Christine CarrilloWith tin pie pans sitting on...
- Share via
Christine Carrillo
With tin pie pans sitting on a piece of wood on their desks and nails
and hammers in hand, fifth-graders at Lincoln Elementary School in
Corona del Mar pounded their way back in time and into the lives of
colonial folk.
They sat among their peers, boys and girls alike, and carefully
embroidered stars on different-colored fabric, stenciled borders and
designs on blank tiles and made bread.
For a day, dressed in 18th-century-style breeches and gowns and
wearing cocked hats and linen, ruffled caps, the three fifth-grade
classes moved from one station to another Wednesday to live the
history lessons they’ve learned.
“We think that simulations are one of the most effective ways of
teaching social studies,” said Leslie Slevins, one of the
fifth-grader teachers at Lincoln. “They develop an empathy for ...
and a better understanding of how people lived then.”
Employing the services of many helpful parents, the eight
different colonial stations, which included butter churning and
woodworking, challenged students to cast aside their 21st-century
comforts and embrace the ways of the colonial world.
“I think it’s really fun and I like the activities and dressing
up,” Chloe Harder, 10, said. “I now have a better visual of what
their life was like and how we have everything so easy.”
Chloe’s fellow tinsmith and classmate, 10-year-old Maxine Morris
agreed.
“They had everything so hard,” she said. “Not like us.”
The fifth-grade social studies curriculum focuses on the study of
the 13 American colonies and, by breathing life into the curriculum
at the culmination of their history lesson, the students get a sense
of the reality behind the lesson plan.
“It’s great, and [the students] really appreciate it,” said
Michele Koziara, a parent who helped organize the event. “They’ll
always remember it. They may not remember the history behind it, but
they’ll always remember Colonial Day.”
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Christine Carrillo visits a campus in the
Newport-Mesa area and writes about her experience.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.