Supporting Question 3

In Supporting Question 2 activities, students examined some significant adaptations of Abenaki lifeways in response to physical and social environmental factors in their world—with a focus on food, clothing, shelter, and art-making.

Supporting Question 3 focuses students’ discussions and writing on what they have learned and are learning about American Abenaki cultural preservation and cultural identity. Resilience, adaptation, and cultural values are some of the many ways local Abenaki people have maintained their cultural identity from colonial times to today.

Supporting Question 3
How have the American Abenaki people demonstrated resilience and resourcefulness in maintaining their culture from colonial times to today?

Supporting Question 1 presented material about Abenaki relationships with the environment, natural resources, and their neighbors.

Assessment Objective

Students can ask and answer informed questions and write about how the American Abenaki people have maintained their cultural identity.

Standards Alignment

The following C3 standard aligns with all activities for Supporting Question 3 (SQ3). See “ Standards Alignment” for further details.

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Standards Alignment

The following C3 standard aligns with the activities for Supporting Question 3 (SQ3). See “Section 4: Standards Alignment” for further details.

C3 Framework for Social Studies

Standard Assessed for Grades 3–5

D2.His.3.3-5. Generate questions about individuals and groups who have shaped significant historical changes and continuities.

Beginning Progressing Proficient Proficient with Distinction
I can create and ask an informed question about the American Abenaki people. I can create and ask an informed question about how the American Abenaki have maintained their cultural identity over time. I can create and ask an informed question about how the American Abenaki have maintained their cultural identity over time. I can accurately answer a question about how the American Abenaki have maintained their culture over time. I can create and ask informed questions about how the American Abenaki have maintained their cultural identity over time. I can accurately answer questions about how the American Abenaki have maintained their culture over time.

Supporting Question 3 can also be aligned to the following sampling of standards and guide educators when integrating the American Abenaki Curriculum with other content areas and grade levels. In addition, you will find Common Core English Languages Arts standards alignment for each activity under SQ3.

Potential C3 Standards for Other Grade Bands

Grades K–2

D2.His.3.K-2. Generate questions about individuals and groups who have shaped a significant historical change.

Grades 6–8

D2.His.3.6-8. Use questions generated about individuals and groups to analyze why they, and the developments they shaped, are seen as historically significant.

Grades 9–12

D2.His.3.9-12.Use questions generated about individuals and groups to assess how the significance of their actions changes over time and is shaped by the historical context.

Potential Alignment: American Association of School Librarians (AASL) Standards

Learners

I.D.1. Enacting new understanding through real-world connections.

V.A.3. Engaging in inquiry-based processes for personal growth.

VI.B.2. Acknowledging authorship and demonstrating respect for the intellectual property of others.

School Librarians

VI.D.3. School librarians support learners’ engagement with information to extend personal learning by: Championing and modeling safe, responsible, ethical, and legal information behaviors.

School Libraries

VI.A.1. The school serves as a context in which the school librarian ensures that the school community is aware of the guidelines for safe, ethical, and legal use of information by: Educating the school community on the ethical use of information and the intellectual property of others.

Potential Alignment: International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) Standards

Students

1.3.b. Evaluate the accuracy, validity, bias, origin, and relevance of digital content.

1.6.a. Choose the appropriate platforms and digital tools for meeting the desired objectives of their creation or communication.

Educators

2.3.a. Create experiences for learners to make positive, socially responsible contributions and build inclusive communities online.

2.5.c. Apply evidence-based instructional design principles to create innovative and equitable digital learning environments that support learning.

2.6.a. Foster a culture where students take ownership of their learning goals and outcomes in both independent and group settings.

Educational Leaders

3.1.c. Model the use of technology in inclusive, healthy ways to solve problems and strengthen community.

3.2.c. Evaluate progress on the strategic plan, make course corrections, measure impact and scale effective approaches for using technology to transform learning.

3.2.e. Share lessons learned, best practices, challenges and the impact of learning with technology with other education leaders who want to learn from this work.

Historical Context: Supporting Question 3

The following information comes from the “Deep Roots, Strong Branches” traveling exhibition, Vermont Abenaki Artists Association, curated by Vera Longtoe Sheehan (2025e). Share as much or as little with your students needed to successfully complete the activities that follow.

State-Recognition Sheds Light on Cultural Preservation

“We arrived at this point because of so many people that frankly persevered in light of defeat time and time again.” — Gov. Peter Shumlin, upon signing the Vermont State-Recognition bills for the Elnu and Nulhegan Abenaki Tribes. April 22, 2011 Abenaki State-Recognition Day for Koasek and Missisquoi, May 7th, 2012. (Left to right—Elnu Chief…

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Cultural Values as a Means of Cultural Preservation

Abena Songbird Mural Event Unveiling. “Nd’ôlemôwzibna” (“We Continue to Live”) presents a timeless seasonal cycle of traditional activities, including maple sugaring, gardening, canoeing, basketmaking, snow snake game, and in the center, a drumming circle. (Gould, 2023) “The center of the Abenaki experience is not ourselves, it is each other…” For the Abenaki, the Seven Generations…

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Four generations of Elnu Abenaki Tribe citizens gather at the Tribal Headquarters for the annual Spring Thaw social. Courtesy of Melody Mackin. (Mackin, 2025)

Formative Performance Tasks

Students will address Supporting Question 3 in two parts. In Part 1 they will practice asking informed questions about the American Abenaki people. Students may need scaffolds or support to generate informed questions. In Part 2, they will use what they have learned to answer questions about how the American Abenaki have maintained their culture. To do so, they may need to conduct additional research or they can rely on previously recorded notes compiled on their research tracker worksheets, worksheets from the “Writing Informational Text” activity, “Give One, Get One!” worksheets, graphic organizers, and feedback from their Peer Review Partners.

Part 1: Generate Questions

SQ3 Asking Informed Questions

This is the only activity in Part 1 and it is required for successful completion of the Inquiry Design Model. Overview Students will use what they have learned from Supporting Questions 1 and 2 to craft informed questions about how the American Abenaki have maintained their culture. An informed question is based on factual evidence…

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SQ3 Extension Activities

Revisit Students’ Questions Revisit students’ questions from Generating Curiosity under Staging the Compelling Question. Have them now try to answer those questions using evidence from the original image of the “Fish-In” and what they have learned in the Supporting Question 2 activities to explain their thinking. Use Research Tracker Sheets Throughout this learning journey, students…

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Part 2: Using Evidence to Construct Answers

The goal of Part 2 is to have students answer questions about how Abenaki people have maintained their culture over time. Choose at least one of the following activities, all designed to contribute to assessing Supporting Question 3:

  • Using Sentence Stems and Sentence Frames
  • Using Peer Review Partners
  • Class Debrief and Record

SQ3 Using Sentence Stems and Frames

Overview Sentence stems are the beginning parts of sentences for students to complete. Sentence frames are complete sentences with words and terms missing that a student will fill in. Both can serve as a structured starting point for thoughtful student discussions, reflections, and responses and are especially helpful to ENL students who are in the…

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SQ3 Using Peer Review Partners

Overview The goal of Peer Review Partners is to create a feedback loop in which students offer each other advice, revise their written materials, and overcome obstacles. This approach can be especially helpful for writing assignments requiring students to create several drafts. Take into consideration that allowing students to work with partners will require several…

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SQ3 Class Debrief and Record

Overview Throughout this curriculum, students have conducted research and recorded evidence about their findings on either the My Research or the Track My Research and Notes worksheets. For this activity, they will prepare for the discussion by gathering and reviewing their evidence and tracking their citations. Then the teacher will facilitate a whole-class debriefing and…

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