Quelle horreur!!!
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If the issue is the large amount of people who died then ...why so many people visit Civil War battlefields, Mt. Vernon (where so many slaves brutally died) and other similar places? |
C'est la vie. In France and Canada public elementary educators do a better job. |
And that would have nothing to do with visiting Jamestown. |
Huh? What are you talking about? There are other historical sites in the US with much greater significance. Where things actually happened related to US history. Jamestown is pretty irrelevant. |
+1 OP, do you not realize how insignificant Jamestown is in the grand scheme of things? Truly? I've never been there, but I've been to all the places PP mentioned, and many, many others. I suspect that's true for most of my children's public school teachers. I plan to go along on the field trip when my kid visits in 4th grade, and that will be the one and only time I go to Jamestown. I would not go otherwise. But then again, I did not grow up in VA with this over-inflated sense of my place and importance in the world. |
No big deal. If some teachers don't want to visit key US historic places, I will not send them to time out... I will give them a reminder The point is that you may teach better if you have been at any of the historic places. C'est tout
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+1 Yup.
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Wonder if OP realizes how long Jamestown has been a site to visit. It's been a number of years since I was there (and it does interest me). The last time I was there, there were only ruins and some digs. There was a small museum. Believe me, you could have learned more reading a book. Yes, I found it interesting--but I enjoy history. You don't have to visit to know a lot about a place.
Does a teacher need to have visited the pyramids to teach Egyptian history? Is it a requirement for every preacher to visit the Holy Land? |
Another teacher who has been to all of those places except the Alhambra. I do think it's important for teachers to have intellectual curiosity about the world, but that can manifest itself in many ways other than visiting historical VA sites. |
| unbelieable. can our expectations of good teachers be any lower? is it ok to teach mount vernon but choose to not visit there even once? of course it is 'ok' because we should expect the bare minimum from our teachers... seriously why even bother sending kids to any field trips then? get a samsung VR headset and you can check off everything on your bucket list. |
My expectations of teachers have nothing to do with them visiting a few local/regional historic sites. Seriously, the only one who cares about this is you, OP. Why not spend your energy worrying about things that matter. |
Mount Vernon is different than Jamestown. It's 30 minutes from my house vs. 3+ hours. I can easily visit in a day vs. staying overnight to go to Jamestown. I am teacher and I do think it's important if you are teaching about local places to visit them at least once. No excuses there. But Jamestown is not local. |
These are not college professors tapping into their expertise. In elementary school they are teaching some basic facts that don't need to be verified with their own eyes. My kids learned about ancient China, Greece and Mali in elementary school. Yes, it's ok that the teachers didn't go there even once. |
This thread is about VA history, not China. |