TPT
Total:
$0.00

Tombstone Pictures for Cemetery Lab. Human Population Studies

Rated 4.9 out of 5, based on 21 reviews
4.9 (21 ratings)
;
Strategic Science
1.5k Followers
Grade Levels
9th - 12th, Higher Education
Resource Type
Formats Included
  • Google Drive™ folder
Pages
200+
$10.00
$10.00
Share this resource
Report this resource to TPT
Strategic Science
1.5k Followers
Made for Google Drive™
This resource can be used by students on Google Drive or Google Classroom. To access this resource, you’ll need to allow TPT to add it to your Google Drive. See our FAQ and Privacy Policy for more information.

What educators are saying

So helpful to have this resource - I was able to give my students a wide variety of demographics that I would not have otherwise been able to.
My APES kids were unable to go to an actual cemetery for this lab so this was the next best thing. I bought little stands for several of the cards so it made them look like they were standing up. The variety in ages is great and the look of the different tombstones was interesting to my students.
Also included in
  1. These products will help your students learn about population. All can be done in class or with distance learning.Includes:Age Structure Diagram DrawingHuman Population Virtual LabPopulation Math Practice and assessmentsPopulation Biology at home lab with string
    Price $18.00Original Price $21.50Save $3.50
  2. This bundle includes these resources for AP Environmental Science including:Study guides with EXACTLY what students need to know for each unit (more detail than the CED). Full practice exam.Lots of labs and activitiesGraphic organizersMath practiceDiagram and chart notes for specific, difficult top
    Price $200.00Original Price $227.25Save $27.25

Description

This google drive contains a curated collection of original pictures of 400+ grave markers including some famous people in history, movies and music. I developed this collection over several months of travel. Students will discover historically accurate trends from this data about survivorship for people born before 1900 and after 1900. I have carefully created the collection to provide interest for students and also good data for students to discover trends through inquiry. Use these pictures with your own version of the cemetery lab or use a free version on my website. Links are below.

In this folder I have pictures from several cemeteries from across the United States.

  • Yosemite National Park. Several settlers and park officials are buried here next to what is now Yosemite Village. 
  • Boston’s Granary Burial Ground. This is the historic cemetery along the Freedom Trail. I have tombstone pictures of Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, the victims of the Boston massacre and other markers. This cemetery shows how fragile life was with a high mortality of babies and children and women during this time. 
  • Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles, CA.  I have pictures of several celebrity graves including Carrie Fisher (Princess Leia), Debbie Reynolds, Bette Davis, Lou Rawls, Dio, Liberace, Andy Gibb and more. It has the most data from 1900+ since it was not founded until the early 1900s. This cemetery is the most ethnically diverse and I have several in this collection of pictures to provide diversity and inclusion. 
  • Gold Country California: Angels Camp and Columbia, CA Cemeteries. These are old mining towns from the California gold rush. You will see a higher number of males than females in the data and also males dying at an early age. We can infer this is because of the danger involved in gold mining. You will also see some interesting markers such as “murdered” or “drowned”. These cemeteries also have a lot of European immigrants who immigrated to work in the mines. The cemeteries also have modern graves and are still in use.
  • Richmond, Kentucky. This cemetery was founded in the early 1800s, is still in use today and has the largest variety of tombstones found in this collection. Kentucky was a confederate state during the Civil War and there are a few pictures of graves reflecting this. You may wish to discuss these before using depending on your school community. 
  • New England. I have pictures of old cemeteries in Maine and New Hampshire with graves as early as the 1700s.

There are many versions of the cemetery lab for human population studies. The version I use is found for free on my website along with a description of how to do the lab:

Part 1:  https://teachingapscience.com/cemeterylabpartone/

Part 2: https://teachingapscience.com/human-population-5e-lab-using-cemetery-data-part-ii/

In order to see the accurate trends, it is recommended that students take data from all of the pictures in all the documents. Suggestions on how to divide this task about groups or pairs is included.

.

Total Pages
200+
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
N/A
Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT’s content guidelines.

Reviews

Questions & Answers

1.5k Followers