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Teacher's Guide: Suggestions for Active Learning

School, Metlakatla, Alaska, ca. 1856 - 1936 Building the Alaska Highway offers insights into topics in American history including the American frontier, life in Alaska, World War II, the Pacific theater, homeland defense, African Americans and the military, the impact of a wartime economy, natural resource management, infrastructure planning and development, and more. Use part or all of the film, or delve into the rich resources available on this Web site to learn more, either in a classroom or on your own.

The following activities are grouped into 4 categories: history, economics, geography, and culture. You can also read a few helpful hints for completing the activities.


History | Economics | Civics | Geography

  1. Turning the tide against the Axis
    The Alaska Highway officially opened on November 20, 1942, less than a year after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into World War II. By that time, early signs were starting to point to an Allied victory over the Axis Powers of Germany, Italy, and Japan.

    Divide the class into groups of two to three students each and assign each group one or more of the months from December 1941 through December 1942. For each of the months they have been assigned, the groups should select the two to four most important developments on any front in the war (Asia/Pacific, Europe, or Africa). Assemble the groups' selections into a timeline of the period. Then add to the timeline the major events in the creation of the Alaska Highway. If workers on the highway had received regular updates on the war's progress, which events would have raised their morale? Which would have hurt their morale?

  2. A soldier's daily life
    Read about the life of a highway builder. As a class, compare the daily lives of U.S. Army soldiers in World War II with those on duty in Iraq today. Divide the class into two groups -- one for World War II and one for the present day -- and have each group find the answers to such questions as: What food did the soldiers eat? Where did they sleep? What were their sources of world news? How did they communicate with family at home? What did they do for recreation? Summarize your findings in the form of a chart, or use them to write fictionalized letters or diary entries from soldiers in the two time periods.


History | Economics | Civics | Geography

  1. Alaska's economy today
    Visit the map on this site, The Last Frontier, and tour the Alaskan locations shown, paying special attention to locations in the "Economy" category. Working in small groups, choose a major industry in Alaska, such as fishing, tourism, or oil, and find out more about it: Is the industry dominated by a few companies? How many people does it employ? Who buys the goods or services it provides? Present your findings to the class.

  2. Oil drilling in A.N.W.R.?
    Recently, Congress has debated whether to allow drilling for oil and natural gas in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (also known by its acronym, A.N.W.R.). To examine the arguments on both sides of this controversial issue, divide the class into four groups. The first group should review the Bush administration's reasons for supporting the proposal. The second group should review statements made by members of Congress during past congressional debates on the issue. The third group should examine materials issued by non-profit organizations on both sides of the debate. The fourth group should review news media accounts of the issue.

    When all groups have completed their research, combine their findings to prepare three posters: one giving an overview of the issue (What and where is A.N.W.R.? What is the proposal in question? etc.), one listing arguments in favor of the proposal, and one listing arguments against it.


History | Economics | Civics | Geography

  1. African American soldiers
    Read about the U.S. Army and matters of race during World War II. Choose a topic related to African Americans in the armed forces to research. You may choose a topic connected with World War II (such as the Tuskegee Airmen) or with another era, such as the 54th Massachusetts Infantry in the Civil War, the "Buffalo Soldiers" of the American West, individual stories of African Americans who have won the Congressional Medal of Honor, or the career of Colin Powell (the first African American chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff).

    Now imagine you are writing a book on this topic. What would make the most effective introduction to your book -- in other words, what kind of opening to your story would likely prove most interesting to readers? Write your introduction, and then read it to the class. Do your classmates agree that it grabs their attention?

  2. Homeland security, then and now
    Read the film description and about Japan's invasion of the Aleutian Islands. Just as the Roosevelt administration ordered the construction of the Alaska Highway to respond to the threat to American security posed by the Pearl Harbor attack, the Bush administration took a number of steps -- from tightening airport security to launching military action overseas to creating the Department of Homeland Security -- to respond to the September 11 terrorist attacks. Which of these steps have made you feel safer from terrorist attack? Which have not? Are there other steps you think should be taken to reduce the risk of terrorism? Write a 750-word essay expressing your viewpoint on this issue.


History | Economics | Civics | Geography

  1. An alternate route for the highway?
    Take the Online Poll on whether the Alaska Highway should have been built along a Seattle-Vancouver-Prince George route instead of the Edmonton-Fairbanks route that was selected, and read a historian's comments, Planning the Highway Route, on how the route was chosen.

    On a blank map of the region, trace the route of the Alaska Highway and the alternate route suggested in the reading. Label the major towns or cities through which each route passes, along with the population of each. Now compare the two routes: does this map change your answer to the Online Poll? Why or why not?

  2. Jack London's tales of the North
    Read about travelers to Alaska. Another notable visitor to Alaska was the writer Jack London, who traveled to the Yukon during the gold rush of 1897. London's classic novels and stories, such as The Call of the Wild and "To Build a Fire," are some of the best-known accounts of life in the far North.

    Read one of London's stories set in the Yukon. Then select a passage -- from one paragraph to one page long -- that you think gives the most vivid picture of the challenges of life in the region. Read your selection to the class.

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