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Voices
of the Twin Cities Past
A Videoconference Project
By
Linda McConville and Diane Nye, E. P. Clarke Elementary,
St. Joseph Public Schools
This
project is shared online with the authors' permission
and with the purpose of encouraging other communities
to create a similar project.
Background
Since
the publication of the book Other Side of the
River by Alex Kotlowitz, the two documentaries
“Twin Cities: Understanding the Issues”
by WNIT and the “Tale of Two Cities”
produced by Michigan Public Broadcasting, and the
Jimmy Carter Habitat Build in Benton Harbor during
the summer of 2005, there has been a community focus
on the need for understanding between St. Joseph and
Benton Harbor. In addition, the civil unrest in Benton
Harbor in June 2003 that received national attention
escalated the need for programs and opportunities
to bring a sense of unity to the two cities.
Project
As classroom teacher and media specialist, we designed
a research project, Voices of Twin Cities Past, using
distance learning to unite two diverse fourth classes
and impact their learning about the history of the
two neighboring communities. The specific program
was to teach and use the Big6 research model to learn
about important individuals from the past who made
a difference in our Twin City history. We focused
on schools and parks that the students attend or frequent.
After designing the project we applied for and won
a local Rotary Grant to pay for the distance learning
equipment for both schools. Our working group consisted
of fourth grade teachers from both districts, a media
specialist, a social studies consultant, technology
coordinators from both districts, and the Distance
Learning consultant from our RESA.
Michigan
Curriculum Framework
The
specific measurable outcomes that apply
to Voices of Twin Cities Past were derived
from the Michigan Social Studies Curriculum
Benchmarks (from the Michigan Department
of Education -assessed by MEAP)
-
Strand
1. Historical Perspective - Students
use knowledge of the past to construct
meaningful understanding of our diverse
cultural heritage and to inform their
civic judgments.
-
Standard
1.2 Comprehending the Past.
-
Standard
1.3 Analyzing and Interpreting
the Past. All students will reconstruct
The past by comparing interpretations
written by others from a variety
of
Perspectives and creating narratives
from evidence.
-
Standard
2.1 Diversity of People, Places
and Cultures.
-
Strand
V. Inquiry -Students will use methods
of social science investigations to
answer questions about society.
-
Standard
5.1 Information Processing
-
Standard
5.2 Conducting Investigations
Time
Frame
To complete our project, we established the following
timetable:
-
Fall / Winter 2004 -- Order equipment and determine
project participants.
-
Spring
/ Summer 2004 -- Classroom teachers and media specialists
from partner schools meet, consult with tech coordinator
of each district, receive training, further develop
and refine collaborative activities, survey current
available resources and develop rubrics.
-
Fall
2004 -- Begin video conference activities with partner
schools, give pretest, help students narrow research
choices, teach Big 6 Interviewing and Research techniques,
and plan timeline for completion of project.
-
Winter
2005 -- Continue videoconferences to monitor progress
and share resources. Teach skills necessary for
completing choice of project.
-
Spring
2005 -- Assemble and produce projects. Give post-test.
Share and distribute final projects.
Evaluation
The methods of evaluation
we used to measure the outcomes of Voices
of Twin Cities Past were:
A pre and post test were given to the
fourth grade students to determine their
knowledge of local namesakes of schools
and parks. The pretest results showed
that more than three-fourths of the students
were unaware of the historical connections
of names they see daily. However the results
of the posttest showed the impact on students’
learning as over 90% of the two classes
scored in the satisfactory range. Both
classes also showed an increased interest
and excitement when discussing the names
of schools and parks with their peers
and parents. In addition, both classes
used the distance learning equipment at
other times to connect the two classes.
Because of this project, the students
were able to develop friendships that
were fostered when they met in real time
through field trips and other activities.
As the project progressed, we quickly
discovered there was virtually no material
written at a fourth grade level on the
names chosen from our local history. Parent
volunteers worked closely with student
groups on the notetaking portion of the
research to help decipher the difficult
syntax and content of the primary documents.
The Inquiry outcome was measured using
a rubric from The Big 6 Research Skills
Model. All students successfully used
all steps in the research process to produce
the final written project. They also showed
increased understanding of the importance
of the rich history and stories of our
communities.
The students’ final project was
to create a “historical postcard”
which included digital pictures and corresponding
information on each historical figure.
A full set was produced for each classroom
and each media center. In the future we
plan to include other final projects such
as booklets, tri-folds, CDs, videos, and
web logs.
Community
and School Support
We
received strong support on this project
because administrators recognized that
the potential impact of Voices of Twin
Cities Past could have on students’
learning of local history, Furthermore,
the community was eager to endorse a project
that would facilitate collaboration between
the school communities. Our superintendent
wrote a cover letter of recommendation
to the Rotary and our school board president
signed our application. Upon receiving
the Rotary grant award, our principal
attended the awards luncheon with us.
The technology directors and the RESA consultant
worked closely with us in selecting the
distance learning equipment. In addition
many community members and our local Historical
Society shared with us stories and primary
documents of local history to use in our
project.
Continuing
the Project
After completing the first year successfully,
we plan to continue this project with
the original teachers and media specialist
and the new incoming fourth graders in
both districts. Involving other fourth
grade classrooms in the two buildings
is this year’s goal. This will require
adding additional local names to use in
the Big6 research process to expand the
printed final project. To encourage others
outside our local community to replicate
this project, we have shared the information
that will appear as a vignette in the
new updated State of Michigan Technology
Plan. We have also been invited to present
Voices of Twin Cities Past in March 2006
at the MACUL conference in Grand Rapids,
Michigan, and plan to present at MAME
in the fall of 2007. In addition, we are
working on a multimedia presentation to
share with the community at a local Rotary
lunch.
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