We are now approaching the end of the year...all students in 9th grade have been given a detailed test guide. AP European History Students are getting ready for their senior presentations, and we are still finishing up some great books in READING your WAY through HISTORY.
Mrs. Olsen has exciting plans for the summer. She'll be visiting France with student Brandon Gunn as part of the D-Day Fallen Heroes project---the Albert Small Memorial Scholarship. She and Brandon are representing the state of Oregon as the commemorate a fallen paratrooper who died on June 6, 1944, and is buried in the Normandy Cemetery.
Our fallen hero, Gene Morrison, didn't make it out of his plane when German anti-aircraft fire destroyed the cockpit. He was only 22 years old and had been married only a few months before he was deployed to Britain to prepare for the invasion. We'll also be visiting the graves of some other fallen heroes from Oregon. Thanks to Albert Small's generosity, we're prepared to honor Oregon's sons who are buried in France.
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Pot menders and saving money
Ninth grade students are now learning about the Great Depression....and we are making a lot of links to today. Many of our students are living in families with financial distress...and they are not alone! We are making many links to "buying on margin" and "predatory lenders." They know that the great installment buying scheme of the 1920's was similar to today's credit card debt.
In the 1930's money was scarce. Everyone was encouraged to make due and mend. Even special pot menders were created to mend the holes in pots. I have a collection of pot menders (exactly pictured below) that students will hold in their hands. There was a small slice of cork attached to the metal potmender. It formed a "suction" that sealed the pot.
Pot menders are one of the collectables of the great depression. They encouraged thrift and "make do." During this unit, students will also examine a quilt from the Great Depression.
In the 1930's money was scarce. Everyone was encouraged to make due and mend. Even special pot menders were created to mend the holes in pots. I have a collection of pot menders (exactly pictured below) that students will hold in their hands. There was a small slice of cork attached to the metal potmender. It formed a "suction" that sealed the pot.
Pot menders are one of the collectables of the great depression. They encouraged thrift and "make do." During this unit, students will also examine a quilt from the Great Depression.
Monday, April 2, 2012
Existentialism...why?

AP European History students will be learning about World War II during the next few days. We should be done with the course by next week. I hardly cover World War II because it is the one area that students have a familiarity and we need to get onto post World War Europe.
After two world wars, Europe was shaken and ruined. Many writers, such as Sartre and Camus tried to make sense--or simply said there was no use making sense, of the ruin that had been wrought in Europe over a 25 year time period.
Two generations of young men were dead and countless civilian life had ended because of famine and genocide. In 1942, in the depths of World War II, Albert Camus wrote about the myth of Sisyphus--a man who lived in the underworld whose past deeds lead him to be condemned to roll a stone up to the top of a hill only to have it roll back down again...not unlike the terrible wars which only repeated destruction.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Josephine Baker and her banana skirt

In European History, students are learning about the changes to society after World War I. They have seen some of the "Dada" creations and also the new dresses of Chanel. They have also seen this picture of the famous Josephine Baker in her banana skirt.
She danced in a show called La Revue Nègre, it proved to be a turning point in her career. Amongst a compilation of acts, Josephine and dance partner Joe Alex captivated the audience with the Danse Sauvage. Everything about the routine was new and exotic, and Josephine, boldly dressed in nothing but a feather skirt, worked the audience into frenzy with her uninhibited movements. She was an overnight sensation.
Just as Picasso and cubism borrowed from African elements, Joesphine also paid homage to her African roots. Her later years were just as interesting....she went on to adopt 12 children from different ethnicities.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Clear and Present Danger....

Here is a picture of a Minnesota farmer who was tarred and feathered for speaking out against American involvement in World War I. In Freshman Social Studies, we are wrapping up World War I. During the war years, sedition laws were instituted to prevent people speaking against the war.
"The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that the United States Congress has a right to prevent. It is a question of proximity and degree. When a nation is at war, many things that might be said in time of peace are such a hindrance to its effort that th"eir utterance will not be endured so long as men fight, and that no Court could regard them as protected by any constitutional right."
Students have wondered about what limits can be placed on our free speech. For example, is it fine to criticize the war (it is). It is interesting to see how this ruling could be tested in today's internet world.
Regardless, many citizens lost their civil rights in the troubled World War I era--a time when many Americans looked at a European war as their problem and not ours.
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Florence Nightingale and the Crimean War

Students in AP European History are learning about the Crimean War, a war that led to the break up of the concert of Europe. Russian designs on the straits of Constantinople were met with a combined force of British, French and Italian troops. The result was a "Vietnam' war of sorts that took men and material. Russia lost over 400,000 men.
The dead were evacuated to the hospital on the Asia side of the Bosporus, at Scutari. There a wealthy Englishwoman, Florence Nightingale, traveled and using new methods of nursing helped to reorganize the hospital and save lives. She was called the lady with the lamp because at night she went from bed to bed comforting the soldiers. A poem was written about her by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, entitled "The Lady with the Lamp."
The wounded from the battle-plain,
In dreary hospitals of pain,
The cheerless corridors,
The cold and stony floors.
Lo! in that house of misery
A lady with a lamp I see
Pass through the glimmering gloom,
And flit from room to room
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Pancho Villa and the ladies....

Students in ninth grade are busy learning about America's role in the Age of Imperialism. They spend some times learning about the Mexican revolution and one of its more colorful heroes, José Doroteo Arango Arámbula (5 June 1878 – 20 July 1923) or better known as Pancho Villa.
Pancho Villa is considered by many Mexicans to be a national hero. Mexico, at the time of the revolution, was held in a stranglehold by wealthy hacienda owners, private interests, and a corrupt government. Villa was not a "clean" hero. He engaged in theft and revenge murders. Regardless of the violence he used to achieve his goals, he was also known to be sentimental, charismatic, and extremely appealing to the many women who lived in the villages of Northern Mexico.
Early movies focused on his appeal when they advertised Pancho Villa as being a "revolutionary, bandit, and lover..." It's true that romantic figures often were often soaked in blood. In this case, Pancho Villa had many "wives" in many villages, while he had only one wife, María Luz Corral.
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