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"The
History of Maple Syrup Production" Lesson Plan
Keywords: sugaring,
maple tree, sap, history
Prepared by:
Heather Coder, Pennsylvania Homeschool
Lesson Plan
Grade Level: can be adapted for kindergarten through third grade
Total Time Required:
40-60 minutes, depending on grade level
Setting:
classroom or kitchen
Subjects: history,
science, literature
Topics: American
pioneers, Native Americans, Laura Ingalls Wilder, maple syrup production
Goals for the Lesson
- Students will explore
how maple sugaring began
- Students will experience
the ways the pioneers and Indians produced sugar.
- Students will appreciate
the importance of maple sugaring in the pioneer culture.
Materials Needed
- honey
- real maple syrup
- molasses
- brown sugar
- white sugar
- maple sugar or candy
if available
- pot of water
- large rocks that will
fit into the pot, which have been preheated in an oven
- hot pad
- Little House in
the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder, published by Harper
& Row
- sumac tree branch
section at least 0.5 inch in diameter and 4-5 inches long
- large nail
- carving knife
State Standards Addressed:
E & E Standards: Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources (4.2);
Agriculture and Society (4.4); Humans and the Environment (4.8)
Introductory Activity
- Provide small samples
of honey, maple syrup, molasses, brown sugar, white sugar and
other maple products for children to taste. Taste and compare
the different flavors and textures.
- Explain: When the
pioneers were settling the American frontier, they could not go
to the grocery store every day. Most of their supplies had to
be made, harvested from the land, or purchased during very rare
trips to a town to purchase supplies. As you have observed from
our taste testing, there are many different types of sugars. Molasses,
brown sugar and white sugar were available to early Americans
but they had to be purchased and were quite often very expensive.
White sugar was the most expensive and was reserved for only very
special occasions or guests. Since it was often a year or more
between trips to a town, they needed to make their own sugar.
Honey was collected whenever someone discovered a beehive but
honey was difficult to store and transport.
- The settlers learned
from the Indians how to tap the maple trees to make maple sugar.
The sap of the maple tree is high in sugar content. Making sugar
requires evaporating out the water and leaving the sugar behind.
The Indians collected maple sap by slashing the tree bark with
a hatchet and allowing the sap to flow down into a hollowed out
log. Then they would boil off the water by adding hot rocks to
the log container.
Activity
- This activity can
be observed by younger children. Older children can participate
in as much as you feel is safe for them. Fill a pot with water.
Using hot pads, carefully place the rocks, which have been heating
in the oven, into the pot. Observe how the steam rises from the
pot. Explain that the steam is water rising (evaporation), which
would leave the sugar in the pot if the process were continued.
- The Indians would
also leave the sap out in the cold to freeze. Then the ice could
be lifted off of the top, leaving a higher concentration of sugar
behind.
- The pioneers, over
time, improved the process. They developed the "spile."
The spile is a "faucet" placed in a small hole, drilled
into the tree. Early spiles were made from sumac branches.
Activity: Making a
Spile
- Use a 4- or 5-inch,
0.5-inch diameter sumac branch. Sumacs have a soft matter inside
of their branches. This matter can be hollowed out by inserting
a very hot large nail through the center and burning it out. Use
the hot pad! This will leave a "pipe." Carve one end
of the "pipe" into a point (like whittling a pencil
to sharpen it). This spile was hammered into a hole that had been
drilled into the tree. The sap would then flow out through the
spile.
- In the spring time,
the pioneers would tap their trees and collect the sap in buckets
each day. The sap would then be heated over an open fire in a
very large pot. The sap could then be boiled down to syrup or
boiled completely into sugar. Granulated sugar was much easier
to store and transport than syrup.
- Read chapters 7 and
8 ("The Sugar Snow" and "Dance at Grandpa's")
of Little House in the Big Woods. Laura Ingalls Wilder
grew up on the American frontier. She wrote a series of children's
books about her life. This selection is about making maple sugar
in the woods of Wisconsin during the late 1800s. Ask the students
to look at the pictures and identify the steps in the sugaring
process we have discussed. The students should observe the methods
Laura's family used and the importance of sugaring in her culture.
They can appreciate her excitement as her family gathers to celebrate
the sugaring season.
Evaluation: Make a
Picture Book
- Students can each
create their own picture books or this can be a group project.
Have the students make pictures of the following sugaring scenes:
- the Indian method
- making a spile
- the improved pioneer
method
- Indian and pioneer
children enjoying ways of eating maple sugar
References
Wilder, Laura Ingalls
(1953). Little House in the Big Woods. New York: Harper &
Row.
Davenport, Anni, Roy
Adams, and Sanford Smith (2000). From
the Woods: Maple Syrup a Taste of Nature. University Park,
Pa.: The Pennsylvania State University.
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