109 pages • 3 hours read
Katherine PatersonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Use these questions or activities to help gauge students’ familiarity with and spark their interest in the context of the work, giving them an entry point into the text itself.
Short Answer
1. What was the Industrial Revolution? How did this period of dramatic social and economic change impact the American way of life?
Teaching Suggestion: You may decide to provide your students with these links to explore as part of their prereading homework assignments, assign them computer lab time for the same purpose, or bring up these resources on a smart board or other projection system in your classroom. Many students will have a familiarity with this period in history, but perhaps not the ways in which it directly pertains to the events of Lyddie.
2. What were conditions like for children and young adults who joined the industrial workforce during this period of history? What opportunities, challenges, and dangers did they face? What were the expectations and responsibilities placed upon these working children, and how do those duties differ from what is expected of children today?
Teaching Suggestion: This second question narrows the approach to child labor and the experiences of textile mill girls specifically, offering an orientation to the practice of allowing children in the workforce and defining the parameters under which Lyddie lives during her time at the Concord Corporation.
3. How did industrial workers, including children, begin to oppose the exploitative and unsafe conditions of their employment? What did that opposition look like, and what were the consequences of taking on these large corporations?
Teaching Suggestion: This question and the accompanying materials prepare students for one of the most important threads that runs through the narrative: the issue of workers’ rights and the developing resistance to changing conditions in the mill. Creating an awareness of these issues will prepare students to understand parts of the story in which workers at the Concord Corporation begin to resent and push back against their employer.
Personal Connection Prompt
This prompt can be used for in-class discussion, exploratory free-writing, or reflection homework before reading the novel.
Imagine that you will be moving away from your home to take a job in an industrial setting in the 1840s. Which industry job would be the most logical choice for you based upon where you live and any applicable skills you may have? What might you be wondering about as you prepare to take this step? What do you think would be the biggest adjustment for you? What would you be most worried about? What aspects of your personal experience up to this point would be an asset in your new role? What might hinder your ability to adjust to the rigors associated with the strenuous work conditions in the industrial setting?
Teaching Suggestion: You might want to allow your students to draw upon the previous resources in this prereading section as they develop their response to these questions. This is an opportunity for them to develop empathy by placing themselves in the position of a hypothetical character in the world of Lyddie. Your students will likely be the same age as some of the characters in the book, and this peer-to-peer comparison will deepen their engagement with the text.
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By Katherine Paterson