Area 12: The U.S. During the Struggle for Civil Rights
Question: How successful was the U.S. in creating a more equitable society?
Lesson Plan Developed By
Michael Redman, St. Stephens Indian School, St. Stephens, Wyo.
Grade Level
6-12
Content Area(s)
Social Studies
English
Learning Objective(s)
- Students will gain a fuller understanding of the link between hunting rights outlined in the original treaties and tribal hunting and fishing regulations today.
- students will understand how much land for natives lost since treaty times.
- Students will understand how game management and regulation works on the Wind River Reservation today.
Standards
Wyoming Social Studies Standards, with 2018 Additions
Click here to see a spreadsheet aligning Wyoming State Social Studies and Common Core Standards for this and other digital toolkits of Wyoming History.
We will update the standards spreadsheet as more lesson plans are developed.
Materials Required
Maps:
- Tribal Territories assigned in the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851
- Bannock and Shoshone territories, 1863
- Wind River and other reservations today. At “Indigenous Tribes of Wyoming,” Wyoming Student Atlas, https://www.arcgis.com/apps/MapJournal/index.html?appid=c82430cc0332460d97cdbc5eab1d023a, scroll down to “Present Day Native Lands.”
Readings
- Hunting rights excerpts from 1851 and 1863 treaties
- Shoshone and Arapaho Fish and Game website.
- Managing Game on the Wind River Reservation, WyoHistory.org.