Students revolt at Eastbluff
Michael Miller
Last Thursday at Eastbluff Elementary, fifth-graders got to do
everything that’s usually against the rules in the school library --
shout, taunt each other, even fight wars.
Granted, the battles in question were only reenactments of the
American Revolution, and no one actually got to brandish a gun.
Still, the annual Walk Through the Revolution event, presented by
California Weekly Explorer, taught the origins of the United States
in a livelier way than a textbook.
“It’s a good way for them to understand the history and take part
in it -- not just get it out of a book,” said Dan Freese, one of the
three fifth-grade teachers at Eastbluff whose classes undertook the
unit this year.
Over the last three weeks, fifth-graders at Eastbluff have studied
the revolution in an interactive way. Each student was given a
character to study -- from Molly Pitcher to Patrick Henry to obscure
colonial spies -- and had to dress as that person for the Walk
Through the Revolution on Thursday. During the three-hour event in
the library, Explorer presenter Rick De Lung led students in a
game-show format in which they had to answer questions about the
Revolution, define vocabulary words ... and always answer in complete
sentences, under penalty of a squirt of “sentence juice.”
“This is kind of a combination of ‘Jeopardy’ and ‘American Idol,’”
said De Lung. During the event, the kids often “performed” as their
characters, reciting historical speeches in their best colonial -- or
British -- accents.
The event took the form of a competition, as Freese divided the
class into three teams and had them compete for points. Teams won
marks by reciting facts from memory, sitting up straight and putting
enough gusto into their performances. In the end, the Blue Rebels
defeated the White Tories and Red Redcoats for the top spot.
Even faculty members got into the festivities. Librarian Barbara
Dinsdale, who teaches social science to fifth-graders at the school,
dressed up as Rachel Revere, the wife of revolutionary Paul Revere.
“I come from Boston, and she took part in the Boston Tea Party, so
I wanted to be somebody,” Dinsdale said.
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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