5th Grade  Project 4 weeks

Choctaw Journey: The Trail of Tears

Jocelyn L
Updated
5.3.b
5.6.c
1-pager

Purpose

Students explore how the Trail of Tears affected Choctaw communities and what Choctaw resilience, survival, and community can teach us today. Through maps, stories, music, oral history clips, library-supported reading, discussion, and short performances, they build age-appropriate historical understanding while practicing evidence use, respectful interpretation, and reflection. The project leads to a community presentation and display where students share what they learned in ways that fit 5th grade skills and honor Choctaw history.

Learning goals

Students will build age-appropriate understanding of Choctaw history, culture, and forced relocation by using books, maps, music, oral histories, and short media sources to notice important details and compare information. They will answer the question about resilience, survival, and community by sharing evidence in a short poem, map talk, story retelling, or brief dramatic scene. Students will practice 5th grade speaking, listening, reading, and collaboration skills during story circles, partner rehearsals, teacher conferences, and respectful discussions with classmates and community guests. They will also reflect on one challenge they faced, one skill they used, and one way they showed respect while learning about Choctaw history.

Standards
  • [New York] 5.3.b - Europeans encountered and interacted with Native Americans in a variety of ways.
  • [New York] 5.6.c - Across time and place, different groups of people in the Western Hemisphere have struggled and fought for equality and civil rights or sovereignty.

Products

Students will create question cards, response sketches, simple annotated maps, and short notes from books, media, music, and oral history clips as they build understanding across the project. During work time, they will draft and revise short scripts, poems, story retellings, or map talks that show Choctaw resilience and include clear evidence from their sources. The culminating products will be a brief dramatic scene showcase and one individual presentation piece, such as a poem, map talk, or story retelling, connected to the essential question. Students will also help curate a community display for the final family evening with selected quotes, artwork, maps, and short reflections that show what they learned and how they showed respect for Choctaw history.

Launch

Begin with a Trail of Voices story circle using 3–4 short stations with maps, Choctaw music, brief oral history clips, and a few carefully chosen images or artifacts from a library or humanities partner. Have students use a simple notice-and-wonder chart to talk about what they see, hear, and think these sources show about home, movement, family, and resilience. After rotating, invite each student to share one question they want to explore and add it to a class wonder wall. Close by explaining that they will learn from books, media, and discussion, then create a short performance, poem, map talk, or story retelling for a family and community presentation.

Exhibition

Host a family and community evening at the school or library where students rotate through short, 2–3 minute presentations such as a simple skit, poem, map talk, or story retelling about Choctaw resilience, survival, and community. Set up an easy-to-follow display with student maps, short written reflections, and library-selected books and media so guests can move through the exhibit and talk with students. After small groups present, invite students to answer one prepared question about their evidence and one about how they showed respect for Choctaw history. Give every student a clear job, such as performer, greeter, map guide, or reflection reader, so the event feels successful and manageable for 5th graders.