Before, I’ve written about the importance of geography in
the social studies classroom. So far this school year I’ve seem to put a higher
emphasis on traveling. Here are a few ways how I’ve done that.
1.
What Time Is It?
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the middle clock's batteries are dying so it's time is not in line with the others |
2. Where’s Waldo?
This I’ve written about in a previous post
about finding the teacher, but this year I’m implementing it with a more
student-centered attitude. To get my
students started and provide an example, I wrote a description and included a
picture of a location I had been and posted it on our Google Classroom site.
Then I gave the students one week to guess where I was. The first to do so
correctly wins a homework pass and to “hide” next. All the students who guess correctly get a
piece of candy. To help make it more challenging, if the student who “hides” does not get
guessed, then that student receives another homework pass, a piece of candy,
and to hide again if they’d like!
![]() |
This was the first one I wrote to start off my classes. Can you figure out the answer? |
![]() |
This is one of my student's hiding place. Not all the entries went off my example this closely, but this student stumped a lot of her classmates. Can you find this 6th grader? |
3. Passports
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I believe we are all students, no matter what
stage of life we are at currently. I also believe that traveling helps open up
our minds to new ways of life and news level of education. I suppose this is my
way as a social studies teacher to “do” in order to learn. All I want for my students is to have a passion to continue learning throughout their lives, whether it be through travel or other means.
“Tell me and I forget, teach me and I
may remember, involve me and I learn.” -Benjamin Franklin
"I hear and
I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand." - Confucius
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