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, April 27, 2023

Join us for the 50th annual Montana History Conference

Save the Date! The 50th Annual Montana History Conference, "Building on the Past," will be held in Helena September 28-30, 2023 at the Delta Hotels Colonial in Helena. As we eagerly awaits completion of the Montana Heritage Center addition in Helena, we’ll be looking back on 49 years of gathering to talk about Montana history. Keynote speakers will include Pulitzer Prize winning author Elizabeth Fenn, who will be talking about Sacagawea's capture and the history of the early West, and Salish educator and author Julie Cajune, who will be performing her one-woman show Belief: Lives and Stories of Montana's Salish Women.

Renewal units will be available for both the Thursday educator workshop and all conference sessions. (Check here beginning July 1 for more details.) We hope you’ll consider attending! 

As in past years, we will be offering travel scholarships for both teachers and college students. 

About the scholarships: Funded by the Dennis and Phyllis Washington Foundation, the scholarships will consist of full conference registration plus a $300 travel/expense reimbursement. All teachers and students in Montana’s colleges and universities are eligible to apply (residents of Helena and vicinity are eligible for the conference registration scholarship but not the travel reimbursement). 

Teacher recipients must attend the entire conference, including Thursday’s Educators Workshop and the Saturday sessions. Student recipients must commit to attending all day Friday and Saturday, including a Saturday tour. Preference will be given to

  • Teachers and students from Montana’s tribal colleges;
  • Teachers from Montana’s on-reservation schools;
  • Teachers and students from Montana’s community colleges and four-year universities;
  • Teachers from Montana’s rural, under-served communities.

Applications are due by 11:59 p.m. June 11, 2023. Awards will be announced on Friday, June 23, 2023. Applying for a scholarship is quick and easy. Apply online. 

 

Monday, April 24, 2023

Prizes

 Since 2012, I've sent out a survey asking for feedback as well as asking folks to share information about "the best Montana history or IEFA lesson or project or resource you taught this year--the one you will make time for next year no matter what." Each year, I make changes to the newsletter and our other offerings based on the feedback you give. And the "best of" posts that I create every fall, based on the ideas you share, are perennial favorites. 

That's why I'm asking for your help once again. Take the survey 

If you've been part of this community for a long time, you are probably tired of this request. You may also feel as if you've already shared your best ideas--but I hope you'll think of the new teachers, just starting out, trolling for good lessons, and take a moment to share them again. Take the survey!

Need more encouragement? I'll be offering a prize to the eleventh, eighteenth, twenty-eighth, thirty-eighth, and forty-eighth person to complete the survey. Say it with me: Take the surveyIn all seriousness, I appreciate your help, and your fellow teachers will appreciate learning about the lesson you share.

Thursday, April 13, 2023

Buffalo Unity Project

 For many people, the highlight of the Indian Education For All Best Practices Conference held in Helena in March was learning about Poplar Middle School's Buffalo Unity Project. For those who weren't lucky enough to attend in person, there's a film about the project, which combined math, industrial arts, social studies, English Language Arts, and science. Most schools don't have the resources or opportunity or desire to stage a buffalo hunt for their middle schoolers. But every school can engage students in place-based projects rooted in their community history.

I'd love to learn how you and your students are engaging in place-based education. I'd love to gather examples of projects happening across the state that we can share to encourage others to take the plunge. I'm also interested in figuring out ways that the Montana Historical Society can support your efforts. One thing I know we can do is connect you with teachers who are already doing place-based education and can offer tips for getting started. So write me!

And then take a moment to watch Rezilient: The Buffalo Unity Project 2022 on YouTube to gain inspiration from this remarkable project.

P.S. The deadline is fast approaching. If you are a middle school teacher who loves Montana history, consider applying to become a Teacher Leader in Montana History. Find out more hereApplications are due April 23.    

Thursday, April 6, 2023

Teaching about Montana’s Chinese Communities: A Workshop for Educators

 Learn the history of Chinese Montanans, their struggles and contributions to the region’s development, and how they kept their culture alive on the Montana frontier. 

Saturday, May 13, Butte, MT

12:30 – 2:30: Butte Public Library: Learn about new research and approaches for teaching about the history of Chinese communities in Montana

3:00 – 4:00: Tomb Sweeping Festival: Chinese section of Mount Moriah Cemetery

4:00 – 5:00: Tour of the Mai Wah Museum & Wah Chong Tai Mercantile

5:00: Dinner at the Pekin Noodle Parlor (the longest continuously operating Chinese restaurant in the U.S.)

Open to twenty teachers. Each participant receives:

  • The Middle Kingdom under the Big Sky, new book on the region’s Chinese history
  • $50 to help with travel expenses
  • Entry to the Mai Wah Museum
  • Dinner at the Pekin Noodle Parlor
  • Five Professional Development Units toward certification renewal (provided through the Montana Historical Society)

Contact: Mark.Johnson@nd.edu to register.

Monday, April 3, 2023

Cross Curricular Integration

Back in February, I shared Bill Moe's strategy for getting students to explore Charlie Russell's paintings. Carrie Sorenson took Bill's idea a step further and conducted an actual auction and images from the PowerPoint of the Russell images we created as part of our Teaching Montana's Charlie Russell materials.

She said: "I  used fake money, and picked 5 of his pieces from the Powerpoint, and actually ran an auction with auction numbers and everything.  They LOVED IT!  And asked me to print out the painting they purchased in color so they could take them home.  I had 4 boys negotiate a cooperation so they could go together and buy one of them." She's thinking of framing some post cards next year.

Charlie Russell's paintings are a great way to integrate art and social studies. In March, Big Fork Teacher and Teacher Leader in Montana History Cynthia Wilondek shared other ideas for integrating Montana history into other curriculums at our final online PD of the season.

Because it was Women's History Month, she suggested

Since I think Women's History Month is EVERY month, I'm including her plug in this post.

Cynthia also pointed attendees to OPI's website, which lists IEFA lessons by disciplines and grade levels.

She suggested that science classes could examine the environmental impact of mining, pointing to this PPT for background. (Fourth-grade teachers will want to look Part 3, Lesson 3, Mining Today, in the Montana: A History of Our Home curriculum for lessons.) 

She suggested using the digitized Montana newspapers to teach American history (why not use examples from Montana). She also spent some time on Structured Academic Controversy (an alternative to debate) that attendees found particularly valuable.  

All and all, it was a very valuable session and hopefully these links can inspire you even without listening to Cynthia's enthusiastic delivery. Want more? Check out our Interdisciplinary Lesson Plans page

 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.