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

Music Appreciation:  Dig a Little Deeper

7/31/2020

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Students are often called upon
to read "chorally".
That is, they read together simultaneously
​
as a group.

Repeating this practice assists young readers with reading fluency - the speed, accuracy,
and inflection of  oral reading.


Why not, since it's called "choral" reading anyway, actually read the chorus ​of a song?
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Mood Music:  Cold

7/30/2020

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​Sometimes, when we go to the movies or as we watch a show on TV, we are transported into the plot.  Directors understand that their selection of background music can change and enhance a scene.

Now it is time to turn it around.  This time, the music comes first.  Do not watch the video; instead, let the music lead your imagination.  As it plays, allow it to transport you into a scene that has yet to be written.  Then, write the scene.  Use all the visual imagery you can muster in your writing.  At the end, you will share your writing.  Will it stand on its own, without the music in the background?
Close your eyes.

Listen to the music.

Create a visual story in your mind.

Write your story as you listen a second time.

Tweak your scene.

Share your scene with the class.
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Excuses for Not Teaching History

7/29/2020

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​There may be some legitimate reasons for not teaching history in the elementary classroom.
​There are also some excuses for not teaching history.  We'll address six that are commonly used.

There's Not Enough Time

It's true.  There's not enough time if your priorities are dictated by schedules and textbooks...but if you're not seeing a need for civics education based on established history these days, you may not be paying attention.  If ever we are to bring people to the table for conversation, we must teach students how to have conversations.  They need to be taught how to listen, how to disagree amiably, and how to resolve conflict.  Base this on actual history, show them how people have gotten it right in the past - and how they have gotten it wrong - and you will be performing a great service not only for your students, but for society around them.

I Haven't Had Enough Content Training.

PictureTeachers Learning History Hands-On
This is true, as well, and that's the reason things are out of whack in our profession.  We could call it generational historical ignorance, and it's a problem that education has set up for itself.  When we don't teach it, no one learns it.  When no one learns it, no one teaches it.  That cycle is deadly.  I suppose this is a primary, secondary, and post-secondary failure.  Is it possible, at some point, to break the cycle?  I'd say we need to teach some content to the teachers and teachers-to-be.  We need to get people interested in the content.  It's a shame that we have sacrificed patriotism, identity, and heritage in the name of ignorance, melancholy, and apathy.


It Makes Me Uncomfortable.

Some elementary teachers get into the profession because they like making cute bulletin boards, teaching cute kids, and creating cute, enjoyable activities.  History breaks that mold, because (Say it together!), history is ugly, not cute.  It includes murder, treason, war, abuse, infidelity, racism, and all kinds of negativity.  Still, taught effectively, you will keep your students attention, at appropriate developmental levels.  While teachers like cute things, they also should recognize that it's all about storytelling.  Every good story has conflict, but not every story has a happy ending.  Find the stories within your section of the social studies.  Let your students marinate in some complicated thinking.  Help them understand the overarching picture, develop their conclusions, and apply the skills you are teaching them.

It's Too Controversial.

It can be controversial - that's true - but that's not our fault.  Teaching the facts of history does not mean that we are complicit in the actions of historical figures.  The facts are the facts.  Sometimes they implicate people, and sometimes they simply demonstrate the flaws in humanity.  Life happens, resulting in good and evil consequences. Educators aren't always obliged to take sides, but to show the causes and effects of the choices made in the past. Please don't shy away from the controversial:  that may just be the spice of the lesson.  It may get an unlikely student to sit up and pay attention.

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Learning Symmetry with Washington

There are More Important Subjects.

Look at the amount of training that goes into the college education of an elementary teacher.  What percentage of the coursework is spent in the Social Studies, Civics, and History.  One three-hour course is about it, and even then the class gets really caught up in methodology, and it doesn't cover content at all.  There is a lot of talk about, "If they can't read, they can't learn any other subject," and "Kids today have to learn STEM to compete in the workplace," but what about citizenship, responsibility, and respect?   Who is to say that reading is important if students have no purpose to their reading?  Who's to say arithmetic is important if students cannot apply it in the real world?  Who is to say that science is important if students can't trace scientific developments and see them in context?  

It's not Relevant to Kids.

OK.  This one is blatantly untrue.  If you believe kids are bored by the subject, you haven't been in our classroom to see my students have mature conversations about some very serious subjects in colonial and American history. Sure, you can stick to the biased and bland presentation of a textbook (Blah.), but the magic happens when the teacher brings it to life.  Many teachers would be surprised to see ten-year-olds longing for more of a subject that the teachers themselves are bored with.  Please do not project your own dysfunction in history education onto your pupils.
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Book:  The Unforgettable Guinevere St. Clair

7/28/2020

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It's hard to make up my mind whether or not I liked this story.  There were enough moments along the way that had me guessing, but I wasn't trying to predict the outcome of the story; instead, I was trying to guess what the real identity of the story was.
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From Goodreads:
Guinevere St. Clair is going to be a lawyer. She was the fastest girl in New York City. She knows everything there is to know about the brain. And now that she’s living in Crow, Iowa, she wants to ride into her first day of school on a cow named Willowdale Princess Deon Dawn.

But Gwyn isn’t in Crow, Iowa, just for royal cows. Her family has moved there, where her parents grew up, in the hopes of jogging her mother Vienna’s memory. Vienna has been suffering from memory loss since Gwyn was four. She can no longer remember anything past the age of thirteen, not even that she has two young daughters. Gwyn’s father is obsessed with finding out everything he can to help his wife, but Gwyn’s focused on problems that seem a little more within her reach. Like proving that the very strange Gaysie Cutter who lives next door is behind the disappearance of her only friend, Wilbur Truesdale.

Gwyn is sure she can crack the case, but when she does she finds that not all of her investigations lead her to the places she would have expected. In fact they might just lead her to learn about the mother she’s been doing her best to forget.
 ​
There are some disturbing sections in the storyline.  Gwyn, who spells her name with a Gu- when spelled out properly and Gw- when abbreviated, is somewhat of an eccentric girl in spite of being critical of others.  She is pretty self-righteous, though I'm not sure that's what author Amy Makechnie intended.  In fact, I found Gwyn to be an annoying character who is far, far from empathic.  She rudely dismisses her own mother's mental health, she mistreats the old lady who watches the going-on of the neighborhood, and she rudely accuses Gaysie of being evil just because she is different.

The end will have readers screaming at Gwyn for making the weakest of choices, defying authority, resulting in a regrettably-predictable tragedy.  Like most kids, I suppose, she should have known better!
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The Starving Time

7/27/2020

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Mood Music

Draw a picture to show the scene that comes to mind as you listen to this music. Be ready to write a story to go along with your picture and share it with the class.

In the winter of 1609/10, residents of Jamestown were faced with their darkest season.  Read this quick article about the Starving Time from Historic Jamestowne.  

Art Appreciation

Observe the painting below.
  • ​What do you notice?
  • What do you wonder?
  • ​What is happening?
  • Write your thoughts.
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Picture

Jane

Watch the process of archaeology from find and interpretation to reconstruction and presentation.  How many careers are depicted in these videos?  What education do you think was required for each of the jobs?

​Who was Jane?  What is her story?
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Positive Behavior Conversation

Everything matters...Forever
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Music Appreciation

Fix You
Turn the Radio Up
​
When the Good Times Come Again
​
You Will Be Found
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While We're on the Subject

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What Do You Hunger For?
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Personal History and Who I Am Today

7/26/2020

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During the last part of the 1980s, I stumbled onto a dream job in El Reno, Oklahoma.  The place was called The Wilds, located just a few miles north of Interstate 40 and west of Oklahoma City.  Several acres of land boasted a 10-acre lake and a half-acre pond for fee fishing, a large restaurant modeled after a horse barn, a grist mill, paddle boats, a covered bridge, and a petting barn

I applied for a job in the outside area, and quickly rose to become the manager.  We had a business that was tourism-based, with the dreams of becoming something even greater.  I lit bonfires, drove hayrides through the buffalo herd, designed educational tours, and guided college students and government groups through the property, telling them about the elk, the buffalo, the timber wolf, the rattlesnake, the mountain lion, and the rabbits. I showed them the farm animals, set them up on horseback rides, and taught them about fish farming.

We booked country music artists to perform on stage, and we were even known for bringing in a day-full of entertainment with top country entertainers.

And of course, one of my favorite things was walking up the hill to get a plate of food at the restaurant.  I never got tired of the smoked ribs, catfish, and cheesecake.
Did I say something greater? Yes, I did.  The Wilds had aspirations of becoming a nationally-known destination in central Oklahoma - a place that taught as well as entertained.  The Wilds family, in fact, had already purchased a full-scale railroad with all of the workings.

Before I came along, they already did all of the dirt work in preparation for laying the railroad track.  One of my jobs was going to be to help create the experience for guests. Perhaps a dinner ride with appropriate western entertainment.  Maybe a children's field trip ride.  Or even a good old-fashioned holdup.  The train would have chugged through the western prairie and even encounter the buffalo herd.

Other plans included a themed campground and perhaps an old western Main Street with vendors and themed hotel lofts.  My personal thoughts went to other attractions based on Oklahoma history.  This job was right up my alley, allowing me the freedom to create scripts, assign jobs, order supplies, and schedule entertainment.
But first, I had to work.  I had to clean out grease traps, install an aeration system in the pond, and skin thousands of channel catfish for customers.  There was a lot of sweating and running.  I would drive home, smelling of fish and barbecue and sweat at the end of a 14-hour day.  I would listen to fishermen tell their tales.  I would move heavy picnic tables.  I would mow the grass.  I would move and feed animals.  I would bail out and clean the paddleboats.  Indeed, it was hard work, but it was also an investment in my future with the company.
And then, the bank called the loan.  The Wilds family had borrowed a half-million to a million dollars to purchase and move the railroad, the engine, cars, etc., but the bank needed the money early.  This was the 1980s, remember, and banks weren't doing very well.  Of course, the loan could not be repaid in such a lump sum, so the company declared bankruptcy.  I was in the right place, but it was the wrong time.

I still dream about The Wilds ​from time to time, usually about a kind of revival of the property, but my parents recently drove by and took the pictures that accompany this writing.  They were saddened by the condition of the property after all these years.  There was a period of time when it was sold and run as a Christian camp of some sort, but it would never recover as a theme park or outdoor tourist venue.  The overgrown nature of the property gives away the notion that it is completely abandoned.

Still, my investment in the company was not in vain.  By advancing to management and also receiving the title of Education Director, I discovered that I had a talent for working with elementary-aged children.  Of course, I didn't know at the time.  I finally got a new job, working in a furniture warehouse, and in a month, I was done.  I became discouraged:  I was no longer using my college degree for anything, and I felt like I was spinning my wheels.

On my drive home, during the urban rush hour of Oklahoma City, the idea dawned on me that I should go back to school to acquire my elementary teaching certification.  I already had my secondary certificate and had already completed my student teaching (with no desire for teaching), so with the money I had saved, I went back to school for a year.  If The Wilds had not failed and the furniture warehouse not been so frustrating, I don't know if I ever would have become an educator.  There's no way of knowing what I would have done.

The investment in The Wilds was really one of experimentation and growth.  Lynn Wilds taught me great lessons in dealing with the public, doing hard work, having a good time while doing hard work, and not being afraid to get dirty (filthy at times).  Those messages have kept me going for all the years since then, and I guess I don't look at troubles in life like most people do.  The whole process taught me about perseverance and patience.  It also taught me not to worry until there is something to worry about.

I look at The Wilds with nostalgia, wishing I could return with a digital camera and document what once existed there.  I wish I could slip onto the property to dig up some artifacts and relive the events of the late 1980s, even if it resulted in sore muscles and sunburn.
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A Visit to Underground Vaults & Storage

7/25/2020

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While touring the Strataca Salt Mine Museum in Hutchinson, Kansas, we were reminded of one of the supplementary uses of the underground space.  A company called the Underground Vaults & Storage leases a portion of the abandoned section of the mine to store important documents, films, and artifacts.

Hollywood movie companies pay UV&S to store original films and negatives from movies and television programs in the salt mine.  The salt atmosphere preserves everything very effectively for decades.  Also in the space are a few movie props and costumes.  We found Mr. Freeze, Batman, Superman, and other costumes from popular films.  We also saw the "Dorothy II" apparatus from Twister and a few props from Men in Black.
The most interesting item in the area is the original April 16, 1865, New York Herald.  This paper is from the day after President Lincoln was shot at Ford's Theater.  The preservative qualities of the salt have kept this copy of the newspaper from typically yellowing, and the text is still easy to read.
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Quote:  Character

7/24/2020

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"Ego is the anesthesia
that deadens the pain
of stupidity."

(Rick Rigsby)
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Music Appreciation:  Life's a Happy Song

7/23/2020

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Students are often called upon to read "chorally".
That is, they read together simultaneously

as a group.

Repeating this practice assists young readers with reading fluency - the speed, accuracy,
​and inflection of  oral reading.


Why not, since it's called "choral" reading anyway, actually read the chorus of a song? ​
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History Mythbusting V

7/22/2020

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If our students are thinking like this, we have wasted everyone's time!  We can do better.  Thinking that we can just hit a reset button without learning from what has gone before us is preposterous.  Even in a video game, even with all of the save points and extra lives, a person has a slim chance at defeating the evil "bosses" without the practice that comes from repeated failure.  That's a parallel that most of my students understand.
​

History is never relevant.  I'll never use History in my lifetime!

PictureStained Glass Display at George Washington's Mount Vernon
  • Don't just tell them it matters:  teach them why and how it matters to them.  For years, teachers from elementary school to graduate schools have focused on the events without making connections to the lives of their students.  I've written about context and connections in previous articles, but this time let's address the idea that sometimes you just have to clearly tell them.  I'm tired of the claims of ignorance, but I also understand that sometimes people need a kick in the seat (That's figurative language:  don't actually kick anyone.).  That is to say, we have to explicitly teach some things.  Not that our lessons should begin in a way where we just state everything up front, but at some point, we must be clear.  Sometimes we have to guide students by the hand and show them where the directional signs are.  Sometimes we have to read the signs to them.  Sometimes we have to explain the signs.  You get the idea.  Why does it matter that Hamilton and Burr couldn't resolve their differences except by dueling?  Why did Billy and Tommy get into a fight on the slide?  The answers to such questions might be similar.

  • Don't forget the romance.  There is something rewarding about a good moral story based on the nation's founding.  There is something wonderful about having history heroes.  The classic story is the Parson Weems' telling of George Washington chopping down his father's favorite cherry tree with his new birthday hatchet.  When asked about it, the story says that George told his father, "I cannot tell a lie," and admitted to being the assassin.  The story has a moral and easily fits into a communication arts lesson, as well.  Likewise, anything we know about Sacagawea accurately leading Lewis and Clark fits into a romantic notion of a woman saving the directionless men and heroically saving the lives of expedition members.  We can all get a picture in our minds of this brave Indian "princess" standing at the pinnacle of a rock, with the wind in her dark hair, and declaring which path to follow.  It makes for an admirable picture of a woman in history.  That said, read on.
 
  • Kill the romance!  We know things were not perfect.  We know the people weren't perfect.  The future will never benefit from lying about reality.  The cherry tree tale a nice story, and it may have happened, but there is no proof.  I still cover the story in my classroom, but I also reveal it as probable fiction - at least until someone finds a reference to the event in a letter penned by Augustus Washington or remembered in one of his son George's memoirs.  After all these years, it may be one of the only things parents and grandparents "know" about Washington, so at this point it would be better to show kids how to better discern truth and fiction.  I don't think there is anything wrong with elevating heroic people, but not to the point that we don't understand that they were just as flawed as we are.  Washington bravely and strategically led the Colonial Army during the Revolution, but he also had his share of bad decisions.  These people who have been memorialized statues never intended to be worshipped as idols or gods, but at the same time, the monuments are created as a reminder that amidst the mistakes, some great choices were enacted.​

PictureImagine Respect's Potential
  • Connect!​  Not relevant?  You have to be kidding!  The very births of major religions are much older than American history, and yet those personal beliefs have steered the direction of nations for centuries.  Entire peoples have been conquered and slaughtered in the Crusades or Jihad.  For years, slaves have been collected by Muslims and accepted by Christians.  It happened.  It's history.  It was and is wrong, but it happened.  And it is something to understand.  We don't get how something so heinous could have occurred until we understand the timeline of events, the cultural norms of the times, and the excuses that people used.  And after generation upon generation of accepting slavery as the standard, it is a pattern that we are still dealing with.  That hatred is emblazoned and engraved into the hearts of many of our own citizens to this day.  It helps to understand the history so we can connect our students to the reality of choices that they, too, must make.  At the same time, we need to bring it onto the level of our children.  True, they don't have to make a decision whether to own slaves, today, but continued lessons about the equal treatment and respect of other human beings, regardless or race, color, gender, or creed is something for which to strive.
​​
  • Here comes Growth Mindset again.  Yes, I've covered growth mindset in previous posts, as well, but I don't think it can be overemphasized.  People - students - can change.  With all of the evil we see in the world, and all the behavioral patterns we see in our classrooms, we must not lose sight that people can change.  As teachers, we want to positively affect the world, but it's easy to give up, lose heart, and get depressed. Why? Because it takes a lot of time and energy to turn a big ship around, and there are icebergs in our paths.  We're going to continually hit the icebergs, with all the unseen issues our students carry under the surface.  We're going to continually fire all of our boilers around the clock to correct courses.  We'll go home tired.  We'll cry into our pillows.  We will pray to God, throwing up our hands in despair.  But the ship can be navigated around the blockades, through the icy waters, and the ship can arrive safely on the other side.  Why?  Because we know that people change.  How do we know?  Because we have countless examples in the people we study in history.

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A well-informed citizenry might be a myth in itself, but it is a goal that we can work on.  That it is hard doesn't make it something to avoid.  President John F. Kennedy, in reference to sending astronauts to walk on the moon said, "We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard."  He continued the inspirational speech, explaining, "...that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too."  Our greatest heroes may have been slowed, but they have never let mountains, rivers, riots, or disease stop their forward momentum.  That's something even for teachers to remember.

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Mood Music:  Foggy Mountain Breakdown

7/21/2020

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Sometimes, when we go to the movies or as we watch a show on TV, we are transported into the plot.  Directors understand that their selection of background music can change and enhance a scene.

Now it is time to turn it around.  This time, the music comes first.  Do not watch the video; instead, let the music lead your imagination.  As it plays, allow it to transport you into a scene that has yet to be written.  Then, write the scene.  Use all the visual imagery you can muster in your writing.  At the end, you will share your writing.  Will it stand on its own, without the music in the background?
Close your eyes.

Listen to the music.

Create a visual story in your mind.

Write your story as you listen a second time.

Tweak your scene.

Share your scene with the class.
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Book:  The Ambrose Deception

7/20/2020

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Emily Ecton has authored a page-turner.  With The Ambrose Deception, she constructed a mystery that keeps the reader interested.  It was a quick read for me and a lot of fun to follow along as events developed.
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From Goodreads:
Melissa is a nobody. Wilf is a slacker. Bondi is a show-off. At least that's what their middle school teachers think. To everyone's surprise, they are the three students chosen to compete for a ten thousand-dollar scholarship, solving clues that lead them to various locations around Chicago. At first the three contestants work independently, but it doesn't take long before each begins to wonder whether the competition is a sham. It's only by secretly joining forces and using their unique talents that the trio is able to uncover the truth behind the Ambrose Deception--a truth that involves a lot more than just a scholarship.

With a narrative style as varied and intriguing as the mystery itself, this adventure involving clever clues, plenty of perks, and abhorrent adults is pure wish fulfillment.
I wish the end had lived up to the standards set along the plot path.  The payoff at the end was kind of dropped in suddenly, and I felt it needed some more attention.  There were components that could have been clearer.

In addition, I do wish there was more in the vein of consequences for some cheating that occurred along the way. The kids broke rules.  They skipped school.  They lied.  They got in cars with strangers.  But in the end, none of those things mattered, but perhaps they should have.
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Eagles

7/19/2020

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During these first days of the school year, it seems appropriate to give some thought to our school mascot.  Our mascot, seen here (right), is a stylized version of the national bird, the eagle.
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Mood Music

Spirit Animal:  Eagle

Art Appreciation

Analyze the picture shown (below).  Check out the details.​
  • 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?
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What's Your Wingspan?

We will use the Bald Eagle Activity Guide from the Army Corps of Engineers and Eagle Days from the Missouri Department of Conservation to see how we measure up to the eagles of the world.

Music Appreciation

Eagle
The Eagle and the Hawk
Fly
Fly Like an Eagle
You're Gonna See Me SOAR!

1, 2, 3, Draw!


Owl Pellets

Eagles and other raptors cannot digest everything they catch and eat.  The hair and bones collect inside the bird and must be regurgitated.  We don't have regurgitated eagle pellets, but we can investigate pellets from owls.  The teacher will give you distinct instructions for this activity, and you are expected to follow those instructions to the letter.  We will use the following link to help us understand:  Owl Pellet Essentials Guide.
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While We're on the Subject

Who Is the Wisest Bird?

Are Bald Eagles Really Bald?

We should also consider plant and animal adaptations (habitat, survival, and structural)
​to round out our science diet.
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A Visit to Strataca Salt Mine

7/18/2020

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​My wife and I visited the salt mine in Hutchinson, Kansas, a few years ago, and thought it to be a most unique experience.  Most people probably do not know that this place exists in the first place.  This time, we brought the kids along to join in the fun.  The folks at Strataca have really put together something cool here, and it's worth a day trip or a two-day trip to experience the mine, Cosmosphere (which I'll write about in the near future), and the Kansas country view at this time of the year, which I found to be quite beautiful.
We spent several hours 650 feet below the earth's surface with a constant 68-degree temperature, learning just about all we ever needed to know about the mining of salt for winter streets.  I suppose we could almost do the mining ourselves, from undercutting to setting explosives to harvest, with all the wisdom we picked up.
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​The facts about the salt mine are fascinating.  That they hope to harvest one million tons of the stuff in 2020 is amazing all by itself.  The fact that Mike Rowe did an episode of Dirty Jobs, the reality show about careers that involve hard work, elbow grease, and determination, is pretty cool, as well.  But the culture and history in the mine is, as you might guess, my favorite part.  You can see that some of my photos here are not about the salt mine at all. Some are about life inside the mine, and some demonstrate the culture of the 1940s and 1950s when this section of the mine was active.

Being somewhat of an archaeology buff these days, I was drawn to the trash piles in the mine (Things that go into the mine stay in the mine.).  The piles of candy and snack food wrappers, cone-shaped water cups, reading materials, and other items were quite interesting. There is even a partially-eaten sandwich at the edge of one trash pile that has been there some 75 years - yes, still sitting there on the ground, preserved all of this time because of the salt atmosphere that surrounds it.  At the other end of the same pile is a 75-year-old banana peel.
Maybe you, like I was, would be interested in the newspapers and maps from World War II, the cigarette wrappers and matchbooks marked with prominent Vs for victory, or the collection can to "Help Fight Mental Retardation".  We wouldn't think these to be worth much, but their connection with history and the culture of several decades ago are compelling.  We might even consider some of the items (like one that uses the word retardation) to be insensitive today, but that doesn't mean it didn't happen and we can't learn from it.  Kids might be more interested in seeing the primitive-looking toilet still surrounded by unused rolls and used toilet paper.

Salt is a terrific preserver of these items and others - something I will address in a couple of posts to come.  Check back in coming days to learn more about this location and others nearby that our family visited on our recent trek into Kansas.
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Professional Pet Peeve:  Stop Depending on Sports

7/17/2020

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How many times have we heard it?

Sports teach teamwork.  Sports teach sportsmanship.

First of all, really?  Because what I see is a lot of growling and posturing.  Oh sure, an effective team has to work together, but isn't there also a bunch of trash talk and intimidation?  What is the locker room talk like?  Is there any bullying of the weaker members of the team or of the kids who aren't on the team?

But more importantly, and more to the point of this writing, why are we depending on sports to teach teamwork and sportsmanship?  If we do, aren't we leaving a lot of people out?  When does the rest of the population learn how to work with a team or how to lose and win?

I opine that we should more consciously spread that responsibility beyond the coach and put it into regular classrooms.  My primary responsibility is not to teach reading and writing, math and science, or even history, but to teach my students to think for themselves, work with other people (even with people who are different), listen to people with whom they disagree, and respect people who do not show respect.  Just for kicks, let's say that all of this belongs under the umbrella term of citizenship.

How about teaching respect outright?  How about explicitly teaching how to greet other people?  What about teaching students how to ask questions to show interest in other people?  What about teaching the steps of responsibility without beating around the bush?  How about integrating these so-called soft skills into every period of the day, not implicitly on the back burner, but right up front?  We can no longer afford to hide these skills in the weight room, on the court or the field.  No longer can we sneak these skills into the huddle.  No longer should we allow our referees to clean up the mess of unsportsmanlike behavior.

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    Passing Notes

    EMAIL MR. HOGGATT
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    History in Residence

    Elementary Schools:
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    into your classroom
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    Intercom

    GigSalad Member Since 2022
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    Trophy Case

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

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    Fireside Chats

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    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.)
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