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  • Tasting And Living History

    TASTING AND LIVING HISTORY
    By Bruce A. Scruton

    New Jersey Herald, NJ
    Oct 16 2007

    Tuesday, October 16, 2007 Mail to a friend Printer Friendly Version

    HOPATCONG - It was one of the props the two teachers planned to use
    later that day in their English/Social Studies class, but the cook
    spoiled the broth, so to speak.

    "She said, 'I couldn't serve the kids that,' so she put lots of extra
    stuff in it," laughed Jeff Ryder, the Social Studies part of the
    teaching team. The particular section they were teaching was based on
    the book "Night," by Elie Wiesel, the Holocaust survivor who became
    known as "The Nazi Hunter."

    The teachers were preparing stale (more than two-day-old) bagels and
    what passed for soup to be served as the students' "first meal" when
    they arrived at the prison or concentration camp (classroom). While
    the soup was richer than anticipated, the rest went off as planned -
    students herded into a darkened room, being yelled at and not knowing
    what would come next.

    Ryder and Lisa Kenny - the English part - used the mock arrival
    scenario as part of a program they call "Global Mosaic," which brings
    the two fields together for ninth graders.

    The program will be among those highlighted during the annual Parent
    Fair from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday in the Hopatcong High School gymnasium
    on Flora Avenue.

    The program will have nearly 80 groups with tables and booths
    explaining their programs. Most are part of the instructional program
    for all grades in the borough's school district, but some tables are
    from service organizations, ranging from Cub Scouts to soccer clubs
    to the county prosecutor's office.

    There will be baby-sitting services provided and for slightly older
    students - grades 5 to 8 - there will be a dance in the auxiliary
    gym. Door prizes include a digital camcorder, IPods and a laptop,
    among other items.

    Thursday's session is a warm-up of sorts for Ryder and Kenny. They
    have been invited to present a talk on their program in mid-November to
    the National Council for Teachers of English meeting in New York City.

    The idea for Global Mosaic was born just over a decade ago over
    lunch. Ryder and Kenny taught honors sections in their respective
    disciplines and had back-to-back sessions. They began talking about the
    idea of combining their subject matter, while she taught a particular
    book, like "Night", or "Of Mice and Men" or "Kite Runner", he could
    take the students to that time in history and the cultural issues
    discussed.

    The school board liked the idea and gave permission to bring it into
    the honors classrooms. After two years of success at that level,
    the team pressed to take it further.

    "Now we have three teams and it's mandatory for all ninth graders,"
    said Ryder, adding that the program, including one of the teams,
    is for special education students.

    The idea was embraced so well, the revamped high school has a special
    area for the teams; side-by-side classrooms, which have a moveable
    partition to create one large space; special audio-visual equipment,
    including several computers; and, most importantly, the school's
    library across the hall.

    "If we get bogged down on a question, we can just move over there to
    do research," said Ryder.

    Throughout the class, students are encouraged to get involved.

    "Activity driven," the teachers call it.

    While the Holocaust is the focus of that time period, Ryder brings
    into the discussion the genocide from other time periods, like Armenia,
    Cambodia and Rwanda.

    The Wiesel novel and the bad food, yelling, darkness and a touch of
    fear add a sensory overload. "Start them off with an emotional unit,"
    said Kenny. "Hopefully, we can grab them."

    Posters cover the walls of the classroom and a large hallway display
    case is filled with projects on the section dealing with "Night." On a
    recent afternoon, teams of students worked at the computers, creating
    Powerpoint presentations on the Chinese dynasties. The book being
    studied is an autobiography by a man whose Chinese family owned land
    before Mao's Cultural Revolution took their social status away.

    Both teachers said it is professionally satisfying to have students
    come back a few years later, remembering particular parts of the class.

    "I think it helps them become thinkers," Ryder said. "We try to make
    the connections with culture and geography. It's a perfect way to
    weave the concepts together."
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