TVA: Electricity for AllTom Thurston, New Deal NetworkOverview: The controversy surrounding the Tennessee Valley Authority was profound and complicated. It raised constitutional, economic, social, philosophical and ethical issues. Once students become familiar with the facts and the issues by reading and studying the material in the collection and other material you provide, they will be in an excellent position to debate these issues.
(activity created by Stanlee Brimberg, Bank Street School)Objectives -- to help students: In this activity you will:
Resources: Documents from "TVA: Electricity for All" and the Image and Document Libraries of the New Deal Network (http://newdeal.feri.org/)
- Acquire information about TVA
- Understand that, depending on a person's identity and situation (social, educational, economic), he or she would have a different opinion about TVA
- Develop understanding for all the points of view about TVA
- Learn to make compromises to resolve disputes.
Collection Background: Materials concerning TVA in the Image and Document Libraries of the New Deal Network include editorial cartoons, advertisements, the Tennessee Valley photographs of Lewis Hine, dramatizations, and articles from The Nation and Opportunity Magazine.
Activity (50 Minutes Total)
| Step One (5 min.) | Meet briefly with your small group.
Each individual should quickly choose an identity from the list below.
(In a classroom setting, you would divide the class into seven sections
and assign each section one of the characters.)
|
| Step Two (30 min.). | Working as an individual, use the
resources available in the TVA collection to find information that
clarifies the point of view of your character. Look for facts, opinions,
reasons, and explanations, including testimony (oral history). You might
want to develop a chart listing the pros and cons to TVA from the
perspective of your character.
Searching tips: Useful information can be found in three separate areas:
|
| Step Three (15 min.) | Review your evidence and prepare a
short (1-3 min.) statement about the TVA, from the point of view of your
character. Your statement should include a concluding segment that
expresses support for TVA, or opposition to it, or a combination of
support and opposition.
|
| Step Four: Small Group Discussion (40 min.) | Meet again with your small group to
share your presentations and discuss the activity. (For more detailed
follow-up activities you could undertake with your class, see
attached.)
|
TVA Activity -- Supplemental Classroom ActivitiesIn an actual classroom, when each group reports on the points of view of their character, others in the class listen and then ask questions. Give and take in character is encouraged. Then the class returns to the present to discuss the TVA in historical perspective. To focus discussion, the students consider these questions:
Additional follow-up exercise: In a second class session, the charts are rotated among the groups--so, for example, a group that had Roosevelt yesterday might be a coal company executive today. Each group now takes the position of that new individual. They add to the evidence the other group has compiled. At the end of an appropriate amount of time, the charts get rotated again. The process continues until all the groups have seen and have had the opportunity to amend all the charts. You might notice that as the process goes on, groups have less and less to add and you can allot less and less time before switching. Alternatively, all the charts might be posted and you might allow time for any student to come up and add evidence to any chart.
- Was TVA a good idea for America? Which groups of people benefited? Which groups suffered? Did more people benefit or suffer?
- If a program is proposed by government today that would be bad for a few thousand Americans but good for millions, would you support it? Why or why not?
- If TVA were proposed today, how could the plan be modified so that the number of people who would suffer would be minimized and the number of people who benefited would be maximized?
- Should the government be responsible for providing services to Americans, like affordable electricity or health care, or should government stay out of people's lives? If you don't think the answer is either one or the other, what things do you think the government should provide? Not provide?
Once all the charts are complete, display them and allow time for the class to look at all of them together. Then ask and allow for discussion of some or all of these questions. Alternatively, some of these might be questions asked in a follow-up essay about TVA. In that case, it would be helpful for each student to have access to the material on all the charts and to the material in the TVA section of the New Deal Network.
The New Deal Network: The New Deal Network (NDN), a research and teaching resource on the World Wide Web devoted to the public works and arts projects of the New Deal, was developed by the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute and is now based at the Institute for Learning Technologies (http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/) at Columbia University. NDN seeks to make the most of the interactive, communications and publication capacities of the Internet. Its designers intend to bring many different institutions and individuals into the ongoing construction of the site and to stimulate students and historians throughout the United States to discover and document the cultural and material legacy of the New Deal.
"TVA: Electricity for All" was developed by Thomas Thurston, a doctoral candidate in American Studies at Yale University and the project director for NDN. The extended on-line curriculum package, from which this exercise was developed, was created for NDN by Stanlee Brimberg, a teacher at Bank Street School for Children in New York City. NDN would like to thank The Nation and the National Urban League for granting permission for the educational, non-commercial use of materials from their publications.
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