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Michael Tuccio

09 Project Summary

National History Day


1.  General Overview of the Proposed Project:

Helping students participate in New York State History Day.

 

2.  Clear Purpose and Objective:

Expose Jamestown area students to History Day at the regional level, and hopefully the state level.  This is a new challenge for me because getting high school students interested proved more difficult than middle school students.

 

 

3.  Stakeholders: grade level, who will benefit, who will participate in this project.

All students of mine have the opportunity to participate.  This year I only had one student compete, but she did make it to the state competition.  Leisha Kolstee took second place in the exhibit category at the senior level at Fredonia’s regional competition.

 

4.  U.S. History Content Area

This year’s theme was the Individual in History.  Leisha’s project focused on Benjamin Franklin’s scientific discoveries.

 

6.  Software to be used, internet materials, contacts, etc.

Tons of websites, including History Day’s home site, Yale’s Avalon Project and Digital History

 

7.  Level of Student Involvement

It was all Leisha’s work.  She did an incredible job.  She qualified for Cooperstown last year and her work this year improved by 100 times.  She did better research, she spent more time on the exhibit, and the experience at Cooperstown last year showed her what it would take to compete. 

 

8.  Evaluation process (include students when possible)

I have never given students grades for History Day.  I’ve met some teachers who have all kids do it, and I don’t agree with that idea.  It’s too much work to have students be told to do it. 

 

9.  Timeline: how you envision the project being carried out between start up and  conclusion

This year, I started working with Leisha in December.  The regional competition is in March, revision work takes place in late March/April, and the Cooperstown competition was Friday, May 1st.  Leisha didn’t win in Cooperstown, but she did great work on her project.


Mike Tuccio

JHS

 

            Third time’s the charm.  That’s what I thought about this year’s History Day competition.  To date, I have not had two years that were identical.  This year’s new things marked the first time I had a repeating student compete in the competition.  Leisha Kolstee, currently a ninth grader at JHS, was an 8th grade student of mine last year and qualified for the state competition in the exhibit category.  This year, she was able to repeat that feat.  Leisha chose to do a project on Benjamin Franklin this year.  The competition’s theme was the Individual in History.  Leisha’s project turned out ten times better than the one she did last year on newspapers during the abolition movement.

I started working with Leisha in December.  I do not have her in class this year, which made it more difficult to coordinate meeting times.  This is also the first year I worked with a student that I did not have in class.  That offers many obstacles to someone who is used to having the student in class.  I directed Leisha to a ton of resources on Franklin, including primary sources, his autobiography, numerous biographies, websites, DVDs and several essays. 

The regional competition was in March at SUNY Fredonia.  Leisha took second place once in the exhibit category and was real excited to qualify for Cooperstown again.  As soon as Fredonia’s competition ended, revision work began.  As always, I instructed Leisha to take the judges comments seriously.  We sat down and reviewd her scores and looked at what needed to be changed.  There was not a lot to improve upon, but she did add more visuals to her piece, as well as a resource box filled with Franklin writings and replicas.

The Cooperstown competition was Friday, May 1st.  Leisha did not qualify for the National competition, but she did great work on her project.  I was thrilled that she tried again after last year’s success.  I intend to get more high school students involved next year, which is harder than at the middle school level.  I also hope to get other teachers involved.  I am still the only Jamestown teacher who has competed in the competition, and I believe that needs to change.  This is one of the most rewarding things I have been involved in during my career and I would like to see others take advantage of this amazing program.

 

 

 

 
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