In the trenches
Deirdre Newman
Imagine being stuck in a trench, surrounded by the stench of rotting
corpses, humongous rats foraging for food and the sporadic bursts of
poisonous gas as the rat-a-tat-tat of machine gun fire continually
punctuates the air.
That’s the task that 135 Estancia High School juniors were faced with
Tuesday morning as their teacher, Jon Williams, tried to re-create the
tactical and sensory assault of World War I trench warfare.
Williams said he wants his students to taste the psychological trauma
the shellshocked soldiers experienced, from claustrophobia to fear to
paranoia. The culmination of the activity is when the students write
letters home to their families describing the ordeal.
“This is student-centered learning,” Williams said. “It gives them
critical-thinking skills.”
The students -- wearing pie tins as protective helmets -- had to crawl
under barbed wire to enter their classroom. There, they huddled in the
darkness in a makeshift trench, with lights flashing and a barrage of
machine gun fire emanating from loudspeakers. Williams used a fog machine
to re-create the clouds of poisonous gas that would descend on the
trenches and envelop the soldiers.
As the students became acclimated to their crowded conditions,
Williams showed slides of World War I trench warfare and read excerpts
from “All Quiet on the Western Front.” After each section, he asked the
students to try to relate to the soldiers’ conflicting emotions.
“Every time you leave the trench and return, you have cheated death.
What kind of things might you be feeling as your buddies are getting
killed?” Williams asked.
And Williams did not sugarcoat any of the gory details of war -- at
one point reading about a soldier having his brains blown out and taking
three hours to die.
Many of the students, who came from four social studies classes, said
they were struck by the visceral effect of dealing with trench warfare.
“I felt claustrophobic and just wanted to get out of there,” Cody Hess
said. “It puts you in the mind set that person would have been in inside
the trench.”
And although the methods of warfare have advanced since World War I,
some students said the classroom experience made the current war in
Afghanistan more tangible.
“It helps me understand what people from our country are going
through,” Clairisa Maygren said. “It makes me think twice about the war.”
-- Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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