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Great Depression: Adobe Voice Edition As they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each group has been given an image from the Great Depression. Your job today is to use Adobe Voice (free app), in generating the broader story of this image. Please create a narrative, using as much factual information as you can from the image, along with historical fiction in filling out the remaining story. Although each individual experienced something different in the Great Depression, what are some generalities we can make about who this person/people may have been? Contemplate these questions as you work: 1) What can I ascertain from this image? Can I identify a general (or specific) date based on the contents of the image? 2) What is happening in the picture? What are our ‘facts’? 3) What might their life have been like before the depression? 4) What FEPS (facts, events, people, statistics) do we have that can help to explain the image? 5) Who might these people be? What types of work do/did they have? What family situation might they have? How has their life been shaped by the depression? Requirements for Adobe Voice product: 1) No longer than 2 minutes in length 2) Incorporate the original image into your story 3) Tell a story of historical fiction that incorporates as much fact as possible from the image. 4) A minimum of 10 FEPS

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Page 1: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

Great Depression: Adobe Voice Edition

As they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point.

Each group has been given an image from the Great Depression. Your job today is to use Adobe Voice (free app), in generating the broader story of this image. Please create a narrative, using as much factual information as you can from the image, along with historical fiction in filling out the remaining story. Although each individual experienced something different in the Great Depression, what are some generalities we can make about who this person/people may have been?

Contemplate these questions as you work:

1) What can I ascertain from this image? Can I identify a general (or specific) date based on the contents of the image?

2) What is happening in the picture? What are our ‘facts’?3) What might their life have been like before the depression? 4) What FEPS (facts, events, people, statistics) do we have that can help to

explain the image?5) Who might these people be? What types of work do/did they have? What

family situation might they have? How has their life been shaped by the depression?

Requirements for Adobe Voice product:

1) No longer than 2 minutes in length2) Incorporate the original image into your story3) Tell a story of historical fiction that incorporates as much fact as possible

from the image.4) A minimum of 10 FEPS

When finished, we will pair your group up with another group. You will watch each other’s video and evaluate on the following page.

Good luck!

Mr. McPherson

Page 2: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

Names of ‘Voice’ creators _____________________________________________________

Names of peer reviewers ______________________________________________________

What is the general story of the Voice video?

What FEPS were incorporated during the video?

What was done particularly well in the video?

Was there anything that could have been incorporated (either visually or in the storyline), to enhance the product?

Names of ‘Voice’ creators _____________________________________________________

Names of peer reviewers ______________________________________________________

What is the general story of the Voice video?

What FEPS were incorporated during the video?

What was done particularly well in the video?

Was there anything that could have been incorporated (either visually or in the storyline), to enhance the product?

Page 3: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Bonus Army’

Page 4: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Dust Bowl’Lindsey, Erin, Libby

Page 5: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Unemployed Italian, 1930’

Michel, Charles, Walt

Page 6: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Seattle Hooverville, Late 1930s”Natalie, Maeve, Grace

Page 7: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Florida to New Jersey, 1930s’John, Peter, Gabe

Page 8: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Bank Run in LA, 1929’

Page 9: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Kansas children, 1930s’Serena, Olivia, Margaret

Page 10: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Police scuffle with Bonus Army, Washington D.C.’

Page 11: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Soup Kitchen, 1933’Pat, Zach, Teddy, GB

Page 12: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Dust pneumonia’

Page 13: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Oct. 29th, 1929 – Outside New York Stock Exchange’

Page 14: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Bread Line’

Page 15: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Youth riding the rails – 1930s’ Katherine, Deirdre, Ellyse

Page 16: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Unemployment sign – 1930s’

Page 17: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Public Housing’

Page 18: MCPHERSON AP US HISTORY · Web viewAs they say, ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’! Well, in your case, it is worth only about one hundred words, but you get the point. Each

‘Evicted Sharecroppers – Missouri’Maya, Andreas, Molly