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Getting to the Heart of World War I: Using Maps, Statistics, and Other Resources to Investigate the War

About this Chapter

Getting to the Heart of World War I illustrates a variety of ways to bring the scale of American involvement in World War I home to students through a resource easily accessible by classroom teachers, American Armies and Battlefields in Europe, also known as the Blue Book,by ABMC. Using maps, statistics, and written sources referenced in the Blue Book and other ABMC materials, teachers can find windows into the large themes of the war and help students grasp the importance of this war not only to world history, but to American lives.

The activities within this chapter will help students answer the following questions:

  • How can students use the Blue Book to practice close reading of written sources and identifying fact, opinion, and perspective in order to develop a richer understanding of the United States’ role in World War I?
  • How can students use maps and statistics from the Blue Book to describe and evaluate the United States’ contribution to the Meuse-Argonne offensive and World War I?
  • How can students synthesize information from the written narrative, maps, and statistics of the Blue Book to build an argument about the United States’ contribution to the outcome of World War I?

This chapter is part of the iBook Bringing the Great War Home: Teaching With The Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery, which was produced by ABMC in partnership with Learn NC and Virginia Tech. You can access individual elements of the iBook here on ABMC.gov, or you can download the full iBook through iTunes.

In this Chapter:

  • Section 1: Introduction
  • Section 2: Written Sources: Identifying Fact, Opinion, and Perspective
  • Section 3: Interpreting Maps as Sources
  • Section 4: Interpreting Statistics as Sources
  • Section 5: Synthesizing Multiple Sources to Build an Argument: Creating Infographics
  • Section 6: Conclusion
  • Section 7: Instructional Menu
  • Section 8: Bibliography
  • Section 9: Video Transcriptions
  • Section 10: Credits and Disclaimers

Chapter Materials

Preface and Acknowledgements_5.pdf

Section 2—Battling Interpretations Worksheet.pdf

Section 2—Why Fight Worksheet Answers.pdf

Section 3—Maps as Artifacts Gallery.pptx

Section 3—Reading Maps Gallery.pptx

Section 3—Reading Maps Handout.pdf

Section 4—A Death Gallery.pptx

Section 4—Graphs Gallery.pptx

Section 4—s of Death Worksheet.pdf

Section 4—Running the Numbers Packet.pdf

Section 4—Running the Numbers Worksheet Answers.pdf

Section 4—Statistics Examples.pptx

Section 4—The Yanks Are Coming Annotated.JPG

Section 4—The Yanks Are Coming.JPG

Section 5—Infographic Planning Sheet Rubric.pdf

Full Chapter Download

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Lesson Plans



Battling for Your Interpretation – How the U.S. Portrays Key Battles

About ABMC

The American Battle Monuments Commission operates and maintains 26 cemeteries and 31 federal memorials, monuments and commemorative plaques in 17 countries throughout the world, including the United States. 

Since March 4, 1923, the ABMC’s sacred mission remains to honor the service, achievements, and sacrifice of more than 200,000 U.S. service members buried and memorialized at our sites.Â