction for students to labor culture and history in its focus on an occupational community in the Bay Area.

Grade Level: 6-8; 9-12 Curriculum: Language Arts; History and Social Studies
Resource Type: Primary sources; Lesson plans; Activities Language: English
Subjects: Pile drivers; Hazardous occupations; Ethnographic films; Labor unions; Labor history; Educational films; Construction workers; Oakland (Calif.)--Social life and customs; San Francisco Bay Area (Calif.)--Social life and customs
Geographic locations: California

Sponsoring Organization:
Folkstreams


http://www.folkstreams.net/


Woodsmen and River Drivers – Teaching Guide
by Paddy Bowman
http://www.folkstreams.net/context,273

Teaching guide for grades 10-12 to accompany the film “Woodsmen and River Drivers,” created by filmmakers Michael Chalufour, Karan Sheldon, and David Weiss in 1989. The 28-minute film, available as streaming video on folkstreams.net, features men and women who worked for a lumber company in Maine before 1930 and who share their recollections of the logging industry. Documentary footage illustrates the dangerous and exhausting work of cutting trees by hand, hauling logs to the river with horses, and floating them down to the mill. By encountering firsthand accounts of arduous physical labor and the seasonal round of old-time logging in the film and teaching guide, students gain perspective on work and occupations in their own lives and communities, including how occupational folklife contributes to a sense of place.

Grade Level: 9-12 Curriculum: Art and Culture; History and Social Studies; Language Arts
Resource Type: Lesson plans; Primary sources; Activities; Video recordings Language: English
Subjects: Hazardous occupations; Labor history; Log driving; Ethnographic films; Loggers; Oral history; Occupations--Folklore; Maine--Social life and customs; Educational films; Industrialization; Place-based education; Logging; Lumbermen; Seasons
Geographic locations: Maine

Sponsoring Organization:
Folkstreams


http://www.folkstreams.net/


 

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   June 23, 2011
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