by Aaron Faver
In November of 2009, I was lucky enough to participate in an event put on by the PZ team from Harvard working in conjunction with the CASIE Institute out of Atlanta, GA, The event, held in Washington, DC, was called “Educating for Today and Tomorrow.” At this symposium, Dr. Gardner spoke on a Sunday morning in what became popularly known as the “sermon on the mount,” primarily called this because the Washington International School where it was held was, in fact, on a mount, but also because of both the revolutionary nature of the ideas expressed by Dr. Gardner, and the passion with which he spoke about them. Among these were the three E’s that the GoodWork team at Harvard works so hard to implement in the educational community at large. These three E’s are excellence, engagement, and ethics.
I am currently lucky enough to participate in a great opportunity for my students that I wanted to share with everyone that involve these three visionary ideas for American education. The Remnant Trust, a collection of rare books, manuscripts, documents, and first edition books, is on display at a local university, West Texas A&M University. Last year my class went to the Panhandle Plains Historical Museum to view these books and to have the opportunity to see and touch the books.. without gloves! This year, that effort was extended by the Director, Dr. Baum, who is allowing high schools and junior high schools in the Panhandle to bring these books into the classroom and use them for a week at a time. I wish all of you could see my students’ imaginations coming to life with questions about where the books had been, who had held them, whether or not they’d ever been aboard a ship, wondering as to whether or not they’d ever been in the presence of a king, etc.
The students respond to the age of these books, and in that way, they somehow become part of the books’ stories. Some examples: a traveling judge’s copy of the “Magna Carta”, ca. 1341; Augustine’s “Confessions,” ca. 1491; Declaration of Independence, 1776; “Spirit of Laws” by Montesquieu, ca. 1752. These are just a few examples. If everyone would be interested in checking out more, take a look at this link! My hope as an educator is that we can expand this enterprise to be a normal part of students’ experiences in the educational process from an earlier age (8th grade forward). The experience can not be replicated by using modern technology.
Finally, I wanted to open up and ask you all for new ideas and ways of integrating these types of instructional materials into day-to-day and week-to-week practices. It’s not often that we, as educators, are able to teach students “textuality” while also dealing with “materiality”. In Texas, we have a definitive curriculum to teach, and a highly limited amount of time to teach that curriculum within, as many of you know (meeting the demands of standardized testing). How do we incorporate these texts into a curriculum without adding “time-issue” burdens?