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Colonial Williamsburg:  Saturday

4/30/2022

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Exhausted at the end of the week, Saturday is departure day.  If will be a bittersweet time, filled with leaving Virginia and arriving back on my home soil.  Yet, even on this day, there is some programming planned that will enrich my ability to reach students and assist other teachers.
7–8:00 a.m. Breakfast

8:10 a.m. Travel to Classroom Location

8:30–9:30 a.m. The Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments Examine the Emancipation Proclamation and determine why it was insufficient to end slavery. It continued the process of freedom and equality for all but did not “solve” the problem. The Emancipation Proclamation opened the door for later legislative and executive action.

9:30–10:30 a.m. Meet a Person of the Past: Jenny Joseph Meet Jenny, an enslaved woman freed by the Thirteenth Amendment. Discuss with her the hardships of life in the post-emancipation South during Reconstruction.

10:30–10:50 a.m. Break and Reflection Time

10:50 a.m. Donor Recognition

11–11:35 a.m. Teacher Collaboration Time You know your students best! Work with other teachers to identify ways to use the Institute materials, content, and strategies in your classroom.

11:35 a.m. Graduation

​12:00 p.m. Departure
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The Testing Camera

4/29/2022

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As we are in the midst of state testing, I thought I should repost this from a few years ago.
A million assessments - whether formative or summative, whether pretest or posttest, predictive or summative, common or unique - cannot give a complete picture of a child, adult, or anything in between.  I constantly remind myself that our children are more than numbers on a data document and much more than a line on a graph. Educators are in the business of inspiring human beings to want to improve themselves; we should not be in the business of plotting points and constraining students to a single position on an assembly line.  I do not believe all students are the same, like the same things, or are motivated in the same manner.  On that note, you might enjoy the accompanying video below.
​Peter H. Reynolds, creativity advocate and best-selling author and illustrator, and co-founder of FableVision Learning, has created a new animated short called The Testing Camera — a whimsical poke at high-stakes, standardized testing and a reminder that real assessment is as easy, and — at the same time — as challenging as getting to really know the gifts and talents of every child.

“We’ve gone through a very test-centric decade which, in my opinion, has consumed a lot of time, energy, and resources,” Reynolds shares. “Many teachers have had to adhere to new mandates and measures that require a ‘teach to the test’ approach. Public schools redirected funding for art, music, theater, libraries, field trips, and more. It’s a discouraging picture for those trying to reach all children in creative, engaging ways.”

Reynolds, who is known for his books encouraging creativity, The Dot, Ish, Sky Color and The North Star among many others, penned this whimsical and poignant story about a young girl named Daisy who, dismayed at her art class being canceled, nervously faces her turn with the “Testing Camera.” This huge apparatus snaps at her with a few blinding flashes of light. Weeks later, her father’s reaction to the test results surprises Daisy in a most wonderful way.

“This is my gift to educators to remind them to follow their instincts and remember why they got into teaching in the first place: to see the potential in every child, to nurture those emerging gifts and talents, and to change lives,” Reynolds shared.

The film was produced by FableVision, the transmedia studio in Boston founded by Peter and his twin brother, Paul Reynolds, author of Going Places and the Sydney & Simon series. The Testing Camera was directed by John Lechner with music by Tony Lechner, and animated by a team of young animators interning at FableVision for the summer. Broadway actor Chester Gregory lends his voice to the project.
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Schifferdecker Field Trip

4/28/2022

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Before heading inside the Joplin Museum Complex, last week, we ate lunch in Schifferdecker Park.
​The wind was a challenge, but we survived.
Soon we headed to the historical and mineral museums.
​There are some interesting sculptures and markers outside the complex.
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Inside, students sat at tables in the museum's classroom for a presentation from the curator. We had already studied minerals months ago, so this acted as a review.  Some students were really into this short lesson.

Finally released into the museum, one of the most intriguing displays is the one containing jewelry and items found after the infamous police shootout with Bonnie and Clyde (pictured below).  This was the last time Joplin Police lost two officers to gunshots (The most recent loss of two officers was just last month.).
Many of the displays in the museum are poorly labeled and fail to tell Joplin's story.  Unless you recognize the references to places like the House of Lords, these displays are little more than a collection of interesting antiques.  
Another fascinating display, housed next to the cookie cutter collection, is one that showcases circus traditions. The miniature displays have powered animations and lights to bring them to life, reminding us that the latest Dumbo movie had the title character being born in Joplin, Missouri.

In fact, the current park is built upon the former Schifferdecker Electric Park.  A hundred years ago, there was a rollercoaster on the property, as well as an alligator pit, monkey house, and a Bertha Bear.  It might have seemed like a circus atmosphere at times.
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On the way to the front of the museum, we caught a glimpse of debris from
​the 2011 EF5 tornado that swept through our fair city.
On the other side of the building is a glorious display of minerals and mining equipment - mostly to showcase Joplin's mining past. Unfortunately, again, things are not labeled or explained as well as they should be.  Students shot glances at the displays but had little idea about the things they saw.

This is an impressive display, but it's hard for ten-year-olds to spend much time in a space that doesn't grab their attention and help them interact with the information before them.

It was nice when we returned to the school and got back down to the business of learning about caves.  Students had noticed a connection with our cave and the geology of the Ozarks.
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Hoggatt Cave:  Growing Crystals

4/27/2022

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Monday, using simple table salt and epsom salt (and a little water), we began the process of growing crystals for the walls of Hoggatt Cave.

After the weekend, we noticed the water evaporated, and cube- and needle-shaped crystals developed on the brown construction paper.
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Hoggatt Cave:  Cave Decor

4/26/2022

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We're working on getting the famous Hoggatt Cave up and operating in time for a family night that sits on the calendar for May 5.  The entrance is almost complete.  Stalactites are in place.  Crystals are growing.  Bats are roosting ont he ceiling and flying out the door.

Oh yes, and the students are memorizing their parts of the tour, both for the family night and for conducting tours with other classes during school hours.  We can't wait to bring flashlights from home to allow the tours to be more captivating.
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Oklahoma City Bombing

4/25/2022

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As a quick follow-up to last week's presentation about the event that occured on April 19, 1995, students worked through a packet of pages to help them visualize the building and the people attacked 27 years ago.
Some wanted to color the Murrah building while others decoded the message of thanks for responders.  Still others pondered the list of names and the placement of the chairs at the memorial.
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Quote:  Education

4/24/2022

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“In education,
we are striving not to teach youth
to make a living,
but to make a life.”

(William Allen White)
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GLI History Camp:  National Parks on Board

4/23/2022

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When coordinators at the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History asked for suggestions of U.S. National Parks to present for this summer's History Camp, I didn't realize I would have as much influence on the lineup.  I will present a different national park each week for six sessions in July and August.  I realized that I knew some of the parks quite well.
In fact, I wondered if I could actually present the virtual sessions and speak to park rangers from some of the parks themselves.  George Washington Carver National Monument in Diamond, Missouri, is an obvious choice, being the closest to our location in the Joplin area, so I put it on the list.  It would allow me to showcase one of the smaller, lesser-known of the national treasures.
Another park is one which may not be thought of as being in the national park system.  It is one that I know quite well because I lived through the event that inspired it.  The Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum is one that tells the same story that I shared with my fourth graders and other classes of fourth graders for the 27 years since a terrorist bombing in 1995.  Being able to be at the memorial for one of the sessions would be a dream.

A third park is one a little farther away, but it is one I feel I feel close to.  Mammoth Cave in Kentucky is the largest known cave system in the world.  I've been operating my own "cave" as a classroom transformation for 27 years, as well, and sharing other caves with their unique ecosystems.  Our classes have been looking at caves in New Mexico and, of course, here at home in the "Cave State", but we've also admired, from afar, Mammoth.

Happily, these three parks, plus Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska, are confirmed participants in the summer program.

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Our Hope Bear, a stuffed animal left on "the fence" at the Oklahoma City bombing site, represents unity, empathy, and comfort.
We're still on the lookout for two more parks, but plans are starting to come together for this summer's History Camp.  The camp will be available for students entering the third through fifth grades.
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Colonial Williamsburg:  Friday

4/22/2022

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It's easy to forget that there is more than a Revolution at Williamsburg, but after all, there has been some 250 years of history since then.  As the week winds down, the materials being presented do not slow down.  On this day, if this schedule remains accurate, we'll be focused, at least partially, on the American Civil War.

Also scheduled on this day is an immersive experience where the events unfold around us.  That and many other applications will be especially useful if they can be recreated in a classroom or for another educational experience.
​7–8:00 a.m. Breakfast

8:00 a.m. Bus to Classroom Location

8:15–9:00 a.m. Resilience, Agency, and Resistance As the new nation grew and evolved, so did the institution of slavery. Discover how the changing economy and shifting political movements of the early nineteenth century caused massive changes to the slave labor system of the south, and how enslaved people persisted, resisted, and self-liberated.

9:00 a.m. Break and Travel

9:15–10:30 a.m. Meet a Person of the Past: Nat Turner “Something was about to happen that would terminate in fulfilling the great promise that had been made to me.” Learn from Nat Turner about his great promise.

10:30–11:00 a.m. Reflection and Master Teacher Session Your Master Teacher shares strategies for bringing history to life in the classroom using the experiences and materials gained from participating in the Teacher Institute.

11–11:45 a.m. The Civil War Through Primary Sources Chart major events of the Civil War and their connection to Williamsburg and Virginia through primary documents, images, and objects.

12:00 p.m. Resolved: An American Experiment A thought-provoking and playful museum theater experience unfolds around you as our troupe of diverse actors explore the events of the 5th Virginia Convention. Become a part of the story as a Member of Parliament, a Burgess, or maybe even Patrick Henry. Relive and examine the moment Virginia said yes to American Independence.

12:45–3:30 p.m. Lunch and Exploration Time

3:45–4:00 p.m. Reflection and Journaling Time

4–4:40 p.m. Teaching Controversial Issues An accurate depiction of our nation’s history requires including many sensitive issues, such as slavery, cultural conflict, and women’s roles, as part of the story. Colonial Williamsburg interpreters and staff are confronted with the challenge of addressing these subjects in an informative, non-confrontational, and sensitive manner. Share ideas with some of these individuals, learn about their techniques, and discuss how to transfer these lessons to the classroom.

4:40–4:50 p.m. Break

4:50–5:45 p.m. Application Session and Teacher Collaboration

​6:00 p.m. Dinner on Own 
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Welcome

4/21/2022

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A hearty welcome is extended to the newest member of the Hoggatteer family:  MALACHI.

MALACHI has been in our school before but has returned from another town in Missouri.

MALACHI, our wish is for you to feel at home in our classroom,
to feel at ease with making mistakes,
and to desire to constantly challenge your abilities.

Our fourth grade classroom is happier with you in it.
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Farewell

4/20/2022

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...to a student who has moved and left our class and our school.  The class will miss getting to see MADISON everyday, and we will miss getting to see her develop during the remainder of her fourth grade year.
Remember:
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Oklahoma City:  27 Years Later

4/19/2022

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​​April 19, 1995.  Twenty-seven years from today.

Twenty-seven years ago, a young man named McVeigh parked his rented moving truck on the street behind the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. Inside the truck, a bomb would soon detonate and change the lives of countless people.

One hundred sixty-eight people dead.


I taught second graders just four miles away.  We heard the explosion.  We felt the concussion.  We experienced the emotions.

Confusion.  Fear.  Confusion.  ​Twenty-seven years ago.

I will relay my story - my personal experiences with the 1995 terrorist attack - today.  My experience with being the one responsible for leading the school into a red alert, locking the outside doors.  My wife's experience of holding the one-year-old who was famously photographed in the firefighter's arms.  My grandmother's experience of panic, thinking "they" were "blowing up Oklahoma City".

It is a history that needs to be remembered, studied, and learned from - one evil act counteracted by hundreds of thousands of generous responses in return.  This, like Joplin's response to the tornado in 2011, was a defining moment - a moment when we found out who we were.  In Oklahoma City, they call that response "The Oklahoma Standard".

We will look at my pictures of the Oklahoma City National Memorial, today.  I'll take our fourth graders inside one of the best museums I've ever experienced.

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Goin' Batty

4/18/2022

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Kids are getting more practice with their scissors as we learn more about the critters in a cave.  We finally made it around to studying bats, last week, and Hoggatteers sorted these bats into True and False piles based on the statements on their wingspans.  

After this, they also made some flying foxes to display in Hoggatt Cave.  These will be a pivotal and memorable portion of the tours that students will lead in coming weeks.
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Happy Easter, Hoggatteers!

4/17/2022

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17 Airports?

4/16/2022

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I like to keep track of experiences in my life, and that includes my experiences in flight.

  1

My first airplane flight took teenager me, along with my family, from Oklahoma City through the airport in Dallas, Texas, to our ultimate destination of Nashville, Tennessee.  This was a flight my mother won in a local radio call-in contest.

  2

The next time I flew, was for a trip on which Oklahoma City Schools sent me to learn Student Team Learning with Dr. Robert Slavin of Johns Hopkins University.  That trip took me through Dallas again to our destination in Baltimore, Maryland.

  3

Trip number three was probably my honeymoon from Oklahoma City to Orlando, Florida, again with a layover in Dallas.  I had to pay for this trip myself.

  4

  5

My only international excursion came in the form of a trip to Honduras in Central America.  We flew out of the airport in Tulsa, with a layover in Austin, Texas, finally arriving in the impoverished nation (at a very interesting airport and runway) in Tegucigalpa, Honduras.  I took this trip again a couple of years later.  The church footed the bill for these trips.

  6

Unfortunately, my fourth trip was with my family from Northwest Arkansas, through Dallas (of course), to Houston, Texas, where my wife's parents were staying as my mother-in-law underwent treatments for leukemia at M.D. Anderson Hospital.  We flew stand-by on these flights with a family plan provided by the airline through a flight attendant who happens to be related to us.

  7

Later, I traveled to Atlanta, Georgia, for a visit to the Ron Clark Academy.  I was invited to sit in the classrooms of Ron Clark, Kim Bearden, and other top, energetic teachers.  The travel this time was funded by Cecil Floyd's PTA.

  8

On a more positive note, I applied to attend the Mount Vernon Teacher Institute and was accepted.  Soon I was on a flight that passed through Dallas, Texas, to arrive in Virginia for a week at George Washington's estate.  On this trip, I missed my return flight, and I ended up staying in the DFW airport overnight before returning to Will Rogers Airport in Oklahoma City.

  9

The next year, I was privileged to attend the teacher institute at Fort Ticonderoga in upstate New York.  Flying through Chicago, my destination airport was Burlington, Vermont, where I picked up a rental car to head toward the fort on the other side of Lake Champlain.  This was the first and only time to fly out of and return to the Joplin airport.

10

This year, I hope to add a couple of airports to the list.  Though I have been in the Springfield, Missouri airport, I have not flown in or out of there.  In May, I'm hopefully headed that direction. If things go as planned, I will fly to Disney World in Orlando through the largest airport in Atlanta, Georgia.  When selected and announced, Disney would bring me and 49 other teachers to Florida to celebrate their 50th anniversary and receive training in creativity.  The return trip would bring me back through Chicago.

11

Finally, I'm headed to Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia for another teacher institute.  I'll get there from Springfield, Missouri, through Charlotte, North Carolina, returning the same way a week later.  The teachers in attendance will spend hours in Williamsburg, Yorktown, and Jamestown. Those in the know have told me that this triangle is Disneyland for history buffs.
By my count, that's 17 airports during 11 trips, only one of which I actually paid for.  Through these years, I have been privileged to take most of my trips as a result of earning them through an application process or being assigned trips for work.  All of these have been rewarding in their own ways.
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