Posts

Showing posts from August, 2010

Great American Communicators: Sequoyah

Image
Great American Communicators Sequoyah: Inventor of the Cherokee Syllabary Sequoyah, born in the 1770’s, was a Cherokee Indian. His mother was full blood Indian, and his father was probably at least half-white. His English name is Geroge Gist or Guess. Sequoyah became an excellent blacksmith and silversmith and operated a trading business. He also had a drinking problem, but he gave up alcohol when he saw how it was ruining his life. Sequoyah wanted the Indian people to have a way to read “talking leaves” like the English speaking people did. He never spoke English, and he never understood how the English alphabet worked, although he had seen some books. Facing much opposition and taking 12 years away from his business, he invented the Cherokee syllabary. This is like an alphabet, but there is a character for each syllable, not for each individual phonetic sound. He had originally tried to do a character for each word, like in Chinese. Sequoyah used 85 characters in his syllabary. In or...

Great American Communicators: Benjamin Franklin

This is another handout from my series on Great American Communicators that I taught to my students in the middle school English class in a large home school co-op. Benjamin Franklin’s C ontributions to Communications Benjamin Franklin was born in 1706, the 15th of the 20 Franklin children! There must have been a whole lot of communicating going on in his house when he was a kid! He stopped going to school when he was 10 (his parents couldn’t afford it) but he LOVED to read! He apprenticed as a printer -- but he hated working for his brother James and so he ran away. His pseudonym (false name) for writing letters to his brother’s paper was “Mrs. Silence Dogood”! At age 24 he started the Pennsylvania Gazette newspaper. He created the Poor Richard’s Almanack from 1732 to 1757. It was a yearly book with a calendar, list of events, advice, witty sayings, weather predictions, etc. He founded the first public library in Philadelphia. He established the postal system. He founded a...

Great American Communicators: Thomas Jefferson

Image
In the middle school English class which I taught for a large home school co-op, I used to do a series on Great American Communicators the years we studied American literature.  I featured about a dozen men and women who had made significant contributions to American communications either by what they spoke or wrote themselves, or what they did to improve communication for others.  Some of them included John Winthrop (Puritan pastor), Jonathan Edwards (preacher in the Great Awakening), Benjamin Franklin (statesman, newspaperman, inventor, library and college founder, etc.), Noah Webster (creator of the American dictionary and spelling books), Alexander Graham Bell (inventor of the telephone and teacher of the deaf), Sequoyah (inventor of the Cherokee syllabary for written language), and  Phillis Wheatley  (slave poet).  Here is what I gave my students in their handouts for Thomas Jefferson. Great American Communicators: Thomas ...