PUBLIC HISTORY TOURS

 

Public history is a challenging art. As public historians you must strike a balance between academic rigor, accessibility and a compelling presentation. The goal is to inform and edify, but to do so in a captivating, concise and, yes, entertaining manner. This is not as hard as it may seem, once you begin to see history as a set of meaningful narratives instead of a litany of disconnected facts. Your job is responsible and rigorous storytelling.

 

The tour component is integral to the course. There will be six tours: Lower Manhattan, Lower East Side/Brooklyn Bridge and Brooklyn Heights, Architecture of Capital, Greenwich Village, Harlem, Central Park. Each tour corresponds to material we will cover in the literature and history courses. Indeed, there are some topics, Central Park, for instance, that we will study only as we prepare the tour. Tours are graded using the grade sheet, below. Each tour will be followed in class by a short quiz based on the tour, comprising 10% of your tour grade.

 

A. Research

 

You will be working in groups of 3-5, each named for a borough: the Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan , Queens, Staten Island. For each tour there will be five categories of historical research: social/cultural, literary, architectural, political and economic. Students will rotate through the categories. As you have probably noticed, each tour is locate both in time (period) and space (place), so that you will be studying the events that occurred in a particular where during a specific when. One group will be responsible for coordinating each tour, collecting a multiple choice question from each group and grading the quizzes.

 

You will be responsible for locating primary sources on your own, with the consultation of the teachers. Primary sources are documents or images from the period that tell us something interesting or useful about the period/place we are studying for the tour. Such sources would include photographs, lectures, news articles, editorials, essays, diaries, poetry, prose, etc. There are source books of materials for each tour (over Mr. meyers desk in the History Center) , from which you may draw items, but much of your research will be in historical societies (NY Historical Society, , Brooklyn H.S., Museum of the City of New York) and libraries (Fieldston, NYPL). Keep an eye out for good quotes and visuals that you can laminate and use on the tour.

 

Secondary sources will provide context and analysis for the primary sources you locate on the period/place. You should begin with the books assigned in class. The books from which handouts are drawn are on reserve at the library, where you will find a large selection of sources both on reserve and on the New York shelf in the stacks. Check also call numbers 974.71, 914.471 and REF 974.71 . The Encyclopedia of New York City and The Columbia Historical Portrait of New York City are always good places to begin. The library also has a list of recommended books on file. There is also a good bibliography in your Homberger. For other books think of appropriate keywords and use the catalogue to locate useful material. The librarians will assist you with the electronic media available. Books from the literature course may prove to be primary or secondary sources depending on when they were conceived and how you use them. There are useful links on the New York City Websites page

 

B. Tour Preparation

 

As you look for sources consider possible themes and topics that will help organize the material for your audience. Remember, your listeners will be on their feet, not at a desk, and must be engaged with compelling concepts, clever phrasing, visual aids, anecdotes, etc. Themes, ie. opportunity, or modernization, are broad conceptual umbrellas under which you can group various ideas and events, while topics are more local categories, such as trade-unionism, or immigration. Look for anecdotes and statistics- the story of a sweatshop laborer, the number of synagogues on Hester Street- that encapsulate these larger categories so people are not overwhelmed. Actual quotes can be very compelling and useful and visual aids are encouraged.

 

The most important source is the city itself. You must choose your sites/sights with care and cleverness. Begin by browsing through the various walking tour books on reserve (but do not become a prisoner of them, as you will only learn by doing, and you can do a better job!). Then, after you have begun your primary and secondary source research, and have some ideas about themes and topics, go with map in hand (blank maps are in the source books) and begin to map out your stops with the other members of your group. Remember to think about which stops will be most memorable, as well as those which will permit you to include the most important information. Think about what handouts you might like to have at each stop. Back in the classroom, you will combine your research with those from the other groups to decide who will say what where, and produce the final itinerary.

 

C. Tour Presentation

 

Tours should be approximately two-and-a-half hours long. We will finalize the itinerary in class, combining the information from the five groups. Each tour will have a lead group, responsible for organizing the itinerary, helping with site selection and collecting tour notes and multiple choice questions before the tour (see below). The teachers will coordinate this effort. When we are on-site, the teachers will make a brief introduction, and then it's up to you. Everyone must have an opportunity to speak, as you will be graded on your tour preparation and presentation, as well as your ability to work with others.

 

Even if you choose not to read directly from them, prepare notes. These should be in longhand on sheets or notepaper. The lead tour group will collect these notes, so be neat. Transfer these notes to notecards for the tour, one notecard for each stop at which you will present. There should be 10-15 stops of 5-10 minutes each. At each stop, herd the group together, so as to avoid blocking the sidewalk and prevent losing your voice. Rule of thumb: heels to the curb or heels to the building. Watch for lights and look ahead to catch walk signs ( so we're not wasting time standing at a corner). Always have more to say than you plan to use, just in case you need more material. And remember to stand in the shade.

 

For the tour, each student should take their notes and put them on notecards. Each individual student should have between one and three stops at which to present. Each student should have the following:

 

ð At least one primary source quote, dated and placed in context

ð At least one event, dated and placed in context

ð At least one visual aid, dated and placed in context

ð One note card for each stop at which you plan to present (at least one, at most three)

 

Remember to ask questions and to ask for questions. Tours work better as Socratic dialogue, not lecture. Speak clearly and slowly enough for people to understand you. And, like, avoid like, um, y'know. it's, um, not a good way to, um, like, establish credibility, y'know? See History Tour grade sheet below for more guidelines.

 

D. The Tours

 

Click here for a list of tours, schedules and starting points

 

E. Trip Requirements

 

ð Write up your notes and quotes on the computer (Mac format in Word) and turn in notes, quotes and your multiple choice question the day before the trip

ðBe sure you have a permission slip on file in the office.

ðWear comfortable shoes and appropriate clothing. (Check the Weather Channel or local news the night before)

ðBring subway tokens and emergency money

ðBring a brown bag lunch or money to buy food

ðDo not forget your notes and handouts

ðTours will meet on site at 9am (see schedule). Mr. Meyers or Ms. Neubauer will meet students who come to Fieldston first at the rock at 8:30

ðFor Sunday tours we will meet at 10am at the first stop on the tour, unless otherwise noted

ð The trips will be announced in the bulletin, but please remind your teachers if you will be missing class

ð Be sure to make up any in-class or at-home work that you missed due to the trip

ðIf you have permission on file in the hoigh school office you may go home directly after our trip is over, if you do not, or have athletic practice, we will return to Fieldston via subway by 4pm. (Be sure to tell your coach or after-school group that you may be late)

 

F. Quizzes and Grading

 

Each of the five research groups will compose two multiple choice questions based upon their tour presentation and the readings, to be turned via email on the class day before the tour, along with your tour notes. These questions will become part of a 10-question quiz to take place the first class day after the tour. The quizzes will make up 20% of your tour grade. Your tour presentation will be graded using a tour grading sheet