Although many social studies education experts recommend the use of
resource documents as part of history education, many social studies
teachers are reluctant to utilize historical resources. One reason is
the belief that students, especially those with poor reading skills,
will have difficulty reading and understanding the resources. When
teachers do not regularly include the use of resource documents in their
history classes, students are unable to develop first-hand knowledge of
the past and instructional methods such as inquiry become difficult to
successfully implement. This study examines the ways students with
various reading skill levels utilize historical resource documents that
contained embedded hyperlinks to provide several types of scaffolding.
Students read three resource documents that included hyperlinked
scaffolding. Many of the findings suggest that students utilize these
texts in ways that are similar to the ways they utilize print text. The
data suggests that the use of the hyperlinked scaffolding was successful
and assisted the students in utilizing the documents as part of a
problem-based inquiry lesson.