EDITORIAL
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Last week, the students in Penny Norton’s fifth-grade class at Harbor
View Elementary took part in an old lesson on America’s Founding Fathers.
That bit of information is not particularly noteworthy, we admit. But
what unfolded in that classroom was.
As we and our readers know, history can often be boring and dull. And
getting young charges interested in things such as the signing of the
Declaration of Independence can be an impossible task.
So we were surprised and heartened to see the pupils in Norton’s class
glued to the discussion, which included them dressing the parts of the
historical figures and reenacting the highlights of the country’s
beginnings.
It is a bitter truth that too often our children are not engaged by
school, for whatever reason. It is even more bitter that we -- parents,
educators, community members -- don’t seem to be able to find ways to
make school more interesting and our students more in love with learning.
Norton managed to solve that problem, for a day at least. And her
students one day will be able to thank her when they’re able to remember
who Patrick Henry was.
And the rush of innovative teaching didn’t stop there. The next day,
Newport Coast Elementary fourth-graders received real-life lessons in the
struggles of California’s migrant workers. Along with learning about
migrant worker leader Cesar Chavez, the students also spent time picking
beans at a farm in Irvine, sweaty work that taught more than a day in the
classroom.
Finally, in today’s Pilot, another story showcases the re-creation of
Ellis Island at Lincoln Elementary School. Parents and teachers made the
experience difficult, just as it was for immigrants passing through the
gates.
The language barriers, the confusing specifics of passports and
notifications, even the possible corruption involved were all
dramatically enacted for the students.
In each of these cases, the students talked about how memorable and
exciting the lessons were. And while it is not teachers’ jobs to be just
entertaining, they do need to grab and keep students’ attention so they
can learn.
Judging by the past week, we applaud the Newport-Mesa teachers who are
finding ways to do just that.
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