A Note on Links: When reading back posts, please be aware that links have a short half-life. You can find working links to all of the MHS resources on our Educator Resources Page.

Monday, February 25, 2019

Field Trip Season Is Fast Approaching

Despite the masses of snow on the ground, we can tell by the number of phone calls we are receiving to schedule tours that field trip season is almost upon us.

Especially during legislative sessions, many schools like to come to the capital city to watch democracy in action. Sadly, because of last year's budget cuts, we are no longer providing tours of the capitol this legislative session. We are hoping that we will be able to re-institute them soon (we'll see after the legislature finalizes this year's budget.) For now all groups are on their own when arriving to the Capitol, though you may wish to get in touch with a legislator from your district to see if he or she can accommodate your group while you are at the Capitol.  

To make your job as tour leader easier, we have produced a special interactive guide for you to download. It is aimed at high school students, but adaptable for other grades. There are also self-guiding tour booklets (a great resource for teacher led tours) and a scavenger hunt  for kids led by Lewis and Clark’s intrepid Newfoundland, Seaman, that are available to pick up at the information desk on the first floor of the Capitol. We hope you and your students enjoy these resources.

Although we are not providing guided tours of the capitol, we are still offering tours at the Original Governor's Mansion and Montana's Museum, including special tours of the Mackay Gallery of Russell Art led by none other than Nancy Russell herself (as played by Mary Jane Bradbury). A full list of our museum tours is here; and here is more information about booking an Original Governor's Mansion tour. All school tours are provided free of charge.

Finally, last spring, I shared ideas for making your field trips more than a day out. They included having students create before and after concept maps to demonstrate learning, as well as specific pre- and post-field trip ideas for sites curated by the Montana Historical Society (including the capitol, the Original Governor's Mansion and the Museum). Find them here.

Monday, February 18, 2019

Back in the saddle again... MHS is coming to Deer Lodge, Missoula and Dillon


The Montana Historical Society is very excited to be sending veteran teacher and workshop leader extraordinaire Jim Schulz back on the road this April with the workshop Crossing Disciplines: Art, Social Studies and the Common Core. This time, Jim will be traveling to Deer Lodge (April 9), Missoula (April 10) and Dillon (April 11).

 The workshop (which can be taken for 6 OPI Renewal Credits) is designed to
  • Provide instructional strategies (including Visual Thinking Strategies) that can be adopted to any topic and most disciplines
  • Encourage teachers to think about using and creating interdisciplinary units
  • Introduce teachers to specific lesson plans that they can use in their Montana history, US history, social studies, art, or ELA classes
  • Offer a strong Indian Education for All component.
We’ve brought versions of this workshop to other parts of the state (eastern Montana, the Hi-Line, and northwestern Montana), where it received rave reviews:

  • One of the most productive and informational PIR workshops I have ever done…”
  • “I really enjoyed the workshop. It gave me new tools…”
  • “Learning about VTS was an eye-opener….”
  • “Jim's workshop inspired to me reflect on my teaching practice … he reminded me of the importance of including ALL students in class discussions.”
You can find the detailed schedule and links to register on our website: http://mhs.mt.gov/education/ConferencesWorkshops/EducatorWorkshops.

We hope you can come! And we hope you'll help us spread the word. Please share this information and the registration links with colleagues you think may be interested.


Monday, February 11, 2019

How would you teach about livestock and the Open Range?

Last December, I wrote about having students design a brochure for (and then pretend to take) a time travel vacation. The idea--which I found on Russell Tarr's amazing site--is to have students consider multiple viewpoints, first by selling the positives of a certain time or place in the brochure. And then, in a complaint letter about the vacation from hell, highlighting all the problems.

Since then, a teacher planning a new course in Montana history asked me to suggest activities to accompany Chapter 8, "Livestock and the Open Range, 1850-1887," of our textbook, Montana: Stories of the Land. My first thought was that this would be a perfect time period with which try out Russell Tarr's time-travel idea.

Before writing their student recruitment brochure, I'd have students start their investigation by analyzing such Charlie Russell paintings as Laugh Kills Lonesome, and Bronc to Breakfast,  using Visual Thinking Strategies. After listening to a cowboy song like "My Home's in Montana," I'd ask them to "write their way in" by spending 3 minutes answering this question in writing, without regard to grammar, spelling or punctuation: "What do they think of when they think about cowboys and the Old West?"

After a discussion about about the appeal of the cowboy myth, I'd have them work in small groups to research life on the open range and to create the two written products:

1. a brochure selling a vacation on the cattle frontier.
2. a complaint letter to the tour company, detailing all the ways the fantasy didn't match the reality.

Here are some sources students might want to use to do research for both the brochure and the complaint letter:
  • Montana: Stories of the Land Chapter 8 - Livestock and the Open Range, 1850-1887 
  • Excerpts from "Cow Tales," a reminiscence by Harry Rutter, which we've selected for one of the chapter 8 Learning from Historical Document units
  • photographs of L. A. Huffman and Evelyn Cameron, who documented life on the open range
  • The short essays about ranching history and culture on the Grant Kohrs NHL website (the easiest way to find them is to go to the site map and scroll down until you reach the links listed under the head "history and culture.")
  • Excerpts from Mary Alderson's A Bride Goes West and Teddy Blue Abbott's We Pointed Them North, two published reminiscences about life on the cattle frontier.
After students complete their brochures but before they write their complaint letters, you might want to help them switch gears with another VTS activity, this time of Charlie Russell's Last of the 5000 or Waiting for Chinook

This activity is a more research intensive (and possibly more fun) version of the one of the critical thinking questions listed at the end of chapter 8: “Look back at the Russell paintings that illustrate chapter (could expand to additional cowboy paintings.) Do you think they offer a realistic picture of life on the open range?"

How do you teach about Montana and the Open Range? According to a survey we did several years ago, it is one of many teachers' favorite chapters to teach, so I'm sure there are many great ideas and activities out there. Please send me yours, so I can share it out.

Monday, February 4, 2019

IEFA Resources Roundup

It's past time for another post on IEFA (Indian Education for All) topics and resources that have caught my eye--or more likely, been brought to my attention by readers and colleagues.

This video does a great job surveying major eras in American Indian policy and explaining sovereignty all in 2 minutes and 41 seconds!

The Smithsonian Magazine published an interesting article on the 1868 Fort Laramie Treaty: "In 1868, Two Nations Made a Treaty, the U.S. Broke It and Plains Indian Tribes are Still Seeking Justice."

That treaty is available online (with a transcription) from the National Archives. How do I know? Billings High School teacher Cheyenne Aldrich wrote to let me know about a session she attended, given by the National Archives at the National Council for Social Studies annual conference on resources in the archives relating to native communities. As a take home, the archives created a dandy handout of links, which Cheyenne shared. In poking through the handout, I not only found out how to search for treaties, but also about the National Archives' research guides, which suggests search terms to find relevant information on Montana tribes in the National Archives catalog.

Speaking of the National Archives, several years ago, University of Montana sent several students to Washington, D.C., to scan documents--"65,000 pages from 126 boxes of Bureau of Indian Affairs records (Record Group 75) held at the National Archives in Washington, D.C." These documents, which include letters, reports, photographs, petitions, leases, bonds, wills, and other legal documents, are available on the Montana Memory Project in a collection called the Natives of Montana Archival Project (NOMAP). They are an underused treasure trove, which includes a 1931 letter describing the problem of malnutrition among Blackfeet children in 1931, a 1913 letter complaining about the July 4 celebrations in Browning (a "Fully two-thirds of these people are still addicted to medicine practices and pagan superstitions"), letters from Salish hero Sam Resurrection, protesting the opening of the Flathead Reservation to homesteaders (Select "download all as a PDF" and see particularly pages 10-13 of the document), and more. NOMAP will be one of the collections Director Jennifer Birnel will explore at the March 2-3, Best Practices in Indian Education for All conference, for which you can register here.

And speaking of upcoming professional development, 2014 Montana Teacher of the Year Anna Baldwin is presenting "Unpacking Bias in a Reservation School" as part of this Teaching Tolerance online course, which runs February to June. (Registration closes today--sorry for such late notice).

Finally, my colleague Stan Wilmoth shared an article published in Quaternary Science Reviews with this unwieldy title: "Earth System Impacts of the European Arrival and Great Dying in the Americas after 1492." The article is too hard for all but the most advanced high school students (I think) but I found its conclusions fascinating enough to include a link to it in this round-up. Basically, the paper argues that the disease, slavery, and warfare brought by European conquerors (beginning in 1492) killed approximately 55 million indigenous people, 90 percent of the inhabitants of the Americas. "The Great Dying," as the authors call it, led to billions of acres of farmland being abandoned (56 million hectares). That farmland became forest, and those new forests sequestered enough CO2 to make global surface air temperatures decline. In other words, human behavior created climate change (in this case global cooling) before the industrial revolution.

Got a great resource you think other teachers would like to know about? Let me know and I'll share!

Friday, February 1, 2019

MHS Starts Facebook Book Club


Guest post by Barbara Pepper-Rotness

To celebrate the 130th anniversary of Montana statehood, MHS has launched a virtual book group that will study Ken Egan’s 2017 publication, Montana 1889: Indians, Cowboys, and Miners in the Year of Statehood.  Each month throughout 2019, the author will post prompting questions to the group and respond to readers’ comments to facilitate lively conversations about topics that are still important to Montanans today.  MHS Photo Archives Manager Jeff Malcomson will assist Egan by suggesting further reading in related areas of Montana and Western history and helping to answer any history-related questions that readers may have. The group is being organized by MHS reference librarian Barbara Pepper-Rotness who noted that, since Montana is the proverbial small town with long streets, she is “super excited to carry on a neighborly conversation that utilizes the advantages offered by social media to bring people together.”

In addition to monthly readings and discussion, MHS will have four quarterly on-site ‘meetings’ to bring in experts on relevant subjects. The first gathering is tentatively scheduled for April. Watch for details later!

You can join Revisting Montana 1889: A Book Group here.