GR.ST.4-6 Lesson 3: Tribal Groups and the Reservation Experience

Overview
Lesson 1: Stories as History and Tradition
Lesson 2: Historical Landscape
Lesson 3: Tribal Groups and the Reservation Experience
Lesson 4: Historical Figures and their Impact
Lesson 5: Stories of Today
Extending the lesson/References

Standards

ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS

EL.06.RE.05—Demonstrate listening comprehension of more complex text through class and/or small group interpretive discussions across the subject areas.

EL.06.WR.02—Discuss ideas for writing with classmates, teachers, and other writers, and develop drafts alone and collaboratively.

EL.06.WR.10—Write for different purposes and to a specific audience or person, adjusting tone and style as necessary.

EL.06.WR.30—Use a variety of resource materials to gather information for research topics (e.g. books, magazines, newspapers, dictionaries, schedules, journals, phone directories, web resources).

CD Segments to Play

Background

As many as 15,000 Kalapuya people once lived in the area now known as the Willamette Valley and Upper Umpqua Valley. Their neighbors on the Oregon coast…. The Coos, Lower Umpqua, Siuslaw, Coquille, Tututin-dine, Alsea, Tillamook and many others, also numbered in the thousands. Each tribal group was rich in the traditions of storytelling and history and each also had their great leaders who were well respected.

When the first sailing ships came into the Columbia River before 1700, diseases came also. With the subsequent exploration by trappers, traders and pioneers, more sickness came to villages in western Oregon. Soon, the population was decimated by disease.

By the mid-1800s, tribes were shattered and vulnerable to the offers of treaties. Beginning in 1856, western Oregon tribes were literally rounded up and taken to reservations at Grand Ronde and Siletz. While on the reservations, the Indian way of life was forbidden, with tribal members forced to learn English and to abandon traditional lifestyles.

The impact of this change took its toll. Basketry and arts were nearly forgotten and in their place, the people learned farming, blacksmithing, and other European methods. Unfortunately, storytelling was an art that nearly vanished.

Of the thousands of traditional stories once told in western Oregon lodges, only handfuls remain. Most stories today are told in English because that is how they were remembered for generations after the reservation experience.

Suggested Strategies

Activities

1.  Discuss

After hearing about the people’s reservation experiences, ask the class:

Why weren’t more stories told when the people were on the reservation?

Did the stories change?

How did telling the stories in English change the stories?

Did the people start to tell “new” stories?

2.  Role play

Divide the class into four groups. Each group will play the part of tribal members on the reservation. Remember that nearly all traditional customs were forbidden.  (Part 1)

Allow sufficient time for the group to discuss the topic.  After discussions, ask each group to tell the class what would be the most important thing to remember to tell their children about life before the reservation. (for example: how to hunt deer, how to fish, how to tan a hide). Ask each student why that example was chosen.  (Part 2)

Each group will write a story about the example they chose (for example: “How I caught the biggest fish in the Willamette” or “The time the biggest deer got away.”)

Could this be exactly “true” or was it embellished?

How would this story become “traditional” and passed down to other generations… or could it?

What similar family stories are there in your family? Select a few students to relate their stories.

Ask the class: Do you believe they are true?

3.  Interview

For a homework assignment, have each student “interview” a member of their family to find out about the family history. Share the results during Lesson 5.

4.  Discuss

Suggested questions:

What country did the family come from?

If they immigrated to America, approximately what year was it?

Where did the family first settle?

Who is the oldest person in the family?

5.  Put on a play

Allow time for the class to practice the Kalapuya storytelling.

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