War and Home - Part I

    Overview

    War and Home - Part I

    A displaced Hmong family in Luang Prabang. Site: L-54, Coordinates: TH 0302

    Author: Chong Moua
    Grades:  9–10

    Suggested Amount of Time: 110 Minutes
    Area of Study: Community Building, Home-Making, and Empowerment

    Compelling Question
    • How do Hmong people build and sustain community and belonging? 
    Lesson Questions
    • What is a home?
    • How did war affect Hmong people’s sense of home?
    Lesson Objective
    •  War displaces people from their homes and transforms communities all over the world. This lesson is the introduction of two lessons that focus on war and home. Students will learn about the historical context of Hmong involvement and experience during the US’s Secret War in Laos to explore how war affects people’s concept of home. 

    Lesson Background

    Part I delves into the theme of home and belonging and the historical context of the Cold War, US official foreign policy during the Cold War of containment, and the US’s Secret War in Laos.

    Hmong Scholar Dr. Choua Xiong (2023) shares: “Since the mass displacement of HMoob people after the Secret War, HMoob people have had to rebuild and reimagine their communities and homes. Today, HMoob people live in various places throughout the world including: Australia, China, France, French Guiana, Germany, Great Britain, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Vietnam, South Korea, Thailand, and the United States. HMoob communities throughout the world make up what scholars consider the HMoob diaspora. Home-making is also about finding identity within a place. As an ethnic group constantly on the run, HMoob people are tasked to continuously reinvent and reimagine their identity against dominant imperial and colonial narratives. HMoob people engage in home-making to generate and establish new forms of identity within each place that they live. Most importantly, the ways HMoob people home-make is often in response to the forms of inequities that they have encountered.”

    This lesson contains content that may be sensitive for some students. Teachers should exercise discretion in evaluating whether the resources are suitable for their class and provide a content warning to their students at the beginning of the lesson.

    Image Citation: Beery, G. (2015). Displaced Hmong [Photograph]. Galen Beery Legacy Collection, California State University, Fresno, Hmongstory 40 / Hmongstory Legacy, Fresno, CA. https://omeka.library.fresnostate.edu/s/galen-beery/item/7370

    Ethnic Studies Theme

    This lesson connects to the ethnic studies theme of reclamation and joy from the Asian American Studies Curriculum Framework (Asian American Research Initiative, 2022). Students explore the ways that communities reclaim histories through art, cultural expression, and counternarratives. Students discuss how diasporic communities, without a territorial ethnic homeland, maintained identity and a sense of belonging.

    For additional guidance around ethnic studies implementation, refer to the Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum (2021)  https://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/cr/cf/esmc.asp.

    Supplies
    • Access to laptop device
    • Poster paper
    • Materials will vary depending on final assessment product (Photo, Digital art, Comic strip, Spoken word, or Poem)
      • paint, charcoal, paper mache, collage, digital art, color pencils, etc. 
    Videos
    • Where is home? Where do you belong? Tedx Talk on YouTube
    • Minnesota Experience: America’s Secret War Documentary on PBS
    Handout

    This is the first and introductory part of the War and Home lesson. It is recommended that “War and Home - Part II” be taught following this lesson.

    Step 1: Introducing the Themes

    1. Before watching the TEDx talk, have students do a quick write on the following questions:
      1. How do you define ‘home’?
      2. How do you know where you ‘belong’?
        1. What are the signs, signals, or affirmations that let you know you belong in specific places? 
        2. Are there things you can do to construct or facilitate a sense of belonging in places that might not be welcoming at first?
    2. Watch the TEDx talk, and have the students (in pairs or groups of three or four) write down on post-it paper the different ways in which Vamba Sherif talked about ‘home.’ Each post-it should represent one idea.
      1. Encourage them to think about home in the following ways:
        1. People
        2. Place
        3. Memories
        4. Feelings 
        5. Words/writing 
    3. Community Assessment Reflection: 
      1. After they have recorded their ideas, instruct them to share ideas on digital or hardcopy poster. Students will have five minutes to wander the room and review other peers' ideas. Encourage them to look for commonalities and overlapping ideas/themes.
      2. Finally, have students debrief in a whole group discussion using these prompts: 
        1. Does Sherif offer a definition of ‘home’ or ‘belonging’? What are the different homes Sherif talks about?
        2. What are the similarities and differences between how people in our classroom community think about home and belonging? 
        3. What might be the significance of how and why people think about home and belonging differently?

    Step 2: Historical background 

    1. Students will learn about the historical context of Hmong involvement and experience during the US’s Secret War in Laos to explore how war affects people’s concept of home. 
    2. Primary Source: Minnesota Experience: America’s Secret War https://www.pbs.org/video/americas-secret-war-f55rln/ (PBS documentary 57:57 minutes) 
    3. Primary Source Activity: Students will watch the documentary over two class periods (or watch half the documentary depending on time). Provide students with a Video Guide that contains the following questions for them to take notes on (see Handout https://ucdavis.box.com/s/kupeol6gq43t6yx4g99ok69tmllvxq5z):
      1. Content Questions: 
        1. Why did the US make war in Southeast Asia and Laos?
        2. How did Hmong people get involved? 
        3. Why is the war called a secret war?
        4. What information is provided about Hmong history before the secret war?
        5. How did the war change Laos, the country, and Hmong people’s lives?
        6. How did the war disrupt Hmong people’s idea of home?
      2. Perspective Questions:
        1. Who are the storytellers in this documentary? Are they soldiers? Teachers? Children of refugees? Take note of who is part of telling the story.
        2. Why does that matter? 
        3. Are there other people who aren’t in the documentary that you would have liked to hear from?
        4. Community Assessment Activity: After watching the documentary, have students share with each other the notes they took. Then, have a larger discussion with the class about what they learned, specifically what they learned about US history and Hmong history that they didn’t know before. 

    Step 3: Closure / Assessment: 

    1. If time permits, teachers can move onto the “War & Home - Part II” lesson.
      1. Before moving on to Part II of the lesson, introduce the Cumulative Project and have students start thinking about what kind of product they would like to create and possible materials that might be needed for the final project.
    2. Students will choose from a variety of creative options to create a final product. The options include, but are not limited to the following: 
      • Photo (Hand Drawn) or Digital art
      • Comic strip
      • Spoken word or Poem
      • Other (discuss with teacher first for approval)

    Students will present or record their final product to the class in a two to three-minute presentation where they explain their piece and their process addressing the lesson questions:

    • What is a home?
    • How did war affect Hmong people’s sense of home?  
    1. If teacher is unable to move onto “War & Home - Part II,” teachers can have students reflect on the video with the following closure activity:
      1. 3-2-1 Reflection: What are three facts you learned from today’s lesson? What are two words to describe the content from today’s lesson? What is one unanswered question you still have? 

    Students will choose from a variety of creative options to create a final product. The options include, but are not limited to the following: 

    • Hand Drawn or Digital art
    • Comic strip
    • Spoken word or Poem
    • Other (discuss with teacher first for approval)
    • Engagement: Consider the following method to support with lesson engagement:
      • Create cooperative learning groups with clear goals, roles, and responsibilities
      • Include activities that foster the use of imagination to solve novel and relevant problems, or make sense of complex ideas in creative ways
    • Representation: Consider the following method to support with multiple means of representation:
      • Provide written transcripts for videos or auditory clips
      • Provide templates, graphic organizers, concept maps to support note-taking
    • Action and Expression: Consider the following method to support in presenting their learning in multiple ways:
      • Provide sentence starters or sentence strips
      • Embed prompts to show and explain your work (e.g., portfolio review, art critiques)

    For additional ideas to support your students, check out the UDL Guidelines at CAST (2018)  http://udlguidelines.cast.org.

    • Emerging: Consider the following method to support with emerging students:
      • Listening: Use physical gestures to accompany oral directives
    • Expanding: Consider the following method to support with expanding students:
      • Listening: Give two step contextualized directions 
    • Bridging: Consider the following method to support with bridging students:
      • Listening: Confirm students’ prior knowledge of content topics 
        • With a focus on meaning­-making, students are prompted to think about what they already know in effort to help them learn something new.

    For additional guidance around scaffolding for multilingual learners, please consult the following resources:

    1. Watch an oral account of leaving refugee camps in Thailand for the United States: Captain Bee Yang, Interview Process in the Refugee Camps (12:33 minutes) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=173EjVAda9E.
    2. At the end of each day, students can compile something they learned or worked on into a journal. This compilation can be utilized for their final project

    American Initiative. 2022. Asian American Studies K-12 Frameworkhttps://asianamericanresearchinitiative.org/asian-american-studies-curriculum-framework/ 

    Blackstone, L. (Director). 2019, May 27. America’s Secret War (Season 1, Episode 28 [TV series episode]. In PBS,  Minnesota Experience. PBS. https://www.pbs.org/video/americas-secret-war-f55rln/ 

    Britt, K. 2020c, May 11. English learner toolkit of strategies. California County Superintendents.  https://cacountysupts.org/english-learner-toolkit-of-strategies/

    California Department of Education. 2021. Ethnic studies model curriculumhttps://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/cr/cf/esmc.asp 

    California Department of Education & English Learner Support Division. 2012. California English Language Development standards (Electronic Edition) kindergarten through grade 12 (F. Ong & J. McLean, Eds.). California Department of Education. https://www.cde.ca.gov/sp/el/er/documents/eldstndspublication14.pdf

    California Educators Together. (n.d.). ELA / ELD framework. https://www.caeducatorstogether.org/resources/6537/ela-eld-framework

    CAST. 2018. The UDL guidelines. http://udlguidelines.cast.org

    San Diego County Office of Education. (n.d.). Providing appropriate scaffoldinghttps://www.sdcoe.net/educators/multilingual-education-and-global-achievement/oracy-toolkit/providing-appropriate-scaffolding#scaffolding

    Tedx Talks. 2016, June 1. Where is home? Where do you belong? | Vamba Sherif | TEDxGroningen [Video]. YouTube.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0mVa7d08tg  

    Tulare County Office of Education. (n.d.). Strategies for ELD. https://commoncore.tcoe.org/Content/Public/doc/Alpha-CollectionofELDStrategies.pdf 

    Xiong, C. P. (2023). Community building, home-Making & empowerment [Paper]. Created for OCDE.

    Supplementary Sources

    Hmongstory Legacy. 2023, July 12. Bee Yang - Leaving the camps [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=173EjVAda9E

    Vang, M. D. 2011, December 30. To make a return. The New York Times, 6–8, 190–192.  https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/12/22/us/Hmong_writings_docs.html  

    Model Curriculum

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