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Our Schools Today: February, 2006 - Black History Month
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Hawthorne School - Kate Lyman We read books and saw videos about children who integrated all white schools (Ruby Bridges and The Little Rock Nine) and about children who risked their safety and even their lives to join marches to gain equal rights (the Birmingham Children's March and the voting rights march from Selma to Montgomery). The students also wrote and performed a play about Ruby Bridges. We made connections by discussing ways in which they had advocated peacefully for change in their community or school. Students planned and wrote works of historical fiction in which they "time traveled" back to an event that they had studied during the Civil Rights Movement. As a final activity, each student chose an event from the civil rights movement to write about and illustrate. Then we made a "human time line" as students held up their drawings and formed a chronological line which extended from Rosa Parks' birth in 1913 to her death in 2005.
Shorewood Hills School Jefferson School - Molly Tormey, 8th grade Allis School - Amy Nelson, Music Hawthorne School - Amy Covey, 1st grade In honor of Black History Month and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., our class has joined the efforts of other first grade classrooms involved in the math intervention project to collect 100 cans of food for the 100th day of school. We will donate our efforts to the Atwood Community Center Food Bank. Our first grade class is also planting seeds this month. We hope to grow plants to donate to classrooms for their Hawthorne community garden plot. The produce grown in these gardens is periodically donated to the Second Harvest Food Bank. Service learning is an amazing way to honor Black History Month! Allis School - Steve Hurst, Art We will be doing some art projects with regards to these artists. Romare Bearden, for example, is covered through the Smart Art Projects, targeted to 4th grade students. Toki School Our celebration this year will be held on Thursday, February 23. There will be presentations for students throughout the school day, with the final evening performance at 6:30 in the Toki gym. The program will include poetry recitation, rap, and African drumming performances by students, as well as music by Toki's Jazz Ensemble. SANKOFA Club provides cultural awareness to students through artistic expression. Students learn how music and visual arts reflect the culture of Black people. Club Advisors Howard Muhammed and David Soward also lead Toki's 100 Black Men African American History Challenge Bowl Team. Also:
Gompers School Pamela Ferrill (gr. 5) reads the books that are nominated for the Coretta Scott King Award and makes recommendations. She shares portions of the books with her students and keeps them abreast of the process. Pictured is a display featuring Black History; it's from the bulletin board outside Ferrill's room. Art teacher Jennifer James incorporates the work of Romare Bearden into her curriculum. Pictured is a portion of a bulletin board display from near her room featuring African American Art. Our K-2 music performance, February 16th, includes the songs This Little Light of Mine, and Oh, When the Saints Go Marching In. Grades K-1 studied Martin Luther King Jr. in conjunction with his day, and have since been making connections with other multicultural readings and writing. Second grade students are in the process of studying Africa. Third grade students have enjoyed the stories of Benjamin Beneker, Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. Fourth grade has been studying race and racism, and has considered the question of what the world would be like without Martin Luther King, Jr. The fourth grades are also studying the "I Have a Dream" speech, and talked about their dreams and how to accomplish them. Other readings and discussions have included: Ruby Bridges (changes in school communities,) George Washington Carver (revolutionary ideas,) Rosa Parks (civil rights,) athletes/icons (Michael Jordan, Hank Aaron, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Jackie Robinson) and other important African Americans. Jefferson School - Amelia O'Dell, Music I will also be using the Black National Anthem and I Have a Dream song while talking about "freedom" for all people, for my 6th grade general music. We are working on a Swahili song for contest in my 6th Grade Chorus. We are also working on "Follow the Drinking Gourd" for contest with the 7th grade Chorus. Falk School - Kim Dahl, LMC Our celebration of diversity began with sisters Shanda James and Shawntay Smith reading a poem over the loudspeaker. Then, all over the school, classes gathered for a read-aloud by an African American author. Wherever they were, students and staff shared some great books.
First grader Jordan Bush closed the Read-In with another poem read over the loudspeaker. We at Falk want to acknowledge that while this was a unique opportunity to be part of a big community of readers on the same day, we read books by and about African Americans all year long, not just in February. Muir School Return to MMSD Today |



