THE HOGGATTEER REVOLUTION
  • Homeroom
  • Orientation
    • Meet the Teacher
    • Place in the World
    • Teacher File Cabinet
  • Positivity
    • Insightful Poetry
    • Inspirational Prose
    • Meaningful Quotes
    • Positive Behavior Conversations
    • Scripture Studies
  • Exploration
    • Celebrate Good Times (Come On)
    • Cerebral Cinema >
      • Hoggatt-Made Videos
      • Mood Music
      • Music Appreciation
      • Positive Behavior Conversations
    • Coursework >
      • Cultivating America
      • Focus on Science
      • Let's Communicate
      • M4+HEM4+1C5
      • Missouri, USA
      • Recess Bell
      • Scripture Studies

Bunker Hill

7/31/2018

0 Comments

 

Art Appreciation

Look at the diorama at the right.
  • What do you notice?
  • What do you think is happening?
  • What caused the scene in the painting?
  • What might happen after the scene shown?
  • What does this piece make you wonder?
Picture
Picture
It is one of the battles of the Revolutionary War that most people can refer to by memory.  It is also one of the most misunderstood, with victories and losses for both sides.

Liberty's Kids

The video below will simplify things for you, while the one to the right will reinforce the loss and emotion of any battle.

Music Appreciation

We must appreciate the sacrifice for freedom.  As we've heard people say, "Freedom is not free."
All of Me
​Hey Brother!
Picture

"Don't Fire Until You See the Whites of their Eyes."

Muskets were not very accurate over distance, so with their limited ammunition, soldiers were encouraged to wait for the enemy to advance closer before opening fire.  How frightened must they have been with those columns of Redcoats stomping toward them!

The perspective of the Continentals must have frightened them even more.  As the British marched in the distance, they must have appeared quite small, but now that they approached, they must have seemed much larger.  With the details of their uniforms coming into focus, the Continentals could have notices the buckles and buttons, the trim and the tricorn hats.  I'm not convinced they would notice the whites of their eyes unless they were reminded to look for them before firing.

Speaking of looking for the details, the teacher will describe a little sketching project for you that will have you looking for the details.

While We're on the Subject

Picture
How Do Our Eyes Make Us See?
Picture

More from Boston, Mass.

Now that we've seen some of the historical events that occurred in Boston, let's take a closer look at the city today.
Get a more informed view of the city with our 4D puzzle.
Picture
0 Comments

Mount Vernon:  Titles in the Schedule

7/30/2018

2 Comments

 
I have been staring at the schedule for my upcoming visit to George Washington's Mount Vernon since it was delivered to my inbox a few days ago.  It is a full schedule, to say the least, with some intriguing topics.  In addition to a tour of the mansion, exploration of the estate, lunches, question-answer time, orientations, a reception on the piazza, dinners, and pub trivia, I will enjoy each and every one of the topics below.

Day One

1066 and All That:  England Versus France
The French and Indian War

Day Two

Teaching with Documents
George Washington:  An Overview
Surveying the Information Landscape:  Maps and
     Other Media Before the American Revolution

British V. American Perspective:  1763-1775
Continental Congress:  1775-1776
The Coming of the Revolution
Music About Washington:  A View Into Early American
​     Military History

Day Three

Teaching with Objects
Individual Choices:  Why Do Soldiers Fight?
The American Revolution
18th Century History v. Mythology
Washington:  Objects & War
Plotting the Field and Potting the Land:  Surveying and
​     Farming in Colonial America
Women and the Revolutionary War
Revolutionary Medicine:  Dr. James Craik

Day Four

Teaching with Biography
A Conversation with Tobias Lear
Be Washington:  The Second Trenton
Economics of War:  Blacksmith Shop & Spinning
​     Room
African Americans and the Revolutionary War
Life on the Battlefield:  Fort Ticonderoga
The Road to Peace
The Perils of Peace:  Washington's Leadership Tested
​A Conversation with Martha Washington

Day Five

Slave Cemetery & Tomb Visit
President Washington:  Defining the Role of
​     Commander in Chief
First in War, First in Peace:  George Washington's
     Legacy as a Military Leader
​Conclusions & Next Steps
Picture
2 Comments

Time Zones

7/29/2018

0 Comments

 
The flights I have scheduled will allow me to arrive at the DC airport a day early for my upcoming summer residency at George Washington's Mount Vernon. That means I should have an extra afternoon/evening and an extra morning to explore the estate before I report to my official teacher institute requirements.
The anticipation is real!

​
I hope I don't experience the phenomenon know as jet lag.  After all I will cross the line betwixt our beloved Central time zone into the Eastern time zone.  That means I will, in a sense, travel an hour forward in time, taking an extra hour away from my day between the time my flight takes off and the time we land.

​As luck would have it, I will pick up an extra hour on my return, experiencing the same times twice.  You can imagine the havoc that these time zone changes will inflict on my body.
Picture
0 Comments

Meet the New Guy

7/28/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
Nathan Stewart has joined our crew as the new assistant principal at Cecil Floyd. Mr. Stewart is a personable fellow and will be a welcome addition to the team.  He is positive and anxious to get the school year going.

The following is from Joplin Schools' website from earlier in the month.

Joplin Schools is pleased to announce Mr. Nathan Stewart as the new assistant principal for Cecil Floyd Elementary.

Stewart grew up in Lamar, Missouri, and has been an educator for the last nine years. His career began in the North Kansas City School District, where he taught second and third grade before moving back to the Joplin area to be closer to family.  He most recently comes to us as a fifth grade teacher from the Carl Junction School District. Throughout his career, Stewart has been able to quickly build and foster strong relationships with staff, students, and parents. He not only values the importance of relationships but also fosters the significance of meeting needs of diverse learners. Stewart and his family are proud to be part of the Joplin community and look forward to continuing the great work at Cecil Floyd.

“Mr. Stewart is a wonderful addition to the Cecil Floyd family. His commitment to relationships and student growth are a perfect fit for Joplin Schools,” said Chris Bozarth, Cecil Floyd principal.

​Stewart earned his bachelor’s degree in elementary education from Rockhurst University in Kansas City, Missouri. In 2014, he completed his master’s degree in administration at the University of Central Missouri.
0 Comments

George Washington:  Moral Standards

7/27/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
George Washington's character is revealed in many areas.  He is attributed with bringing discipline to the undisciplined by refusing to relax his own moral standards.  While Washington was not an angel of a man, often struggling to make decisions or making the wrong decisions, the fact remains that he knew and tried to reach high standards of morality.  He knew he could not organize an army if the army was focused on other things.

For this reason, now the general and commander in chief, Washington addressed every aspect of soldier conduct, restricting and prohibiting "profane cursing, swearing & drunkeness"  Additionally, he expected punctual attendance on divine service, to implore the blessings of heaven upon the means used for our safety and defence".  He also forbade games of chance.
Before arriving, latrines (holes and ditches dug for restroom needs) were left open and (as Edward Lengel puts it in his book, General George Washington) "fermenting in the open air".  Soldiers were not to fraternize with the enemy in any way and were told to never fire a weapon unless there was an emergency.  Men were restricted from fishing in local ponds in order to avoid then-deadly diseases like cholera and typhoid.  They were also discouraged from bathing in a river at Cambridge and then "running about naked upon the Bridge, whilst Passengers, and even Ladies of the first fashion in the neighbourhood, are passing over it, as if they meant to glory in their shame".

These might seem like no-brainers to us.  We might consider some of their actions to be despicable.  We might have thought that such traitorous, unhealthy, and immoral acts were more recent temptations for people.  That George Washington, for example, had to make guidelines against exhibitionism for 18th century soldiers comes as a shock to those of us who thought higher moral standards were more prevalent then than now.

For us, sitting in a fourth grade classroom in Joplin, Missouri, there are definitely some standards to which we may aspire:
  • Our language affects the culture around us.
  • "Loose lips sink ships."  We need to keep secrets to ourselves.
  • Being under the influence of drugs (including alcohol) may not portray a person as sophisticated and proper.
  • Cleanliness is necessary for the health and peace of the people who live around us.  Nobody likes bad smells.
  • Running around naked in public gets you noticed, but for the wrong reasons.
0 Comments

Countdown:  Three Weeks

7/26/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
This whole school thing is trying to sneak up on us!
Little does it know, we are going to be ready for it.


No surprises, right?

You can't say you haven't been warned!
Today marks the milestone point where we are exactly three weeks away
from the first day of your fourth grade experience as a Hoggatteer.

Let's do this thing!

School begins Thursday, August 16.
0 Comments

JPM:  Quippy

7/25/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
I'm reading Memoir of a Revolutionary Soldier, by Joseph Plumb Martin.  Martin wrote these pages in 1830, the same year in which he turned 70.  In the preface and introductory chapter, Martin quickly endears himself as a quirky old guy.  He sticks dry wit everywhere.

I found myself thinking of my late grandfather whom I called Popo.  Popo is probably the person from whom I get my own dry humor.  He and I often found humor in unusual places.  When you pick up a book about the Revolutionary War, you probably wouldn't expect humor, but consider the examples below: 

I contend, then, that it is not altogether inconsistent to suppose that I had parents too.  I shall undertake to trace my pedigree (like the Welsh) some thousand years beyond the Creation...
When my father arrived at puberty he found his constitution too feeble to endure manual labour, he therefore directed his views to gaining a livelihood by some other means.
...I, the redoubtable hero of this Narrative, first made my appearance in this crooked, fretful world, upon the twenty-first day of November, in the year 1760.  I have been told that the day on which was born was a thanksgiving day, which day is, generally, celebrated with good cheer.
This Joseph Plumb Martin had quite the experience in the war, starting as a 15-year-old boy.  Even if you aren't expecting humor, it is refreshing to see that a soldier retains an ability to laugh later in life.  One must wonder at his experiences.
0 Comments

Criticism Is not the Same as Hating

7/24/2018

0 Comments

 
Here's something for both teacher and students to remember.  John Spencer recently tweeted this headline and diagram, along with this explanation:
It’s an issue of trust, intent, and empathy.
​This is a grid I use with students as we think about the critical friends approach.
Picture
0 Comments

The Second Continental Congress

7/23/2018

0 Comments

 

(LIBERTY) BELL WORK

Sentence Surgery
Read the sentence below.
​Do you see any problems?

Do not rewrite the sentence.  In fact, don't even fix the sentence.  Instead, on your paper, tell the writer three things that need to be corrected.

john, ben, and tom, worked together
​at the factory.
Picture
Sentence Augmentation*
Augment the sentence below to greatly improve it.  Record your improved sentence on your paper.

She is proud.
​

​
*Augment:  make (something) greater ​by adding to it

Quick Write:  How forgiving are you when a friend lets you down?  Explain.  Give an example. 

Word Work
Using today's lesson set,
create a list of words ​to fit in the categories below.
​Pay particular attention to spelling patterns.
Continental​
​(words with ent)
Congress​
​(words with ong)

Word Wise
Define the ​following words:
arrogance
​humility
On Target
Write the target number in the "bull's eye".
In the 20 other open sections of the target,
write equations to equal the target number.

Today's number is 2.

For example, if the target number is 36, the student may write expressions like the ones here (right):
Picture
​6 squared
2 x 18
3 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 + 8
72/2

3 x 3 x 4
Picture

the Olive Branch

Is it possible to make peace with the English King?  Today, we investigate conflict resolution and discuss what it takes to make it work, as well as what happens when it does not work.  Sadly, in order to resolve (fix) a conflict, there has to be a problem to resolve.  The first three videos give us some idea of conflicts.  See if you can figure out how the characters will resolve their conflicts before they do.
These characters live in an olive tree, but the olive tree is also a metaphor for something else.
​What might extending the olive branch mean?
Picture

Is Conflict Resolution Always Possible? (And More)

The Second Continental Congress involved some very important and very recognizable men from each of the thirteen colonies.  Among them were John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, John Hancock, Benjamin Franklin, and yes, George Washington.  ​Along with other issues, the Congress faced four main tasks:
  • Decide how to extend an Olive Branch Petition to King George to keep the peace and remain a part of Great Britain.​
  • At the same time, accounting for the time it would take a ship to deliver such a letter to England and for the king to respond, the decision had to be made to establish a continental military force.
  • And if such a force was agreed upon, just who was fit and able enough to lead it?
  • Declare independence from the mother country.
The Second Continental Congress was not a glamorous event.  In fact, it was down and dirty, hot and smelly.  Men cast insults and dispersions upon one another.  Along the way, an Olive Branch was extended to King George, a military force was approved, and Colonel George Washington be came General Washington, the commander-in-chief.  He humbly accepted, looking very much like the fellow on the one dollar bill.

Lots of things happened during the Second Congress, some of which we have already discussed in class, and some of which we will still present in the coming days.  Consider parts of today's presentation to be both a review of the past and a preview of things to come.
Picture

Arrogance Vs. Humility

When George Washington was nominated to be the commander-in-chief, his response was given in humility.

​Get a little taste of what the Congress might have looked and sounded like in this video.  What do you think of John Hancock's demeanor here?
Contrast his mood with George Washington's.  What lesson about humility vs. pride can we learn?
Watch heavy-weight boxer Muhammad Ali, described as the "King of Trash Talk" present himself to the press.
Ali's big talk was part of his charm most of the time, but can you imagine George Washington telling the Second Continental Congress how he was "the greatest" and most qualified for the task.  I wonder what that would have looked like.  Would arrogance have earned Washington the position of commander-in-chief, or was humility part of his charm?
What is the difference between the type of pride called arrogance
​and the kind of pride people should have in themselves or their work?
Picture

Music Appreciation

I Just Can't Wait to Be King

​
Prince Ali

While We're on the Subject

Picture
Do You Like Olives?

What's the Best Way to Resolve Conflict?
Picture
0 Comments

Crystal Bridges:  Done, Not Done

7/22/2018

0 Comments

 
Our week at Crystal Bridges ended with our group giving the last presentation of the day - a dialogical session about our selected artwork.  We were the only group to give a presentation after lunch, and our "students" were standing instead of sitting as they had for all the other groups.  Our presentation was definitely looser in tone than the others because of this.  Our content was also a little lighter-hearted than the others, lending itself to more joking and silliness.  In addition, we had chosen a painting that had little background and an author with very little recorded history.

In reflection, all of the demonstrations of art presentation in this style were done by a single docent, and Friday's presentations were all done by groups.  In this case, the dynamic of the presentation is changed.  It was not mine; it was the group's.  It was not exactly how I would have presented the discussion.  I usually refrain from providing too much information about an object, an image, or a video, and allow students to notice and lead the discussion as much as possible, all the while knowing which information I need to lead them to if necessary.  As a group, I felt like some didn't have as much patience and went into leading questions or information a little more quickly than they should have.  I kept thinking to myself, Don't give them that information!  Stop pointing out things the students didn't bring up.  They'll get there if you wait.  At the same time, members of the group seemed to pull against each other, wanting to direct students in different directions.
Picture
I thank Crystal Bridges staff for setting up this summer residency, as well as the anonymous donor who allows our Cecil Floyd fourth grade teachers to participate with little personal expense.  Our time was mostly well spent, and we were allowed to personalize our involvement in meaningful ways, making it more relevant to the needs of our school.  We were also exposed to such a variety of people from many backgrounds and locations across the United States (with one participant hailing from Montreal, Canada).  Some were interested in bringing methodologies and content to their elementary students, while others were working on their doctoral theses.

Our portion of the workshops will continue as we bring all of this back to the school, this year.  Mrs. Mintert, the teaching artist who will visit our staff and our students this year, was also in attendance and we got to know each other better and do some bonding.  She should be an excellent and knowledgable resource for our school, and she will accompany our students when we visit Crystal Bridges with them sometime in April.

0 Comments

George Washington:  Strict

7/21/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
It must have been difficult to face the band of misfits that George Washington did.  Then again, I wonder if he faced them in the same way that teachers introduce ourselves to a new class of fourth graders at the beginning of each year.  He, as many, tried "to get his bluff in on them" by being strict and "not smiling until Christmas".  Actually there is evidence that Washington frowned on "Smiles" shared with subordinates, calling the attempt to be a pal to them a "kind of stupidity".

What we do know is that George Washington had a filthy, unkempt, unorganized, and unmannerly bunch with which he had to raise an army. Paperwork and inventories were nonexistent due to laziness and apathy.  There was no uniformity to the troops' uniforms.  Washington quickly acknowledged a dire need for strict discipline.
It requires no military Skill to judge of the Difficulty of introducing proper Discipline & Subordination into an Army while we have the Enemy in View & are in daily Expectation of Attack, but it is of so much Importance that every Effort will be made which Time & Circumstance will admit.
He told one colonel to be strict and not give an inch on the high requirements of the military.
Be strict in your discipline.  Require nothing unreasonable of your officers and men, but see that whatever is required be punctually complied with.  Reward and punish every man according to his merit, without partiality or prejudice; hear his complaints; if well founded, redress them; if otherwise, discourage them, in order to prevent frivolous ones.  Discourage vice in every shape, and impress upon the mind of every man, from the first to the lowest, the importance of the cause, and what it is they are contending for....Be plain and precise in your orders, and keep copies of them to refer to, that no mistakes may happen.  Be easy and condescending in your deportment to your officers, but not too familiar, lest you subject yourself to a want of that respect, which is necessary to support a proper command."
For a teacher of fourth graders, there are some lessons to take away from George Washington's demeanor and the handling of his soldiers:
  • I am not a friend to my students.  They are welcome to become my friend when they are out from under my wing.
  • Organization can and must be taught.
  • Every student deserves consequences and rewards on the spot.  No student should go without.
  • Bad manners should not be tolerated.
  • Instructions and procedures should be precise and simple.
  • There is no smiling allowed at school.
0 Comments

Crystal Bridges:  Winding Down the Week

7/20/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
Picture
Thursday at Crystal Bridges was a day of observation and rehearsal.  We began by observing one of the museum docents as she led some visiting students from a local day camp through the interpretation of four pieces of the collection.

Our Joplin group planned to present the William Holbrook Beard painting School Rules to the whole group on Friday, and Thursday was spent researching, anticipating the analysis and observations of others, and practicing our dialogical presentation of the art.  We even enlisted some museum visitors to be guinea pigs.
Picture
Picture
So, what do you notice about this piece?  What is happening in the painting?  Provide evidence for your conclusions.  What do you wonder?  Was this artwork produced just to amuse the viewer, or is there symbolism and innuendo involved?

In the midst of our work, we took some time out to tour the Frank Lloyd Wright house that rests on the property, paying attention to the lines and materials of the house, as well as the manner in which it "invites" nature in through intricately designed window work.
0 Comments

Crystal Bridges:  Third Day

7/19/2018

0 Comments

 
The third day of summer residency at Crystal Bridges was the third day I had a headache.  Before it finally subsided at noon, it was difficult to portray myself as attentive and participating.  The truth is, I was attentive and understood what was presented all three days, but it was not enjoyable.

On that third day, we worked with Amber Mintert.  Mrs. Mintert is the artist who will work with our fourth graders in a pointed week of art and history instruction and activities, next spring.  She also works with students at Missouri Southern State University, here in Joplin, teaching and advising would-be art teachers.  We selected some paintings we are interested in to coincide with our curriculum.  We also discussed our approach to her weeklong visit, and we identified a work that our group would present in a couple of days.

Following our time at Crystal Bridges, I finally made it around to snapping some pictures in my hotel.
Down the road from Crystal Bridges is the Amazeum, a children's creative play and science facility.  The Amazeum had free admission, so Mrs. Mouton and I walked around inside.  I didn't get many pictures, but the tapegami was intriguing.
Hungry in Bentonville, Arkansas?  How about a visit to the Flying Fish?  I ordered the grouper with rice and beans and fried okra.  The setting of the restaurant is interesting, including a couple of walls of Billy Bass, donated by patrons in exchange for a basket of catfish.  According to the sign on the wall, this is the "World's First Billy Bass Adoption Center".

​Finally, a visit to the original Walton's 5-10 (where Sam Walton opened his own store - precursor to the WalMart empire that built this city).  Earlier in the week, we had visited the WalMart museum located in the old store, but Wednesday evening we were more interested in nabbing some ice cream.  My chocolate malt was pretty tasty as we listened to live music on the sidewalk.
0 Comments

Crystal Bridges:  Strong Choices

7/18/2018

0 Comments

 
One important set of terms has been important to our teacher residency at Crystal Bridges.  Those terms are making strong choices and making weak choices.  Our presenters from the local children's theater group have made the point that they no longer say good or bad choices, since certain children will try to make their mark on a class by being the "baddest".  It is something to think about.
Picture
These $5000 four-foot-tall green penguins greet us in a variety of locations around our hotel (and they mysterious move around when no one is watching).
They have also stressed that a strong choice for one student might be different than a strong choice for another student.

​That said, Mrs. Mouton, Mr. Culbertson, and I had an opportunity arise in the afternoon that we took advantage of. Donna H., the same tour guide who led our class around the museum, this spring, walked around the museum with the three of us, explaining the history and meaning of many works of art and spurring us to interpret the art for ourselves.  We felt like we made a strong choice to take this tour instead of go through the rest of the schedule with others in our residency.  With the museum closed on Tuesdays, we learned so much on our private tour that our brains were very full when it was time to leave.

​In looking at the schedule, we also feel like we covered the same material that was being presented, but that we practiced our skills to draw meaning from students (and each other) rather than simply lecture and provide lists of facts.
0 Comments

Crystal Bridges:  Acting Right

7/17/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
When we were accepted into the summer residency, we didn't know what to expect from the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas.  We knew we didn't know what we didn't know we didn't know.  Ya know?

On Monday, we were appreciated the difference between a straight lecture about a collection of still life paintings from the 19th century and a participant-driven conversation concerning a sculpture from the Great Depression. Much of what we've heard so far has merely confirmed what we, as experienced educators, already understand. Our methods in the classroom are a consistent attempt to engage our students, and we avoid lecturing whenever possible.

The richest part of our Monday involved methods developed at the Kennedy Center.  Our afternoon was spent learning strategies for using improvisation and theater games to explicitly address classroom discipline.  Sean Layne of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts developed the program.
​Sean Layne has taken the foundational elements of acting such as concentration, cooperation, and collaboration and created a structured process, which can become the basis for effective classroom management every day. This engaging step-by-step approach empowers students to take ownership of and be responsible for their own behavior. In this workshop, teachers learn how to help students build the skills necessary to establish a sense of self-control, accountability, and teambuilding in their classroom.
The strategies make sense and fall into my wheelhouse (though I reserve the right to personalize the methods to make them work for my students.  I plan to introduce some of these in the first days of school and continue their use throughout the year.  In fact, the skills involved here will sit nicely with the other theater games we already use.  In a couple of weeks, I will even present my own professional development sessions to Joplin teachers.  Titled Give and Take, my sessions will focus on games that involve students developing skills of taking and yielding the floor with their classmates.

Another part of our Monday training included having groups of students create tableaus - a technique of teaching that allows students to use their imaginations and collaborative skills to respond to a wide array of curricular needs.
​Led by Sean Layne, drama educator, this course begins teachers’ journey with tableau, a creative, controlled, low-risk drama technique. Tableau helps students apply and expand their knowledge and understanding in subjects across the curriculum by asking them to take on the roles of people or objects to create living pictures.
A part of our training also included watching a thunderstorm move through while sitting in a room with three solid walls of glass.  This was quite a rain maker, and it ended up flooding significant areas of the outdoor portion of the museum.
As it rained, and before dinner, Mrs. Mouton and I were able to visit the museum without groups of fourth grade children in tow.  We just wanted to get a better idea for where things are located (understanding, of course, that exhibits change often).  My favorite galleries are the 18th century pieces in the first room.  That is the location for famous works that depict George Washington and other famous figures, as well as landscapes and cityscapes, of the colonial period.
0 Comments
<<Previous

    Anthem

    The Hoggatteer Revolution
    is
    an extensive,
    award-winning, 
    inimitable,
    digital platform
    for Encouraging
    ​and Developing
    ​the Arts, Sciences, and honest Christianity

    in the beautiful, friendly

    LAND OF THE FREE
    AND THE HOME
    ​OF THE BRAVE
    This site is described as
    "a fantastic site... chockablock full of interesting ideas,
    hilarious ane
    cdotes,
    and useful resources."
    Picture
    Picture
    ...to like, bookmark, pin,
    ​tweet, and share

    about the site...
    and check in regularly
    for new material,
    ​posted
    often before 
    ​DAWN'S EARLY LIGHT!

    Picture

    History in Residence

    Elementary Schools:
    ​Bring Mr. Hoggatt
    into your classroom
    for a week
    of engaging
    ​
    and rigorous

    ​history programming
    ​with your students.

    ​LEARN MORE
    Picture

    Intercom

    GigSalad Member Since 2022
    Book Mr. Hoggatt Securely
    ​for Your Event
    ​at GigSalad.com.

    Email Mr. Hoggatt
    Picture

    Trophy Case

    Picture
    Preacher, starting 2025
    Picture
    Project TRAILS, starting 2025
    Picture
    Student Teacher Supervisor, since 2022
    Picture
    Master Teacher, since 2021
    Picture
    Recruited Lincoln Presidential Foundation Curriculum Writer, 2022
    Picture
    Retiree, 32 years serving Joplin and Oklahoma City Schools, 2022
    Picture
    Selected Participant for 2020-2022
    Picture
    Selected Honoree/Celebrant, 2022
    Picture
    Outstanding Achievement, 2022
    Picture
    Classroom Grant, 2018-2022
    Picture
    2021 Missouri History Teacher of the Year and National History Teacher of the Year Nominee
    Picture
    Recognized in Joplin Globe, February 2021
    Picture
    Teacher Institute Participant, 2019
    Picture
    Summer Residency Participant, 2018
    Picture
    "The Bus Stops Here" Grant, November 2018
    Picture
    Summer Residency, 2018
    Picture
    Recognized 2017
    Since 2017
    Picture
    MSTA Media Award, KOAM-TV's "Manners Matter", Featuring Our Class, May 2017
    Picture
    Third Place, 2016 Film Festival
    Picture
    Recognized 2016
    Picture
    Slide Certified, 2012
    Picture
    2009 Outstanding Class Website
    Picture
    2005 Nominee
    Picture
    2005 Joplin Teacher of the Year and Missouri Teacher of the Year nominee
    Picture
    2004 Recipient
    Picture
    2002 Excellent Education Program
    Picture
    2001 Nominee
    Picture
    1996 Outstanding Classroom Video
    Picture
    Grant Recipient, 1993

    Picture

    Fireside Chats

    Picture
    Choose Your Platform:
    Anchor
    ​Apple Podcasts (iTunes)
    Breaker
    Google Podcasts
    ​
    Overcast
    Pocket Casts
    RadioPublic
    Spotify
    Stitcher
    Picture

    Archives

    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012

    Picture

    Checks & Balances

    Links to external sites
    on the internet are for convenience only.

    No endorsement or approval of any content, products, or services is intended.

    Opinions on sites are not necessarily shared
    by Mr. Hoggatt
    (In fact, sometimes
    Mr. Hoggatt doesn't agree with anyone.)
    Picture
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.

Picture