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Welcomes and Keynote Address
To kick off the conference, Associate Director
Suzanne Wasserman
welcomed the participants, spent a few moments outlining the mission of the
Gotham Center's teaching project, and introduced the conference coordinators,
Julie Maurer
and
Cynthia Copeland. Ms. Maurer and Ms. Copeland, without whom the conference
never could have happened, discussed some logistics for the day and then turned
the stage over to
Mike Wallace, Director of the Gotham Center, who delivered a lively keynote
address on the importance of teachers and the opportunities and challenges that
make education in New York City a unique undertaking.
Maps and Stories: Giving a Sense of Place to Cyberspace: A Web Site Project at
the Fieldston School
(7-12 grades)
Thomas Beller, President, Mapsites.net, Mrbellersneighborhood.com
Robert McClintock, Director, Institute for Learning Technology at Teachers
College, Columbia University
Andrew Meyers, Teacher, Fieldston School
Mapsites allows teachers to turn their classroom into a collaborative writing
workshop and a class newspaper in which the teacher is editor-in-chief. This
demonstration of Mapsites will explore educational possibilities opened up when
students' writing is posted on an on-line map. Mapsites can be used to stimulate
student writing, ranging from personal essays and creative writing exercises to
more academic material like history or social studies papers.
The Origins Project: Research, Writing, and Drama in the History Curriculum
(6 -12 grades)
Lynda Kennedy, Education Coordinator, Lower East Side Tenement Museum
This session presents the Origins Project, a collaboration between the Lower East
Side Tenement Museum and City Lights Youth Theatre, where NYC teens spend five
weeks researching, writing and performing a play based on the history of the
Lower East Side. Session participants will take part in simple exercises that
illustrate Origins techniques. Lynda Kennedy will screen a video clip of the work
created by the Origins Project and hand out a bibliography that encourages the
use of drama and writing for the development of an engaging, interdisciplinary
history program.
New York City on the Box
(7-12 grades)
Suzy Phillips, Education Coordinator, Museum of Television and Radio
Education programs at the Museum of Television and Radio use television and radio
as a catalyst for learning and as a means for helping teachers meet curriculum
standards. The program ANew York on the Box@ explores the changing images of New
York City on television. How have fictional representations of AThe Big Apple@
changed over time and how do they reflect reality? Participants will critically
examine New York City as it appears on television and consider the importance of
setting and location in narrative.
NYC Multimedia Technology Projects: Lower East Side
(4 -6 grades)
David Bellel, Project Director, American Gateways, Community School District 1
Janet Chasin, American Gateways Staff Developer, CSD 1
Mindy Gluck, Classroom Teacher, PS 20 and Henry Street Settlement
American Gateways and Henry Street Settlement work with students in CSD1 to study
local architecture and NYC history. Several multimedia projects centering around
this theme will be displayed and discussed. Software programs used include
PowerPoint, Excel, Word, HyperStudio, and Imovie.
New York's Underground History
(K-12 grades)
Hilary Eddy, Archaeology Educator, South Street Seaport Museum
What better way to supplement your classroom curriculum than with a pile of
trash! Archaeological excavations in New York City have produced a veritable
treasure trove of artifacts, many of which are housed in the South Street Seaport
Museum's collections. In this hands-on, interactive workshop, participants will
examine objects dating back to the 17th century. Working in small groups,
participants will discuss lessons appropriate to their grade level that focus on
interpreting the past through material remains.
Tour of Seymour B. Durst Collection
Wendy Durst Kreeger, President, Old York Foundation
The Seymour B. Durst Old York Library documents the political, social, commercial
and economic development of the City of New York, with particular emphasis on the
19th century. The collection includes books, rare reports with extensive maps,
early NYC newspapers, original photographs, postcards, playbills, pamphlets,
periodicals, ephemera and a wealth of visual materials. The library services a
wide range of users and makes its holdings known through its Web site.
City of Neighborhoods: Bridging School and Community: An Overview of Experiences
(K-12 grades)
Monica Hampton, Program Coordinator for Schools, Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum
Catherine Teegarden, Program Director, Learning By Design: NY (New York
Foundation for Architecture)
Launched in 1991, A City of Neighborhoods: Bridging School and Community is a
joint project of Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum and Learning by Design: NY
Program of the New York Foundation for Architecture, Inc. Over the course of ten
years, A City of Neighborhoods has provided hundreds of educators techniques for
using the community as the focus for a series of lectures and workshops in which
participants learn how to use community resources to enrich school curricula.
This presentation will utilize slides, hands-on activities and primary resources
such as maps and historic photographs.
Life in New Amsterdam
(2-4 grades)
Elizabeth Byrne, Coordinator of Elementary School Programs, The New-York Historical Society
Bonnie Levine, Teacher, Corlears School
The origins of New York City, one of the most important financial capitals of the
world, can be traced back to its founding as a Dutch trading post in the 17th
century. Elizabeth Byrne and Bonnie Levine will conduct a workshop on classroom
and museum strategies for teaching this state-mandated subject. Discussion will
include creating a thematic curriculum and incorporating different disciplines
such as economics, social studies, and English language arts into the study of
New Amsterdam. This workshop will model teaching from primary sources, including
maps, documents and artifacts, and also explore how teachers can create their own
touch collection for object study in the classroom.
Using Photography to Learn About Immigration
(7-12 grades)
Cynthia Way, Coordinator, Community Programs, International Center of Photography
Nancy Wechter, Photographer/Instructor
Karen Lindsay, Photographer/Instructor
Erin Fallon, Community Programs Assistant, ICP
Imagine arriving new to this country -- what do you see? In ICP's Community
Program at the Adolph S. Ochs School, 7th and 8th grade students are asked to
express through photographs what it might have been like to be an immigrant to
New York City in the 1900s. They learn to study, discuss, and create photographs
that help them to picture history. This presentation will review the ICP
photography projects on immigration through a slide presentation and discussion.
Then, ICP educators will lead a hands-on photographic activity to provide a sense
of how to use photography in the classroom.
Fire in the Sky: Using Technology to Bring History Alive
(5 -8 grades)
Chris Czajka, Associate Director, National Teacher Training Institute; Thirteen/WNET
In this session participants will examine an historic event from the early 20th
century via use of video and the Internet. Participants will have a hands-on
experience that will introduce them to conditions facing factory workers in the
early 1900s and learn strategies for incorporating technology into history
instruction.
Oral History As Drama: A Catalyst for Learning
(7-12 grades)
David Kener, Director of Education, The American Place Theatre
Lisa Richards, Associate Director of Education, The American Place Theatre
Peter Ruocco, Education Associate, The American Place Theatre
This workshop will demonstrate the richness of oral history as a primary source
for exploring history, cultural issues and immigration. We will present
strategies for using oral history as theater, featuring immigration stories from
Coming Through: Ellis Island to JFK, a play based on oral histories of those who
came to America in the 1920s and new arrivals who come through JFK today. This
interactive workshop will explore methods of eliciting oral histories from
students and accessing NYC's vast oral history resources.
Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl: Immigrant Women at the Turn of the Century
(High School)
Eliza Fabillar, Co-Director of Education, American Social History Project, Center
for Media and Learning, CUNY Raj Nanda, Teacher, Martin Luther King JHS
This interdisciplinary workshop will focus on the themes of immigration, labor,
and social reform in NYC. Participants will engage in hands-on activities using
student-centered, inquiry-based teaching strategies and ASHP curriculum
resources. Using literature, images, and primary documents that reflect different
points of view, workshop lessons aim to strengthen students= writing, critical
thinking and visual literacy skills.
Using Art to Understand History: The Ashcan Artists, the Muckrakers, and the Progressive Era
(8th grade)
Ann Marie Chinnery, Teacher, Mott Hall School
Robert W. Snyder, Associate Professor, Rutgers University - Newark, N.J.
Ann Marie Chinnery will present two lessons involving primary sources from a unit
on the Progressive Era. She will use lesson plans, worksheet samples, a resource
list and Internet material. Primary sources include excerpts from the writings of
Muckrakers and paintings by the Ashcan artists. Professor Snyder will discuss his
work as co-curator of the Smithsonian exhibit, "Metropolitan Lives: The
Ashcan Artists and Their New York." In addition, he will show his short
documentary film, "City Kids Meet Ashcan Art," which examines the ways
in which city children's every day experiences can direct their inquires about
art.
The Community as Classroom
(2-7 grades)
Franny Eberhart, Board of Directors, Historic Districts Council; Editor, Community as Classroom
Carlo Lamagna, Chair, Department of Art and Art Professions, NYU School of
Education and Landmark West! Board of Directors
Jane Cowan, Architectural Educator and Preservation Consultant
New York City's natural and built environments -- its buildings and open spaces
-- are immediately accessible primary sources for the teaching of history. They
can also enhance the teaching of the other traditional disciplines, bringing new
perspectives and energy to standards-based instruction. Many civic and
community-based organizations work with local schools to bring an understanding
of neighborhood history and architecture to both teachers and students. This
panel will introduce some of these organizations and their teaching methods to
primary and elementary school teachers.
Slavery and New York: Complicity and Resistance
(7-12 grades)
Alan Singer, Professor, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Hofstra University
Graduate Students, Hofstra University
New York City was both a center of abolitionist advocacy and of financing for
slavery and the slave trade. Classroom teachers from the Hofstra University New
Teachers Network will present a curriculum and classroom activities that examine
the city's complex historical relationship with slavery. Lessons focus on slave
narratives, abolitionist writings, contemporary newspaper reports and
collaboration by government officials with the secessionist state. Includes
exhibits from a middle school "Museum of Slavery."
Giving Voice to a Community: NYC History
(High School)
Bayard Faithfull, Teacher, Beacon School
Kevin Jacobs, Teacher, Beacon School
Students from the Beacon School This project is designed to give students
experience in finding and interpreting multiple source. Sources will include
census data, historic maps and photos, surveys and oral histories. Students,
working in groups, choose a census tract and do a detailed study of that area
over the last one hundred years. Students will discuss their work as part of the
presentation.
Using NYC Museums and Gallery Resources to Teach Art History
(8-12 grades)
Roy Reid, Teacher, Urban Academy, Laboratory High School
NYC boasts the largest selection of museums, galleries and cultural institutions
in the world. How can teachers expose their students to the visual arts and use
the resources that these institutions have to offer in their curriculum? In this
workshop, we will discuss some of the methods used inside and outside the
classroom to teach Art and Art History. We will also look at what different
galleries and museums offer to teachers to enhance their students= art
experience.
New York History Day Presentation
(6 -12 grades)
Robert Forloney, Learning Programs Coordinator, Museum of the City of New York
Inspired by the need for new methods of interdisciplinary teaching and
non-traditional ways of reinforcing existing curricula, NYC History Day invites
students and teachers to participate in a year-long process of conducting
research on a given theme. During this presentation, teachers will learn tools
and techniques in order to become facilitators between primary sources and their
students.
Creating An Integrated Curriculum Using the Theme of New York City
(K-High School)
Harriet Pitts, Professor, City College of New York
Graduate Students of Foundations of Reading
This presentation will discuss the creation of an integrated curriculum using the
theme of New York City. In table top style, we will demonstrate how to develop
and use thematic units focusing on New York City. Teachers, in turn, work
together to develop and implement the theme within their classrooms.
Using Text and Video in Historical Frameworks
(Middle School)
Stephen Simons, The Carroll Gardens Community School
Roundtable discussion will explore student engagement in historical literature
and in videos. ELA standards will be pinpointed in discussion as well as
child-centered "readability" and "viewability."
Using Schools and Community as Historical and Writing Resources
(9 -12 grades)
Victoria Missick, Educator Angela Miller, Teacher, Benjamin Bannecker Academy
Through investigating school and local community, high school students are
engaged in meaningful ways with history and writing. Local neighborhood research
gives students control over their own education, experience with document-based
learning, and practice in responding to questions in writing.
Designing A High School Curriculum for the Preservation Arts
(High School)
Ruth Baker, Associate Director, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Center for
Architecture and Building Science Research
Bryan Serra, Art, High School for Arts and Business
Lynda Aron, English, High School for Arts and Business
David Moyal, History, High School for Arts and Business
Kieran McGuire, Science, High School for Arts and Business
This panel discussion will focus on prototypical lessons that were developed
through the methodology of Historic Preservation and Benchmark Structures to
teach students at the High School of Arts and Business. Ruth Baker and four high
school teachers will discuss this pilot preservation arts curriculum. The
discussion will address the NJIT Center model of professional development and the
Center Benchmark approach. There will be a short video to show the teachers and
students in the field.
Best Practices: A Roundtable Discussion With Teachers Using Primary Resources in the Classroom
(4 -12 grades)
Room Facilitator: Brenda Parnes, Ph.D, CA, Regional Advisory Officer, Region 1,
New York City Teachers:
Monique Bertolotti, 4th grade, Grace Lutheran School
Thomas Guarino, 4th grade, Community School
Leonard Geller, 7th grade, Teacher, IS 25
Mariann DeAngelis, 11-12th grades, History Chairperson, Dominican Academy
Andrew Taylor, 7th grade, Chair, Middle School History Department, Horace Mann School
Karen Phillips, Executive Director, Family Learning Project, PS 117
This roundtable presentation features experienced classroom teachers discussing a
variety of approaches to using primary documents. Sources such as literature,
poetry, maps, music, and field trips will be examined.
Harbor History: School Programs from Two New York Maritime Collections
(6 -12 grades)
David Allen, Director of Education, National Maritime Historical Society
Diane Matyas, Director of Education, Noble Maritime Collection
David Allen will present his program "War of the Rose: A Royal Navy Warship
During the American Revolution." The program is based on primary sources
such as excerpts from the captain's logbook, letters to and from the captain and
his superiors, and letters written by American soldiers in New York who actually
engaged the Rose in battle. Diane Matyas will discuss how her institution uses a
theatrical narrative approach to teach the history of the New York harbor. Her
program uses stories, songs and crafts of the maritime experience.
An Interdisciplinary Study of Lene Lenape Indians
(2-6 grades)
Christa McDonald, Director of Environmental Education, High Rock Park Environmental Education Center
Joann Assante, Environmental Educator, High Rock Park Environmental Education Center
An interactive program that offers elementary school teacher activities and
techniques to implement the cultural study of NYC native Lenape Indians into
various content areas. From the science of cooking to the art of pictographs,
teachers will be given the opportunity to explore the early life of the Lenapes.
A time line will be used to guide this educational journey. Reproducible
hand-outs will be distributed.
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