WHERE WE REPORT


SECTIONS


This lesson was created by Jeffrey Webb, an eighth grade teacher in West Virginia, as part of the fall 2025 Pulitzer Center Teacher Fellowship program. It is designed for facilitation across approximately three class periods.

For more lessons created by Pulitzer Center Teacher Fellows in this cohort, click here.

Throughout the academic year, I try to show my students that we do matter, even in our small state of one-and-a-half million people. I center stories about West Virginia and then try to show how that story has importance both for our state as well as for people beyond our borders. That is the approach I took here with this lesson for the Pulitzer Center.

Jeffrey Webb

Lesson Overview

How do additional sources of information help us understand a historical event? Many students often learn about the past from a secondary source like an article or textbook. This lesson encourages students to go deeper and consider other sources and perspectives when learning about the past.

In this lesson, students will read a news article to learn about West Virginia’s role in developing the atomic bomb. Students will then watch a video from the Pulitzer Center to learn how Japanese individuals were affected by the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. By comparing the two sources, students will better understand that seeking out additional sources of information can deepen their understanding about a topic and provide a more well-rounded picture of the past.

Essential Questions

  • How do additional sources of information help us understand a historical event?
  • What were some of the social, political, and economic impacts of the United States’ creation of the atomic bomb?

Performance Task

Documentary poetry often draws upon and weaves together sources to create a poem. Students will use their Cornell notes and what they learned from the resources to create their own documentary poem about the impact of the atomic bomb. 

Assessment

Observation during class discussion and a checklist rubric for the performance task will be used to assess student learning.

Notes on Context & Content Advisory

This lesson contains graphic descriptions of violence.

This lesson was originally created for an 8th grade West Virginia Studies class. The news story from WBOY was included because it specifically discussed West Virginia’s involvement in the production of the atomic bomb. If the lesson is being delivered to students in other states or territories, it could be beneficial to research your own local connection to the atomic bomb and incorporate that history into the lesson accordingly.