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Program
Description
In
this interchange between Thomas Jefferson and George Washington, students will
have the opportunity to learn more about the men, their opinions on a variety of
democratic issues, their views on women and slavery, Washington's Presidency and
their innovative farming practices on their plantations. The men are
interviewed by 5th grade students from the G.O. Center at Robert S. Payne
Elementary School in Lynchburg, Virginia.
Virginia
Standards of Learning
"Shaping the World: Conversations on
Democracy" can assist teachers with the following Virginia Standards Of Learning
objectives.
Virginia
Studies:
VS.1, VS.4, VS.5, VS.6
United States
History
to 1877: USI.1, USI.5, USI.6, USI.7, USI.8
Civics
& Economics: CE.1,
CE.2, CE.3, CE.4, CE.5, CE.6, CE.7, CE.9
World
History II (Era VI: Age of Revolutions, 1650 to 1914 A.D.): WHII.6,
WHII.8
World
Geography: WG.1, WG.2, WG.3, WG.10, WG.12
Virginia
and
United
States
History:
VUS.1, VUS.4, VUS.5, VUS.6
Virginia
& United States Government: GOVT.1,
GOVT.2, GOVT.3, GOVT.4, GOVT.5, GOVT.6, GOVT.7, GOVT.8,
GOVT.9,
COVT.11,
GOVT.12, GOVT.17,
GOVT.18
Poplar
Forest
In
1773, Thomas Jefferson and his wife, Martha, inherited 4,819 acres from the
estate of John Wayles, Martha’s father.
Jefferson
designed an octagonal villa and in 1806 traveled to Bedford
County
to oversee the laying of the foundation.
Poplar Forest served as a retreat for Jefferson
and his grandchildren as well as a working plantation, generating cash income.
During Jefferson’s
residency, 1806 to 1823, the enslaved community ranged from 60 to 100 people.
The house and land was inherited by
Jefferson’s
grandson, Francis Eppes and later sold to William Cobbs.
Over the years, its acreage dwindled and the house underwent many
structural changes. In December
1983, the Corporation for Jefferson’s
Poplar Forest
was formed to rescue this landmark for the educational and cultural benefit of
the public. Today, Poplar Forest is a National Historic Landmark and a Virginia Historic Landmark.
Archaeology and
restoration continue. For more
information on Poplar Forest, call
(434) 525-1806.
Blue Ridge Public Television
Since
1966, Blue Ridge Public Television’s Education Department has provided
instructional television for western Virginia, and today broadcasts
SOL-correlated programs to 42 school divisions with 197,000 students.
BRPTV works on-site with all communities of learners, including teachers,
pre-schoolers, and adult learners. BRPTV sponsors Virginia's JASON Project, Reading
Rainbow Young Authors and Illustrators, and the McGlothlin Awards for Teaching
Excellence.
Virginia Department
of Education and the Virginia Virtual Advanced Placement School
The
Virtual
Advanced
Placement
School
was designed to provide educational opportunities to schools that may have too
few students to justify hiring a full-time teacher, are unable to find qualified
teachers, or for students with scheduling conflicts.
Advanced placement courses follow the College Board curriculum.
Foreign language courses are open to students from the seventh grade and
higher. The Department of Education
the Virginia
Virtual
Advanced
Placement
School
are pleased to make Thomas Jefferson's
Poplar
Forest
program available to students across the Commonwealth and nation.
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