By Alexis and William
We made family trees for part of our immigration study. Each student made
their own family tree. It involved talking to family, we did it over Thanksgiving
break so we got to talk to family members we don’t see often including
grandparents, aunts, and uncles. We also used Ancestry.com for our research.
It gives you information about your family. We made our trees out of paper,
cardboard, poster board and even some real wood! We learned about our
families and our classmate’s families. A lot of the kids in 4-5 are part Irish and
English. There were some surprises for some of us!
This year we made Family Trees in 4-5. People learned a lot about their families. Some people made 3D trees but some people made them on paper. They were very fun to see how people made them. People had very good questions and we learned a lot about our classmates. We also noticed that some things were the same from people's past and to the people we interviewed for our immigration stories.
We made family trees for part of our immigration study. Each student made
their own family tree. It involved talking to family, we did it over Thanksgiving
break so we got to talk to family members we don’t see often including
grandparents, aunts, and uncles. We also used Ancestry.com for our research.
It gives you information about your family. We made our trees out of paper,
cardboard, poster board and even some real wood! We learned about our
families and our classmate’s families. A lot of the kids in 4-5 are part Irish and
English. There were some surprises for some of us!
Lucy Ellen and Mercy
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