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.

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Free Summer Seminar for Middle and High School Educators

Join other Montana teachers in Billings,  June 18-24, 2023, for a weeklong seminar, Worlds Apart but Not Strangers: Holocaust Education and Indian Education for All to discover connections between Holocaust education and Montana-mandated Indian Education for All (IEFA). Explore their relevance for teaching today and envision our hope for the future.

BENEFITS OF PARTICIPATION

  • Interactive strategies for teaching the Holocaust, genocide, and human rights
  • Thought-provoking presentations by local and national experts
  • Books and other resource materials
  • Meals and other community-building opportunities
  • Professional Development credits or low-cost MSU credits available
  • Year-round support network
  • Experiential field trips to local sites, including Beth Aaron synagogue and Northern Cheyenne and Crow lands

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

  • Middle and high school teachers and college faculty
  • Educators from all disciplines, especially Social Studies, History, English, and Language Arts
  • Those who seek to deepen their knowledge, confidence, and skills for teaching challenging content

FURTHER DETAILS

  • Books, materials, and entrance fees provided
  • Meals: Lunches and one dinner provided
  • Professional development credit: 3 MSU-B graduate credits for $135 total
  • Field experiences: Northern Cheyenne and Crow lands; Congregation Beth Aaron
  • Out-of-town participants: Low cost on-campus housing available

SEMINAR FACILITATORS

Marcia Beaumont is a retired Schools Counselor with more than 40 years of experience in education. She is a member of the Blackfeet tribe.

Brenda Johnston recently retired from teaching English at Browning High
School. She grew up on the Blackfeet reservation and has taught in a number of
communities in Montana.

Lacy Watson teaches English at Billings West High School and holds an MA in Holocaust and Genocide Studies.

Learn more and find a link to apply here. Questions? Email lwatson@tolinstitute.org. 

Thursday, March 23, 2023

A Little of This and A Little of That

 No theme this time--just cool stuff, ideas, and opportunities.

Present at MFPE

Do you have a strategy, lesson, or resource that you think is worth sharing with other teachers? I bet you do! MFPE is accepting applications to present at the 2023 MFPE Educator Conference in Billings, October 19-20. The Social Studies strand of this conference is only as strong as we make it--and I'd like your help making it spectacular. Apply to present

Read All About It!

The first batch of newspapers from MTHS's latest cycle of the National Digital Newspaper Program are now online on the Chronicling America site! This batch includes three papers out of Browning, with issues from 1939 to 1963: 

Need a reminder of how cool and pedagogically useful digitized newspapers are? Check out these past posts. 

Billings Public Library Community Archive Project

This spring, Billings Public Library is launching a program to collect photos of Billings from the 1960s to the 1990s. The Library has already partnered with the Montana History Portal (formerly known as Montana Memory Project) to digitize hundreds of historic photos and documents; this new program will look to fill in the gap of the later 20th century. Images will be displayed at the Library, with selected images uploaded to the Portal. Check out the details of this exciting new program, then think--could you and your students cooperate with a public library in your own community to do something similar? 

Apply to Become a Teacher Leader

Middle school teachers! If you love Montana history and want to share your passion with colleagues, consider applying to become a Teacher Leader in Montana History. Find out more hereApplications are due April 23.   

Last Chance to Participate in History Unfolded

History Unfolded is a project organized by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. It recruits citizen historians (including students!) to search digitized newspapers to uncover what ordinary people around the country could have known about the Holocaust from reading their local newspapers in the years 1933–1945. The project has been going on for several years, and will end this spring. Participants can gain free access to newspapers.com on March 27-April 2, April 17-23, and May 15-21. (This makes the task much easier!) There are classroom resources for teachers if you want to register your class. Learn more.   

Monday, March 13, 2023

Bison: Past and Present

 Bison has been in the news lately, from a resolution in the legislature to oppose bison on the CMR National Wildlife Refuge to the Department of the Interior's commitment to working with tribes to restore bison. Here are three articles I saw, all because I subscribe to Mountain West News, which aggregates (especially environmental) news from the Western United States. 

Connect this to the past.

OPI also has lessons on bison. They include Resources for Learning About Contemporary American Indian Issues: Bison Restoration. This lesson helps students learn more about bison restoration and the importance of the bison to Montana American Indians. This lesson is appropriate for grades 6-12.

And check out Project Archaeology's The 10,000 Year Significance of Bison, which includes four science units and one ELA unit for grades 6-9.

Apply to Become a Teacher Leader

Middle school teachers! If you love Montana history and want to share your passion with colleagues, consider applying to become a Teacher Leader in Montana History. Find out more here. Applications are due April 23.   

P.S. Today is the LAST of our online PD series. Integrating Montana History across Disciplines, led by Teacher Leader in Montana History Cynthia Wilondek, will be held from 4:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. Register by noon today to get the Zoom link

 

Thursday, March 9, 2023

New Name, Even More Great Primary Sources

 The Montana Memory Project has changed its name. It's now the Montana History Portal. It's changed its look and its interface, too. I haven't spent much time on the new site, but director Jennifer Birnel says it's an improvement. She's particularly excited about 

  • the new top menu, which will make it easier to navigate to the Collections, Contributors, and Exhibits pages from anywhere in the site, and
  • the new Featured Items section, which will provide easy access to new collections and digital exhibits.

Don't forget to submit your student stories to the Montana History Portal's Third Annual Historical Picture Prompt contest. (The deadline to enter is March 17, 2023.) Learn more here.

And stay tuned for information about their annual Meme-ory Contest, which usually takes place in May. Here are last year's winners in the age 10-18 category, the age 19-40 category, and the age 41-120 category.

Looking for inspiration on how to use primary sources with your students? Here are some past posts that address this issue.

P.S. Don't forget to register for our last online PD, March 13, 4:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.: Integrating Montana History across Disciplines, led by Teacher Leader in Montana History Cynthia Wilondek

 

 

Monday, March 6, 2023

Become a Teacher Leader in Montana History

The Montana Historical Society (MTHS) is soliciting applications from 6-8 teachers interested in helping improve history education (and especially the teaching of Montana history) in their schools, districts, and regions by becoming Teacher Leaders in Montana History. 

Successful applicants will demonstrate a commitment to history education, interest and experience in teaching Montana history, excellence in the classroom, experience in sharing best practices with their colleagues, and familiarity with the Montana Historical Society’s work and educational resources. 

In addition to the criteria above, up to eight program fellows will be chosen to reflect Montana’s geographic and educational diversity, assuring representation from different regions and both small and large schools. 

Those accepted as Teacher Leader Fellows will be brought to Helena for a two-day Teacher Leader in History Summit, to be held at the Montana Historical Society, June 26-28, 2023, at the conclusion of which they will be certified as Montana Historical Society Teacher Leaders in History.

Throughout 2023-2024, this select group of Teacher Leaders in History will join current Teacher Leader Fellows to: 

  • Serve as a members of the Montana Historical Society Educator Advisory Board, providing advice and classroom testing of lesson plans on an as-needed basis.
  • Work to increase the Montana Historical Society’s visibility in their schools and communities.
  • Promote Montana Historical Society resources to teachers in their region.
  • Assist teachers in their schools in finding appropriate resources/implementing lessons that reflect best practices in elementary history education.
  • Communicate with Montana Historical Society staff throughout 2023-24, documenting the outreach they have conducted and participating in up to three one-hour virtual meetings (scheduled at mutually agreeable times).

Teacher Leader Fellows will be expected to: 

  • Share Montana Historical Society Resources
    • through a formal presentation at one or more regional or statewide conferences (for which they may earn OPI Renewal Units).
    • within their own school or across their district through informal outreach and/or formal presentations.
  • Communicate with Montana Historical Society staff throughout 2023-24, documenting the outreach they have conducted.

In return, the Montana Historical Society will provide the following (valued at more than $500):

  • Full travel scholarships to attend the free two-day June 2023 Summit.
  • An honorarium of $100 to cover travel expenses to one regional conference, at which the participant is presenting or up to $100 to your school to pay for a substitute teacher so you can present in a nearby district.
  • Ongoing support and consultation, including model PowerPoint presentations to use and adapt for presentations to fellow educators.
  • A certificate designating the participant as an official MTHS Teacher Leader in History.
  • A scholarship to attend the Montana History Conference in Helena, September 28-September 30 (attendance is optional).
  • Free shipping for one MTHS Hands-on History Footlocker during the 2023-24 school year.
  • Up to 15 OPI Renewal Units.   

Only eight teachers will be selected for this special program. Apply online here. Applications are due April 23. Awardees will be notified by April 28.   

Questions? Contact Martha Kohl at mkohl@mt.gov or 406-444-4740.

Thursday, March 2, 2023

Recharge with new teaching strategies

 " In the middle of the school year my brain starts to feel stale. So it is really nice to have a short training with some new ideas to liven up my mind!"

That's how one person described our last online PD. If you are looking to recharge, I invite you to attend the final session in our online series, March 13 from 4:00 p.m.-5:p.m. The topic will be Integrating Montana History across Disciplines. Discussion will be led by Teacher Leader in Montana History Cynthia Wilondek, who promises a practical and applicable discussion to provide ideas on how you can integrate Montana history into any subject area. All grade levels are welcome. Register here.

Instructional Strategies You'll Love

Last month, Jennifer Graham led us in a discussion of teaching strategies for social studies classrooms that promote social emotional learning.

She particularly highlighted Think/Pair/Share and Jigsawing. Using homesteading as an example, she also introduced us to Brain Dumps/Retrieval Practice. The routine has students write notes after listening/reading rather than trying to do two things at once. It reminded me a little of Project Zero's Plus 1 routine and looks to be a good way to help students retain information.

Then, Jennifer suggested using those retrieval guides to create low-stakes mini-quizzes: 

  1. Take anything discussed in the previous class or questions from Retrieval Guides, write clues on small slips of paper, cut up each clue, and put them in a basket.
  2. Students number 1-5 on paper. 
  3. Randomly choose five slips of paper from the basket of clues.
  4. Read each clue twice.  (For example, which President enacted the Homestead Act of 1862?)
  5. At the end of the Mini-Quiz, read all five clues one last time.
  6. Students turn in Mini-Quizzes
  7. As soon as students’ Mini-Quizzes have been collected, provide immediate feedback by going over the answers.  (Low-stakes or no grade)
  8. All clues go back into the basket.
  9. Hand back Mini-Quizzes after analysis and the next day.

I challenge you to try one of these a new teaching strategy--and if you want, share how it went. As encouragement, I'm sharing this coupon. I am not sure who to credit for this, but I think it's brilliant, so go forth and try something new! And join us March 13 for the last PD in our online series.