To Kill a Mockingbird: Growing up in the 1930s



To Kill a Mockingbird: Growing up in the 1930s

Welcome to the world of Harper Lee's novel To Kill a Mockingbird. You are living in the 1930s. Your home, neighborhood, school, activities, clothes and social interactions are vastly different than with anything you are familiar. This WebQuest will take you back in time to learn what your life is like as a young person growing up in the 30s.

The Task

You are going to begin by researching the resources listed below to learn about your life in the 1930s. Using the information you learn, you will write two letters to your pen-pal living in present day time. Each letter will focus on the following aspects of your life.

• In your first letter, describe your home and neighborhood in detail. Include specific and interesting information so that the reader of your letter can visualize your environment. Tell about your family. What types of activities do you enjoy as a family? What is your standard of living? How do your parents make a living?

• In your second letter, describe what's going on in the world around you. What's happening in the nation politically and economically? Tell about popular fashions, music, radio programs, and other interesting facts.

Resources

Visit the following web sites in order to gather information for your letter:

• Interview: Growing Up White in the South:

• Interview: Growing Up Black in the 1930s:

• “I Remember . . .” Reminiscences of the Great Depression:

• Federal Writer’s Project: Interview Excerpts:

• Then and Now: Prices:

• The Great Depression and the New Deal:

• The Great Depression:

The Process

After reading the first chapter of To Kill a Mockingbird to familiarize yourself with the setting and characters in this novel, you can begin to research life in the 1930s.

1. You are going to write two letters in the voice of a person growing up in the 1930s. Before you begin your research, consider the sex, race, and age of the "character" that you will become as you write these letters. You may also want to decide on a name for your character. Also, decide to whom you are going to address your letter.

2. When you have collected information about each of the topics, you are prepared to begin the writing process. This process begins with brainstorming and prewriting followed by the actual drafting of your letters. Remember, you are writing from the perspective of a person living in the 30s. You are explaining your life to a person living in present day time. Your letters should include enough detail and description for your reader to gain a good sense of what your life is like.

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