Students offer view of tribal life
Marisa O’Neil
Forty students, a couple of teachers, some fish, a buffalo and a bear
filled the multipurpose room at Wilson Elementary School this week.
Carol Redford’s class hosted the assembly about Native Americans
for the other fifth-grade classes, re-creating different aspects of
tribal life. Paper fish and students in wild animal costume helped
complete the lesson.
“She gave us time to get ready, and we started studying about
Indians,” said 10-year-old Maria Munoz, a student in Redford’s class.
“We made this all ourselves.”
Each of the four groups in Redford’s class represented a different
geographical area and tribe. Munoz’s tribe came from the Mississippi
River area.
On the floor in front of them, they had a large piece of paper
with a wide, blue stripe painted down the middle to represent the
river. Fish made from paper floated in the middle.
Students from another class crowded around the station and
listened intently as Munoz and her group described Mississippi
Indians’ foods, clothing, housing and culture. The women of the tribe
cooked beans, pumpkins and squash, she said, while the men did the
hunting and fishing.
Jose Naranjo, 10, displayed his fishing prowess by throwing a
spear made from a stick, hitting a fish square in the gills.
The students watching the Tuesday morning presentation filled out
their assignment sheets, which asked questions about each tribe.
Letting her class research and present the material for other
students provided an unusual learning experience, Redford said. About
90% of them speak English as a second language, making the assignment
an even greater challenge.
But students doing the presentations clearly, if sometimes
quietly, explained their respective tribes. And a little play-acting
helped liven things up.
As the Pacific Northwest tribe told students about their local
wildlife, 10-year-old Alberto Perez, an animal skin thrown on his
back, crawled around on all fours, catching paper fish with his
mouth. A hunter, 11-year-old Jose Tejeda, felled him with a spear and
took his skin for clothing.
He then showed off his kill, parading the fur in front of the
students, who giggled with delight.
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