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This is a neat story I found in the Winnipeg Sun. School field trips were never this good and/or interesting when I was young!
Thu, April 29, 2004 The great escape Learning bursts beyond classroom By TAMMY MARLOWE, STAFF REPORTER A group of teenagers bowed their heads yesterday in front of a simple gravestone in Brookside Cemetery and listened silently to the story about an exciting life gone by. Nope, it's not a sombre funeral service -- it's a history lesson. 'JUST AWESOME' "I find these days just awesome," said Maples Collegiate teacher and tour organizer, Ron Stark. "It's not just opening up a book and learning about Tommy Prince. We can say, 'This is where Tommy Prince is buried.'" With these "self-directed Wednesdays," teachers at Maples are able to use more than their regular allotted class time to provide students with more in-depth, interactive learning experiences. A couple of weeks ago, the teens took a rare tour inside the 17 Wing Winnipeg air base and in the next month the group will head to Lockport for some fishing. "Some of these kids have never fished in their lives," Stark said. Yesterday, municipal cemeteries administrator Rick Thain walked through the massive north Winnipeg memorial site with the teenagers, showing them where Lt. Harry Colebourn, the owner of the original Winnie the Pooh bear, was laid to rest. The class also visited the graves of Charlotte Susan Wood -- known as the Lady Who Lost Five Sons after five of her boys were killed during the First World War -- and Earl Sandy Graham, a 16-year-old jockey whose fatal accident in 1927 led to reforms in the racing industry. "It's an adventure into the past of the city and the province," said Grade 11 student Michelle Ocran. Friend Tereyn Denison agreed. "I think it's really interesting. It's good to learn about the people who lived in Winnipeg and started Winnipeg," said the 16-year-old. "It's so much better to see it." |
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