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.
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).
| Word | Kid-friendly meaning |
|---|---|
| open range | wide unfenced land where cattle roamed and grazed freely |
| cattle drive | moving a big herd of cattle a long way, often to a railroad town |
| barbed wire | fencing wire with sharp points, cheap enough to fence huge areas |
| homestead | land a family settles and farms to make their own |
| railroad | train tracks that carried cattle and crops to faraway markets |
| supply & demand | how much of something there is, and how much people want it — this sets the price |
| drought | a long time with little or no rain, so grass and water run short |
| windmill | a machine that uses wind to pump underground water up to the surface |
| fence-cutting | secretly cutting someone's barbed-wire fence during the range fights |
| free enterprise | an economy where people choose what to make, buy, and sell |
| stakeholder | anyone 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.
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.)
Sources for each expert group (free, reputable Texas history; confirm access through your district — links open in a new tab):
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 ↗
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 ↗
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 ↗
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.”
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 ↗
Aligned to (not reproduced from) 19 TAC Ch.113 §113.15; effect sizes from Visible Learning MetaX.