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Press Releases

3-9-2008
- "Save local history by educating
youth"
Peter Feinman
Over the past few weeks, several events had made clear
the challenges facing communities to maintain their
individual identity. The beloved Guinan's Pub in Garrison
closed it door after being a community institution
for 49 years. Neighborhood bookstores in Cold Spring
and Hastings-on-Hudson read the handwriting on the
wall and it was red for deficit. Of course, times change
and the old makes way for the new, but it is important
to step back and realize what is being lost.
Quick:
if you are at a Starbucks in a Marriott near the interstate,
what state are you in? If the only place people belong
is online then we will have created a "Matrix
Generation" that belongs nowhere except when it is
connected.
One way to address the problem is through education. Our
public schools provide an opportunity to link history and
the young, including the history of the very community
in which the young live.
Too often, in the quest to improve reading scores, history
and reading are pitted against each other in a zero-sum
game so any time spent on history/social studies detracts
from the effort to improve reading scores. Intelligent
educators know that an engaged mind is an eager mind, eager
to learn more about the topic of interest, eager to read
on his or her own because it is a pleasurable experience.
That topic of interest can be one's neighborhood, one's
own community, one's own world -the one that is traversed
on a daily basis.
As it turns out, teaching local, community and state history
is required under New York state Education Department standards.
Are we successful in fulfilling this requirement?
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How are teachers instructed in the content information
related to the teaching of local, community and state
history?
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Are teachers required to demonstrate proficiency
or competence in these areas?
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How can statewide testing
account for local and community history?
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If American
history can be taught in elementary, middle, and high
schools, then why is a student visit to a local historic
site in fourth grade considered sufficient?
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In schools
where both the teachers and the students are new to
the community, will they consider local historic sites
to be part of their own heritage and worth preserving
and maintaining?
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In a time of globalization where
people are linked via the Internet to people and places
around the world, including to people they may never
have met, how do we root people in their own communities?
Practically
every time period that schools are obligated
to teach can be "observed" in our own communities
in the Hudson Valley - if we only take the time to
look. But that is not the way the curriculum is designed.
Addressing these questions will require a cooperative
effort among officials of the New York state Education
Department, graduate schools, historians and independent
scholars. There are actions that communities can
take on their own. But no one group can solve the
problem alone, and it is a problem worth solving.
After all, if we don't know where we are, how will
we know who we are? If we belong nowhere, then what
will we care about? If our past disappears from
our memory, then how will we build a better tomorrow?
Peter, thanks for sharing...
great
article. The State Archives Student Research
Award program sees quite a few entries each year
that deal with local history.... they are generally
excellent entries because students researched in
historical records in their communities - access
to the records is easier with local topics. And,
these topics tend to have a broader impact on the
school, village, and towns where these students
are from. Its great to see. But, with so much at
stake with testing these days, what's taught in
the classroom very often does not appear to include
local history.... Julie
Julie Daniels |