‹ Fences on the Range (unit home)
① Surface · Build the knowledge

Phase 1 — Build the knowledge

Before students can reason about the fence problem, they need the raw material: the words, the facts, and the geography. These three activities are fast and front-loaded — the goal is acquisition, not yet analysis.

🎯 By the end of Phase 1 students can use the key vocabulary, explain how the open range, the railroad, and barbed wire changed Texas ranching, and locate Texas regions where cattle, rail, and farms were.
Vocabulary & feedback · d 0.62§113.15(c)(10)(A), (c)(19)(A)

1 · Word bank & vocabulary sort

Introduce and let students sort the unit vocabulary. Sort twice: first by “words about the open range” vs. “words about fencing and change,” then by student-invented categories (feedback on their reasoning).

WordKid-friendly meaning
open rangewide unfenced land where cattle roamed and grazed freely
cattle drivemoving a big herd of cattle a long way, often to a railroad town
barbed wirefencing wire with sharp points, cheap enough to fence huge areas
homesteadland a family settles and farms to make their own
railroadtrain tracks that carried cattle and crops to faraway markets
supply & demandhow much of something there is, and how much people want it — this sets the price
droughta long time with little or no rain, so grass and water run short
windmilla machine that uses wind to pump underground water up to the surface
fence-cuttingsecretly cutting someone's barbed-wire fence during the range fights
free enterprisean economy where people choose what to make, buy, and sell
stakeholderanyone who is affected by a decision or has something at stake

📚 Background: Handbook of Texas · Barbed Wire ↗ · Handbook of Texas · Ranching ↗ — the words come from a real Texas story.

Jigsaw method · d 0.92§113.15(c)(4)(B), (c)(4)(C), (c)(19)(A)

2 · Jigsaw reading — How the range changed

Split the class into four expert groups, each studying one topic below, then re-mix into home groups where every topic is represented. Each expert teaches their group. (Jigsaw is one of the highest-leverage surface moves precisely because students must teach.)

🧩 Use the ACE Powered Jigsaw Organizer — experts capture their notes on it before teaching their home group: open the organizer ↗. New to running a jigsaw? See the teacher guides in the facilitator guide.

Sources for each expert group (free, reputable Texas history; confirm access through your district — links open in a new tab):

A · The open-range cattle economy & cattle drives

After the Civil War, cattle roamed unfenced land. Cowboys rounded them up and drove huge herds north to railroad towns to be sold — the cattle kingdom.

📄 Handbook of Texas · Cattle Trailing ↗
📄 Handbook of Texas · Chisholm Trail ↗

B · The railroad arrives (markets & towns)

New railroads reached Texas and carried cattle and crops to faraway markets. Towns grew up along the tracks, and ranchers no longer needed the long drive north.

📄 Handbook of Texas · Railroads ↗
🚂 Texas State Library · Railroad exhibit ↗

C · Barbed wire & windmills (fencing land & water)

Cheap barbed wire let people fence huge areas of land — and the water on it. Windmills pumped up underground water so ranches and farms could survive dry spells.

📄 Handbook of Texas · Barbed Wire ↗
📄 Handbook of Texas · Windmills ↗

D · Farmers & homesteaders move in

Families came to farm the land and fence their fields. Their fences and the ranchers' fences began to block cattle, trails, roads, and water — and trouble started.

📄 Handbook of Texas · Agriculture ↗
📄 Handbook of Texas · Homestead Law ↗

Check for understanding: each home group writes one sentence answering “Name one way the railroad or barbed wire changed how Texans used the land.”

Direct instruction · d 0.56§113.15(c)(6), (c)(7), (c)(11)(A–B)

3 · Map work — Texas regions & resources

Using a Texas map, students label the main physical regions (Coastal Plains, North Central Plains, Great Plains, and the mountains & basins of far West Texas). Then mark where the big things happened: open-range ranching on the dry western plains, the railroads and cattle towns, and the farms and homesteads on wetter, more settled land. Introduce land, water, and grass as limited resources — there is only so much to go around.

Quick write: “In West Texas, people mostly earned a living by ______ because the land was ______. The railroad reached ______, which helped them ______.”

🗺️ Maps & sources: Portal to Texas History · cattle ranch images ↗ · Texas Almanac · Texas history topics ↗

Surface check before moving on: can every student use the words open range, barbed wire, railroad, and supply & demand correctly, and give one real way the land use changed? If yes, go deep. If not, reteach — the problem in Phase 3 depends on it.

Aligned to (not reproduced from) 19 TAC Ch.113 §113.15; effect sizes from Visible Learning MetaX.

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