In the spring of the 2011-2012 school year, I was looking for something to give my students (and myself) a boost at the end of the year with high engagement for everyone. This was my first year back in the classroom after 11 years as an Instructional Coach. I wanted to end this great school year in an exciting way. Because of my love for genealogy and my desire to bring history and geography to life for my students, I decided to unite the two into an integrated unit that would provide opportunities to apply all of their freshly acquired skills.
Reuben Sigfred Johnson was my grandpa’s youngest brother. He had a very interesting story of travel and adventure in the 1920’s and 30’s and I have always wanted to write about it or display it in some way but could never find the right medium. A lesson plan for 22 second graders was the last thing I thought I would decide on but it has really been the best way I’ve found to work within Reuben’s life story.
I introduced Uncle Reuben to my second graders by telling them some stories about him and showing them some pictures from my genealogy files. The fact that he lived to be 100 and I knew him personally intrigued them and by the time I started telling about the different modes of transportation he used, I had them hooked. The next question for me was how to use the power behind this story to create excitement that would last until the last day of school.
Reuben with his sisters |
Here is the data we had to work with for the map.
Uncle Reuben's Journeys:
McPherson, Kansas
|
Chicago, Illinois
| Train |
Chicago, Illinois
|
McPherson, Kansas
|
Train
|
McPherson, Kansas
|
Alamo, Texas
|
Indian Motorcycle
|
Alamo, Texas
|
McPherson, Kansas
|
Indian Motorcycle
|
McPherson, Kansas
|
Canada
|
Model T Ford Coupe
|
Canada
|
Yellowstone National Park
|
Train
|
Yellowstone National Park
|
Salt Lake City, Utah
|
Train
|
Salt Lake City, Utah
|
Phoenix, Arizona
|
Train
|
Phoenix, Arizona
|
San Diego, California
|
Train
|
San Diego, California
|
Los Angeles, California
|
Train
|
Los Angeles, California
|
Chicago, Illinois
|
Car
|
Chicago, Illinois
|
Detroit, Michigan
|
Bus
|
Detroit, Michigan
|
Buffalo, New York
|
Steamer across Lake Erie
|
Buffalo, New York
|
Portland, Maine
|
Train
|
Portland, Maine
|
New York City, New York
|
Train
|
New York City, New York
|
Chicago, Illinois
|
Train
|
Chicago, Illinois
|
Illinois River
|
Car
|
Illinois River
|
Mississippi River
|
Canoe
|
Mississippi River
|
New Orleans, Louisiana
|
Canoe
|
New Orleans, Louisiana
|
bicycle shop
| |
New Orleans, Louisiana
|
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
|
Canoe
|
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
|
New Orleans, Louisiana
|
Canoe
|
New Orleans, Louisiana
|
Chicago, Illinois
|
Harley Motorcycle
|
Chicago, Illinois
|
Minnesota
|
Harley Motorcycle
|
Minnesota
|
North Dakota
|
Harley Motorcycle
|
North Dakota
|
Tucson, Arizona
|
Harley Motorcycle
|
Los Angeles, California
|
San Francisco, California
|
Harley Motorcycle
|
San Francisco, California
|
New Orleans, Louisiana
|
Cars and Boxcars
|
New Orleans, Louisiana
|
Chicago, Illinois
|
motorcycle
|
This is what our map looked like when we were finished mapping it out.
Uncle Reuben's Journeys all mapped out! The colors of yarn stand for the mode of transportation. |
Some questions could be answered and others not, but all of it was interesting!
Lucky for us, Uncle Reuben kept a journal during his traveling years. We divided his journeys into 30 parts and started mapping them out with colored yarn. We used brown for train travel, red for motorcycle, green for car and blue yarn for steamship and canoe. The questions kept coming!
Teamwork! |
Lots of discussion! |
Measuring and Recording Data |
Another group determined the type of transportation for each trip and coded it with a letter; c for car, ca for canoe, m for motorcycle, etc., on the board.
Transportation Team |
By this time I was ready to have my board back so I decided to set up three laptops facing the board and assigned students to type the information we had compiled into Excel. Each typist had a partner to check, point and help make sure they weren't skipping data. Some traded places after awhile.
Working in Excel and adding up the miles. |
When they were finished, I combined the three files into one. The class was excited when we put the data up on our Smartboard and I showed them how Excel lets us sort and filter. They used their calculators to add the miles of each mode of transportation. When we were finished, they had figured Uncle Reuben traveled about 19,200 miles between 1924 and 1934. Now they could display the miles according to transportation!
The pictures I’ve posted so far show about half of the class so some of you are probably asking, “What were the other students doing while this was going on?” They were busy! I had just shown the class how to make a video with pictures, text and music using PhotoStory3 but I hadn’t let them work with it on their own yet.
Not long before, I had run across a Model T Coup like the one Uncle Reuben had ridden in, all the way up into Canada, following the harvest. It was sitting right next to me, in the showroom, while I was waiting on my car to be serviced one Saturday. Ignoring the looks I was most likely getting from other “waiters”, I pulled out my phone and started taking pictures of it from every angle. I wanted the kids to get an idea of how small it was; especially to hold three twenty-something young men for more than 1000 miles along bumpy, dirt roads. We had already watched some videos I had found online of a Model T going down the road so they were familiar with the car and the way it looked and sounded.
We loaded the Model T pictures onto a computer and I let some students work together to move the pictures around, edit them and add text and music while standing around the SmartBoard. It worked great and they got to practice their PhotoStory3 skills before they started on their individual video projects at the end of the year. They got skills and I got future trainers to help everyone else learn! What fast learners! We didn't get a finished product but they learned the basics.
Uncle Reuben lived to be 100 years old; “and 1 month,” a student would usually remind me. What a great number for 2nd graders! Time-lines were being introduced in the math chapter we were working on so we decided to make a timeline display of Reuben’s life. We would be able to develop skills for working with time-lines as well as number lines. I had a few pictures to contribute to the board and stapled a strip of white paper, marked off in 5 year segments, and the pictures to the board for them. A second strip was placed below to represent the 10 years of travel that he did starting in 1924. I then began handing the project over to a group of students.
Every child in the class illustrated some part of Uncle Reuben’s journeys. The group began organizing the pictures. I noticed some girls working with the illustration cards on the carpet one day. Our carpet has a large map of the United States on it. They were placing the illustrations on that giant map and telling the story of his journeys to each other. It was interesting to see what they remembered and whether or not they could find the places on a different type of map. (They could!)
The timeline became a very useful tool and was referred to often when a date would show up in something we were reading.
Keeping the students busy wasn’t too difficult. A group of boys made a chain of colored links the length of the wingspan on the biplane Uncle Reuben learned to fly in 1924. I thought for sure our room would be big enough but once we looked up the size on the internet and the boys got out the measuring wheel, they (and their teacher) realized it wasn’t going to be that easy. Before long, the door was open and the chain was reaching diagonally across the room, out the door and halfway across the hall.
They measured, added or subtracted links, and measured again until they were certain the chain was exactly 43 feet and 7 inches.
One concept they learned by doing this is that the chain measured the same if it was straight or curled around the desks.
A second chain was constructed and measured for the length of the plane (27 feet).
We weren't going to be able to experience the size of the plane in our room so we carried the chains to the courtyard and put them in place.
Once you've finished the hard work of an inquiry project, it’s fun to show someone what you’ve been learning.
We got the chance to do that in early May. The “invitation” group went to work writing notes and inviting other classes to visit us so we could show them what we learned. The afternoon was a success as evidenced by the discussions I could hear around the room as students shared their new learning with excitement.
One of our favorite pictures of Uncle Reuben is him sitting by a campfire next to a small canvas tent.
I had come across some camping themed math and language arts activities online that would be perfect for a courtyard camp out during the last week of school. We pitched our tent, grabbed something to sit on and headed for the school courtyard for the morning. There were 12 activities to keep the class busy and s’mores for a reward partway through the tasks. It was a nice way to end both our unit and a wonderful 2nd grade year!
We got the chance to do that in early May. The “invitation” group went to work writing notes and inviting other classes to visit us so we could show them what we learned. The afternoon was a success as evidenced by the discussions I could hear around the room as students shared their new learning with excitement.
Language arts activity |
Reading with friends in the tent. |
One of our favorite pictures of Uncle Reuben is him sitting by a campfire next to a small canvas tent.
Cooler serves as table for story problem work. |
Reflection
Studying the life and journeys of Uncle Reuben was such a deep and rich experience. The material gave my students opportunities to review, practice and apply multiple skills that they have learned over the year.
Skills they used and practiced:
Learning:
Benefits:
Skills they used and practiced:
- Working in a group
- Cooperating and taking turns
- Measuring miles on a map
- Map reading
- Adding large numbers (over 1000)
- Calculator use - adding lists of large numbers and checking their answer by comparing it to others
- Measuring distance
- Non-standard measurement
Learning:
- Location of states in US
- Transportation of the early 1900's
- History of flight - Wright Brothers, World Flight - 1924
- Concept of time past (100 years)
- The computer as a tool
- Some uses for Word and Excel
- The size of the United States
- Putting events in order according to time
Benefits:
- Confidence
- Knowledge of the United States
- Confidence using technology
- Motivation
- Engagement
- Ownership of learning