Materials included publications and selections from the Library of Congress digital collections and secondary sources, which included:
Session 1
Part 1: Introduction to Special Collections (15 minutes)
Introduce students to Special Collections and archives. Provide an overview of what Special Collections holds and how to search for materials online through finding aids, the library catalog, and digital collections. Provide an overview of primary and secondary sources and how to analyze and contextualize a source.
Part 2: Exercise (15 minutes)
Using a worksheet of questions, in groups of two, students will look at 2 sources. As a group, students will reflect on what they learned and inferred about the sources. Students will be assigned an additional subset of documents in preparation for the debate in session 2.
Students will read the news sources ahead of the class session.
Students will use the remaining time in class to continue analyzing the additional sources in preparation for the debate argument.
Additional sources for students to analyze before session 2.
Primary Sources on Miasma, Filth Theory of Disease and Anti-Contagionism
Primary Sources on Germ Theory, the New Public Health, and Contagionism
Session 2:
Part 1: Debate (60 minutes)
Review main themes and issues raised by secondary sources and primary sources. Students will argue from the perspective of their disease model (Miasma, Germ, Undecided). Students will be randomly pre-assigned to a group. Using the historical perspective, the information and language from the sources, students will draw on examples from their sources to help make their argument. Each model will make a case on why their approach is better for protecting the public’s health today. The Undecided group will deliberate on the theories and after hearing arguments from both groups will help decide the winning theory and why it wins.
The students will be debating the question: Which explanation of disease- miasma/filth theory or contagion/germ theory best promotes a balanced approach to public health- one that balances the protection of the public’s health with preservation of individual liberties?
Part 2: Reflection (10 minutes)
Students will reflect on what they have learned about analyzing and contextualizing primary sources and how historical sources are still relevant to health issues today.
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