Ken Burns Classroom Launches on PBS LearningMedia

This week, PBS announced the launch of Ken Burns Classroom on PBS LearningMedia – a one-stop online destination for free teaching and learning resources inspired by Ken Burns’s renowned documentaries. Created for 6-12th grade educators, the new hub houses a full library of classroom-ready content – aligned to state and national standards – to help students further explore the complex historical events and issues illustrated in Ken Burns’s films.

Ken Burns Classroom on PBS LearningMedia is a one-stop online destination for free teaching and learning resources inspired by Ken Burns’s renowned documentaries. Created for 6-12th grade educators, the new hub houses a full library of classroom-ready content – aligned to state and national standards – to help students further explore the complex historical events and issues illustrated in Ken Burns’s films.

Ken Burns and his collaborators have been creating historical documentaries for more than forty years. During this time, his signature style has brought documents, images and video footage to life for viewers around the globe. These films, and the supplementary learning content on Ken Burns Classroom, encourage students to ask thought-provoking questions while introducing new ideas and perspectives.  

“It’s wonderful to see how educators across the country are using our films in their classrooms. By presenting them alongside interactive tools and lesson plans, PBS LearningMedia is helping students better understand the connection between historical events and the present,” said Ken Burns. “Through these resources, my hope is that we can further interest young people in the power of history and help them better understand the complexity of issues we face today, including the connection to the past and their relevance to the future.”

Ken Burns Classroom features hundreds of video clips, lesson plans, activity suggestions, discussion questions, handouts, and interactives to help educators integrate the films into their classroom instruction. This will include important historical events, people and moments-in-time such as international wars, the Roosevelt family and the Industrial Age. The hub will kick off with documentaries including “Country Music,” “The Vietnam War,” “The Central Park Five,” “The Dust Bowl,” “The West,” “The Civil War,” “Jackie Robinson,” “Lewis & Clark,” “Prohibition,” “The Roosevelts,” and “The War,” and more will continue to be added in the coming months.

“Ken Burns documentaries are fantastic. They bring difficult to understand moments in history to life in a way that other classroom methods can’t,” said David Olson, high school social studies educator and PBS Digital Innovator. “The interactive tools and lesson plans in the Ken Burns collection on PBS LearningMedia are indispensable. They help me create hands-on teaching moments and allow my students to more easily grasp the intricacies of American history.”

PBS LearningMedia, a partnership between PBS and WGBH, is an online destination that offers free access to thousands of resources from partners and PBS stations who work to make them available to teachers in local communities across the country. Nearly one million unique users visit the website each month to access free, high-quality, classroom-ready resources.

All Ken Burns Classroom resources and content are publicly available and can be accessed by visiting PBS LearningMedia at https://pbslearningmedia.org/kenburns.

Content in Ken Burns Classroom was funded in part of members of The Better Angels Society.

Q&A: Ken Burns Discusses Power of Country Music

Ken Burns spoke to West Virginia Public Broadcasting about making the film, “Country Music: A Film by Ken Burns,” the impact it had on him, and what he has come to understand about the power of country music.

As part of a national 30-city promotional tour crisscrossing the United States, West Virginia Public Broadcasting will present a special screening of the upcoming PBS documentary, “Country Music: A Film by Ken Burns,” on Tuesday, April 16, at 7:30 p.m., at the Lyell B. Clay Concert Theatre in the Creative Arts Center at West Virginia University in Morgantown. 

The film’s writer and producer, Dayton Duncan, and producer Julie Dunfey, will showcase an exclusive selection of excerpts from the film specific to the Mountain State’s rich country music heritage. Beloved West Virginia country music artists Kathy Mattea and Charlie McCoy, both of whom are featured in the documentary, will perform live with the Mountain Stage Band.  

Tickets are available at wvpublic.org/countrymusic. All tickets are general admission and available for $13 plus applicable fees. Doors will open at 7 p.m. and early arrivals will be treated to a performance by the WVU Bluegrass and Old Time Band in the lobby prior to the show.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

Was country music an interest of yours? How did this project get started? What prompted this idea?

We’re always looking for good stories in American history. And now in retrospect, having spent the last eight years of my life immersed in the story of country music, I can’t imagine a better story in American history to tell than this one. It’s complex. It’s very emotional. It proves some of the things that I think our country is so beset with now: we’re into making distinctions about the “other” and forgetting that we’re all kind of in the same boat together.

Country music is the music of people who felt that their stories haven’t been told. And so it’s been our privilege to tell those stories and to tell them in an interconnected way. And to also show that there are are no real borders between the various musical genres, and that country music isn’t one thing and never has been one thing.

Eight years is a long time. Can you just give us a little bit of insight into what that process is like? 

This is what we do. And it involves deep dives; it takes a lot of time. I mean, the only place this could be done is in public broadcasting and PBS because of the amount of time required. It’s usually labor intensive. We spent a long time researching for that rare photograph that has never been seen, for that rare home movie or newsreel footage that has never been seen before, not because we get to advertise that, but because it fits into a complex story that we’re trying to tell. And so that takes time.

Then the story itself is a huge sort of complex, multi-generation novel with dozens of dozens of characters whose stories have to be intertwined, whose values have to be calibrated and just the right way. So, it’s nothing that you can just sort of churn out. When the script comes, we spend two or three times just looking at it as a document and allowing scholars to comment. We had a wonderful advisory board, including Kathy Mattea.

And then after three or four drafts at that, making the writing better, then I read it as the narrator. We sort of listened to it as a radio play, if you will. We do what call that a “blind assembly.” We do two of those and we make huge, substantial, significant changes — cutting it down and cutting it down.

Art is always about subtraction. So we have, you’re talking to me in New Hampshire, and we make maple syrup here and it takes 40 gallons of sap to make one gallon of maple syrup. So we have a 16 and a half hour film. So if you multiply that times 40 or 50, you understand all the “negative space” of creation, if you will, what’s not in the film. The 100,000 photographs that we looked at, the 175 hours of interviews to have maybe the existing four or five that are in the final 16 hours.

But you can’t do a good job that will last and be able to be used in classrooms and to be a favorite on PBS unless you’ve done that kind of deep dive. It isn’t just sort of regurgitating and repeating superficial conventional wisdoms, as we do in our contemporary political discussions, it’s more nuanced.

"…how many times I have just felt like the story we're telling performed on me a kind of open heart surgery…"

You’ve made so many of these epic films. What is it about this one about country music that you’re going to remember in years to come?

The country songwriter Harlan Howard said the country music is “three chords and the truth.” That means it’s very simple, elemental music. Anybody can sort of master those records. It lacks the sophistication and elegance of classical music or jazz. But it also lacks its complexity and difficulty to understand and find relationship to. And the truth that is telling in those simple chords is the elemental stuff of life that everybody — even if they’re not a country music fan (which we hope to convert) — these are the things that we all feel. The the joy of birth, the sadness of death, falling in love, trying to stay in love, losing love, loneliness, redemption — this is all stuff that happens to everybody. And somewhere there is a country song that exactly fits who you are at that moment.

We just want to parade the best of that tradition out and say listen to the mastery of of Hank Williams who says “I’m so lonesome I can cry.” It just seems so elemental. Or Dolly Parton — a chorus of her most celebrated song goes, “I will always love you, I will always love you, I will always love you.” But when you hear that song, when you hear her remarkable voice, and when you hear the circumstances of why she wrote that, which is what we do as storytellers is add dimension and complexity and undertow to this to the narrative, it has more meaning.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDqqm_gTPjc

And so I think for me over the eight years, the most surprising thing is how many times I have just felt like the story we’re telling performed on me, a kind of open heart surgery and expose me too powerful, powerful art. I mean, Hank Williams was called the “Hillbilly Shakespeare” and Merle Haggard was called the “poet of the common man.” We dissect not just the history of the music and this types and the big stars, but songs themselves that travel unchanged through time and songs that morph into something else. And also, what the act of songwriting is about whether it’s Kris Kristofferson, or Dolly Parton (one of the greatest ever), or Merle Haggard or Johnny Cash, or the early pioneers, Jimmie Rodgers, the Carter Family and Hank Williams. So, it’s a thrilling ride and so completely, as older films are, utterly American.

I understand that you have some roots in West Virginia?

My great grandfather was from Pocahontas County, from Hillsboro. And my mother was from Clarksburg. She was a Smith and she married and moved to Chicago. So I’ve got aunts and uncles who retired to Lewisburg, next door to Pocahontas County. I’ve got West Virginia in my blood. Most of my dad’s people come from just over across the border from Pocahontas in Bath County, Virginia. There’s a Burnsville there. So you’re talking to a native son in a way.

Credit Courtesy of Bristol Historical Association
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Downtown Bristol, c.1927.

In West Virginia, in Appalachia, storytelling is so much a part of who we are. Do you reflect on that often? Do you ever think about that?

Well, that’s this is what our first episode is about. You have this centuries-old tradition, millennia-old tradition, people talking to one another, by sitting on the front porch or hearing the music coming across the holler from somebody else’s house. And radio then helps spread that and mechanical reproduction helps be you to be able to purchase and understand what that music means. Dolly says it really well in our film: it’s carrying the news. And it’s not just the news at the moment is the news across generations. So she’s talking about songs like the Mule Skinner Blues. In our film this song is sung first by its composer, Jimmie Rodgers, and then later by the Maddox, Brothers and Rose, and then in his debut at the Grand Ole Opry, Bill Monroe, the father of bluegrass plays it. And then later on Dolly plays it. You just see this family heirloom being passed from generation to generation to generation.

Credit Courtesy of Les Leverett Collection
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Bill Monroe on the Grand Ole Opry, Nashville, c.1958.

So we’re looking at the at this wonderful, incredibly complex and interrelated [subject] and at a time when everybody wants to say, “No, I’m different from you, I vote for this party, you vote for that party.” You begin to see the ways in which we’re all the same, that 99.99 percent of our genetic makeup is the same, and that the same percentage wants the same things for the kids, and their posterity, and for their country.

And so this is a way to continue stomping your foot on the front porch, and suddenly realizing that stranger knows the same song as you and that makes them less of a stranger. That’s the whole purpose of art: communication and the transfer of emotion. It’s the purpose of music, which is as Wynton Marsalis says the “art of the invisible,” the only art form that’s invisible, and the fastest art form. It works on us so quickly, that we’re hoping that the addition of country music helps us return to a much more open kind of conversation and civil discourse that permits us to remember that an alloy is always stronger than its constituent metals. And then if we just returned back to that kind of pure form of us, against them, we’ve lost the real of us, which is the civilized meaning of us, which is all of us together. That’s what country does.

Ken Burns has been making documentary films for over 40 years.  Since the Academy Award-nominated Brooklyn Bridge in 1981, Ken has gone on to direct and produce some of the most acclaimed historical documentaries ever made, including The Civil War; Baseball; Jazz; The Statue of Liberty; Huey Long; Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery; Frank Lloyd Wright; Mark Twain; Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson; The War; The National ParksAmerica’s Best Idea; The Roosevelts: An Intimate History; Jackie Robinson; Defying the Nazis: The Sharps’ War; The Vietnam War and, most recently, The Mayo Clinic: Faith – Hope – Science.

Future film projects include country music, Ernest Hemingway, Muhammad Ali, the Holocaust and the United States, Benjamin Franklin, Lyndon B. Johnson, the American Buffalo, Leonardo da Vinci, the American Revolution, the history of crime and punishment in America, the history of Reconstruction, and Winston Churchill, among others.

Ken’s films have been honored with dozens of major awards, including 15 Emmy Awards, two Grammy Awards and two Oscar nominations; and in September of 2008, at the News & Documentary Emmy Awards, Ken was honored by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences with a Lifetime Achievement Award.

WVPB presents special sneak peek of ‘Country Music: A Film by Ken Burns’

Buy Tickets – April 16 at 7:30 p.m. – Creative Arts Center in Morgantown

Event to showcase live performances by legendary Mountain State artists Kathy Mattea, Charlie McCoy

As part of a national 30-city promotional tour crisscrossing the United States, West Virginia Public Broadcasting will present a special screening of the upcoming PBS documentary, “Country Music: A Film by Ken Burns,” on Tuesday, April 16, at 7:30 p.m., at the Lyell B. Clay Concert Theatre in the Creative Arts Center at West Virginia University in Morgantown.

The film’s writer and producer, Dayton Duncan, and producer Julie Dunfey, will showcase an exclusive selection of excerpts from the film specific to the Mountain State’s rich country music heritage. Beloved West Virginia country music artists Kathy Mattea and Charlie McCoy, both of whom are featured in the documentary, will perform live with the Mountain Stage Band.

All tickets are general admission and available for $13 plus applicable fees. Doors will open at 7 p.m. and early arrivals will be treated to a performance by the WVU Bluegrass and Old Time Band in the lobby prior to the show.

Get Tickets Here

Chuck Roberts, WVPB executive director and CEO, said an event of this magnitude wouldn’t be possible without support from PBS and collaboration with WVU’s College of Creative Arts and Reed College of Media. He said everyone involved in organizing the event recognizes its importance.

“Country music has flowed through West Virginia since before the genre had a formal name,” Roberts said. “Our history is steeped with a respect and love for this kind of music and it is ingrained in who we are. We are honored to be able to present a fantastic event celebrating the film and our state’s unique place in country music history with the help of our partners and sponsors.

“I encourage everyone to come out for this special experience. There is really no better place West Virginians should be that Tuesday evening in April,” Roberts said.

Burns, Duncan and Dunfey spent eight years researching and producing the film, an eight-part, 16-hour documentary premiering on West Virginia Public Broadcasting television September 15 at 8 p.m. They conducted interviews with more than 100 people, including 40 members of the Country Music Hall of Fame. Written by Duncan, the documentary chronicles country music’s early days, from southern Appalachia’s songs of struggle, heartbreak and faith to the rollicking Western swing of Texas, California’s honky-tonks and Nashville’s ”Grand Ole Opry.” Duncan said he can’t wait to tell the tale of West Virginia’s impact on country music.

“West Virginia — its artists, its radio stations, and its fans –– has had a significant influence on the evolution of country music,” Duncan said. “We were thrilled to interview Little Jimmie Dickens, Connie Smith, Kathy Mattea and Charlie McCoy to tell their stories — and the life of Hawkshaw Hawkins is an incredibly moving tale. I’m particularly happy that Kathy and Charlie will be there to perform as well.

Credit PBS PHOTO
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Julie Dunfey, Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan spent eight years researching and producing the film, “Country Music: A Film by Ken Burns.” West Virginia Public Broadcasting will present West Virginia-specific clips from the film during a special Morgantown screening that also will feature live performances by Mountain State music legends Kathy Mattea and Charlie McCoy.

ABOUT THE PRODUCERS

Dayton Duncan is the lead producer and writer of “Country Music” and has been involved with the work of Ken Burns for more than 25 years on films including “The West,” “Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery,” “Mark Twain,” “Horatio’s Drive,” “The National Parks: America’s Best Idea” and “The Dust Bowl.” Duncan also has served as a consultant or consulting producer on all of Burns’s other documentaries, beginning with “The Civil War” and including “Baseball,” “Jazz,” and “The War,” among others. He has authored 13 books, worked in both New Hampshire and national politics.

Julie Dunfey began her association with Ken Burns as a co-producer of “The Civil War.” Most recently, she was a producer on “The National Parks: America’s Best Idea,” “The Dust Bowl” and now, “Country Music.” Along with Burns and Duncan, she was nominated in 2013 by the Producers Guild for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television.

West Virginia country music legends Kathy Mattea and Charlie McCoy will perform live in Morgantown April 16 at the WVU Creative Arts Center during West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s special screening of “Country Music: A Film by Ken Burns.” For ticket information, go to wvpublic.org/countrymusic.

ABOUT THE MUSICAL ARTISTS

Kathy Mattea was born in Kanawha County, West Virginia, and has enjoyed a career with highlights including two GRAMMY wins, four CMA Awards, four Number 1 country singles, and five gold albums as well as a platinum collection of her greatest hits. Mattea was inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame in 2011.

A multi-instrumentalist, Charlie McCoy hails from Fayette County, West Virginia, and is one of the most prolific studio musicians of any genre. He has recorded 35 solo albums and his work has been on recordings by Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan, Dolly Parton, Simon and Garfunkel and George Jones. His autobiography “50 Cents and A Boxtop” was released in 2017. He was inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame in 2008 and the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2009.

ABOUT THE SPONSORS

Funding for the documentary, a production of Florentine Films and WETA in Washington, D.C., was provided by Bank of America, the Annenberg Foundation, the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, Belmont University, Tennessee Department of Tourist Development, the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, Rosalind P. Walter and by members of “The Better Angels Society,” including The Blavatnik Family Foundation, the Schwartz/Reisman Foundation, the Pfeil Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, John and Catherine Debs, the Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, the Perry and Donna Golkin Family Foundation, Jay Alix and Una Jackman, Mercedes T. Bass, Fred and Donna Seigel, Gilchrist and Amy Berg, James R. Berdell Foundation, David Bonderman, Deborah P. and Jonathan T. Dawson, Senator Bill and Tracy Frist, Susan and David Kreisman, Rocco and Debby Landesman, Lillian Lovelace, John and Leslie McQuown, the Segal Family Foundation, Michelle Smith. Major funding was provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and PBS.

"The Civil War" 25th Anniversary: Watch Now

The Civil War, the award-winning film produced and directed by Ken Burns, is being rebroadcast over five consecutive nights, September 7-11 at 9 p.m. The broadcast coincides with the 25th anniversary of the series’ premiere in September 1990, and presents for the first time a newly restored high-definition version.

Each episode is available to stream on the WVPB video portal after the broadcast, so catch up, re-watch, or enjoy this PBS classic for the first time. 

This is also the first time the film will be seen with the same fidelity and framing as the negative that Burns and his co-cinematographers Allen Moore and Buddy Squires shot more than 25 years ago. 

25th Anniversary of Ken Burns' The Civil War

In celebration of the 25th anniversary of the landmark series, PBS presents Ken Burns: The Civil War, a new television special that shares the story behind the award-winning documentary and explores how the groundbreaking film literally changed the way Americans look at their history.

The program features interviews with Ken Burns, writer Geoffrey Ward, co-writer and co-producer Ric Burns, cinematographer Buddy Squires, supervising editor Paul Barnes and others, as well as extensive video clips from the series.

Hosted by award-winning actor Sam Waterston, who memorably provided the voice of President Lincoln in the original series.

Then, watch the entire remastered series, Monday – Friday, September 7-11 at 9 p.m. on WVPB.

Series Will Explore The Past And Present Of Cancer Research

Special thanks to Charleston Area Medical Center, exclusive underwriter for West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s presentation of Ken Burns Presents Cancer: The Emperor of All Maladies, A Film By Barak Goodman.

A Charleston Area Medical Center doctor, Suzanne Cole, is featured in episode three’s exploration of the current state of cancer treatment. Watch episode three, “Finding An Achilles Heel,” April 1 at 9 p.m. on WVPB.

Credit Courtesy of the Dana Farber Institute.
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Dr. Sidney Farber with colleagues, c. 1950.

CANCER: THE EMPEROR OF ALL MALADIES tells the comprehensive story of cancer, from its first description in an ancient Egyptian scroll to the gleaming laboratories of modern research institutions. At six hours, the film interweaves a sweeping historical narrative with intimate stories about contemporary patients, and an investigation into the latest scientific breakthroughs that may have brought us, at long last, within sight of lasting cures.

In addition to the television series, the website cancerfilms.org contains a producer’s blog, media gallery and story wall. 

The film comprises the following three episodes:

Episode 1 (9 p.m., Monday, March 30) MAGIC BULLETS: The search for a “cure” for cancer is the greatest epic in the history of science. It spans centuries and continents, and is full of its share of heroes, villains and sudden vertiginous twists. This episode follows that centuries-long search, but centers on the story of Sidney Farber, who, defying conventional wisdom in the late 1940s, introduces the modern era of chemotherapy, eventually galvanizing a full-scale national “war on cancer.” Interwoven with Farber’s narrative is the contemporary story of little Olivia Blair, who at 14-months old is diagnosed with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, which spreads to her brain and spinal column. The film follows her as she and her parents struggle with the many hardships and decisions foisted upon a cancer patient. She remains in full remission a year after her diagnosis, but is still on her journey to finish her three-year treatment plan.

Episode 2 (9 p.m., March 31) THE BLIND MEN AND THE ELEPHANT: This episode picks up the story in the wake of the declaration of a “war on cancer” by Richard Nixon in 1971. Flush with optimism and awash with federal dollars, the cancer field plunges forward in search of a cure. In the lab, rapid progress is made in understanding the essential nature of the cancer cell, leading to the revolutionary discovery of the genetic basis of cancer. But at the bedside, where patients are treated, few new therapies become available, and a sense of disillusionment takes hold, leading some patients and doctors to take desperate measures. It is not until the late 1990s that the advances in research begin to translate into more precise targeted therapies with the breakthrough drugs Gleevec and Herceptin. Following the history during these fraught decades, the film intertwines the contemporary story of Dr. Lori Wilson, a surgical oncologist who is diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in both breasts in 2013. Her emotional and physical struggles with the disease provide a bracing counterpoint to the historical narrative.

Credit Courtesy WETA.
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Emily Whitehead with Dr. Grupp.

  Episode 3 (9 p.m., Wednesday, April 1) FINDING AN ACHILLES HEEL: This episode picks up the story at another moment of buoyant optimism in the cancer world: Scientists believe they have cracked the essential mystery of the malignant cell and the first targeted therapies have been developed, with the promise of many more to follow. But very quickly cancer reveals new layers of complexity and a formidable array of unforeseen defenses. In the disappointment that follows, many call for a new focus on prevention and early detection as the most promising fronts in the war on cancer. But other scientists are undeterred, and by the second decade of the 2000s their work pays off. The bewildering complexity of the cancer cell, so recently considered unassailable, yields to a more ordered picture, revealing new vulnerabilities and avenues of attack. Perhaps most exciting of all is the prospect of harnessing the human immune system to defeat cancer. This episode includes patients Doug Rogers, a 60-year-old NASCAR mechanic with melanoma, and Emily Whitehead, a six-year-old child afflicted with leukemia. Each is a pioneer in new immunotherapy treatments, which the documentary follows as their stories unfold. Both see their advanced cancers recede and are able to resume normal lives.

The Film Project

A collaboration of Florentine Films, Laura Ziskin Pictures and WETA Washington, DC, in association with Ark Media, the series is based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning book The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer (Simon & Schuster 2010) by Siddhartha Mukherjee, M.D.  Hollywood producer Laura Ziskin (Pretty Women, Spider-Man), a Stand Up To Cancer co-founder, had wanted to produce a documentary about cancer from the time she had been diagnosed with breast cancer in 2004.  Having read an advanced review of the book, Ziskin quickly contacted Dr. Mukherjee, who awarded the rights to the Entertainment Industry Foundation on behalf of SU2C in December 2010.  Simultaneously, WETA president and CEO Sharon Percy Rockefeller read the book during her treatment for cancer at The Johns Hopkins Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center in Baltimore. Shortly thereafter, Rockefeller connected with Burns, who lost his mother to cancer when he was 11. The two connected with Ziskin, and in early 2011 brought on filmmaker Goodman. (Ziskin, who lived with cancer for seven years, died in June 2011.)

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