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Mission E-Possible

Technology Center

Patti Strout's mission was to create an outlet that would allow California fourth graders to share their field trips to local missions. Today, her Web site offers several student-designed virtual tours--providing kids from across the United States an opportunity to learn about those unique locations. Included: Project participants share how the Mission E-Possible project fit into their classroom activities!


Image At Ribet Academy in Los Angeles, California, the computer lab is adjacent to the fourth grade classrooms. So when elementary computer coordinator Patti Strout was looking for a topic for an online project, the most obvious choice was one involving the school's fourth graders!

"I was aware that our fourth grade teachers do a big California history unit every year," Strout told Education World. "The unit includes a field trip to a California mission. Of course, students are able to visit only one mission each year. I figured that other fourth grade students in the state were probably also visiting missions. The question arose: How could the classes share their field trips virtually?"

Strout's answer was to establish an online venue where fourth graders from across the state could share and publish work related to their field trips to the missions. "I wanted a site where students could learn about the missions they didn't get to visit in person by visiting them virtually through another class's field trip," she said. "An additional goal was to help the fourth grade teachers at my school find ways to integrate technology into their curriculum."

Twenty teachers from around the state responded to Strout's initial call for participation. (One of the participants coined the name Mission E-Possible to reflect the goals and strategies of the project.) Eventually, even more teachers became involved, as computer technologists and classroom teachers combined their efforts.

CHOOSING TO ACCEPT THE E-MISSION

One of the project participants was Jill Goodwin, technology coordinator at Holy Family Educational Center in San Jose, California. "Each year, our fourth grade students visit the Santa Clara Mission as part of a study of California history," Goodwin told Education World. "This project helped me take the lesson one step further."

On this year's field trip, students took pictures and made notes about the Santa Clara mission. Back at school, they brainstormed what they had learned about the mission and what they had found most interesting. Using Inspiration software, they then mapped their thoughts, linked common topics, and put the topics in a logical order.

"I used the brainstorming session to write questions for the different topics," Goodwin explained. "Pairs of students were each given one question to answer in a complete paragraph. (The questions were numbered so the answers could later be assembled into a report.) The students used their notes, Web sites, and books to research the answers to their questions. They emailed the paragraphs to me and I put them in order."

The project provided opportunities for the students to practice paragraph structure, report organization, and brainstorming. They learned how to use a digital camera and how to scan photographs and insert them into word processing documents. Through their research, they also discovered that not all the information that appears in print is correct. The students found numerous errors in Web sites and books!

"I was surprised by how excited the students were about the project," Goodwin said. "They loved the idea of having their writing and pictures on the Web. Also surprising was the students' commitment to the project. Many gave up lunch time and after school hours to complete their assignments."

ACTION!

"The students really enjoyed this project," agreed Sue Feldman, computer specialist for Newhall Elementary School in Newhall, California, and another Mission E-Possible participant. "In the beginning, they really had no idea how it would all turn out, but they were excited that they would be able to show their presentations to people on the Internet."

The Newhall students took the school's digital camera on their field trip to San Buenaventura. Each student took a picture at the mission and wrote three facts about the picture. After the trip, the students used their photographs and facts to create PowerPoint slides, which Feldman combined into a single slide show. Each student then provided an oral presentation to accompany his or her slide.

"The students enjoyed the project and they liked giving their oral presentations," recalled Feldman. "They said they learned a lot about the mission from the slides of other students. Many told me, 'I want to do it again!'"

REACTION!

The Ribet students also enjoyed seeing their own work online--and sharing it with grandparents and friends via the Internet. Strout reports hearing them ask: "You mean anyone, anywhere can see this?" The students visit the site often to relive their field trip to San Juan Capistrano and to learn about the missions visited by other California fourth graders. (See also San Juan Capistrano.)

The participants weren't the only ones who benefited from the project. "I heard from several teachers around the state--and in other states--who enjoyed looking at the project," Strout reported. "A teacher from Missouri wrote that she was inspired to try a similar field trip posting page in her area and I gave her some ideas about how it worked for me."

"I was surprised at how many teachers wrote that they can no longer afford field trips at all," said Strout. "What a tragedy!"

MISSION SUCCESSFUL!

Currently, the Mission E-Possible site features six field trips, including trips to other California history sites. One class submitted pictures from a trip to Chau se Indian Grinding Rock State Park, for example. Because some classes didn't take their field trips until spring, however, submissions are still coming in.

"This online project offered students the chance to be published and to share their experiences with others," Strout told Education World. "Students became the experts and shared their information. They learned to write for an audience. The field trip report previously read only by their teacher was suddenly seen by lots and lots of people. The larger audience gave more meaning to their writing."

FUTURE E-MISSIONS

Strout plans some exciting additions to the Mission E-Possible project during the next school year. She wants to archive previous field trips, as well as add new trips. She's particularly eager to post trips to Sacramento, Gold Country, or other places of interest to fourth grade classes studying California history.

Strout would also like to find ways for students to use e-mail to communicate with one another and for online collaborators to meet in person! "Participating in this project lets students know that other students are out there too," she explained. "I'd like to see it develop into a truly interactive project!"

For more information about the project or to learn how your class can join, visit the Mission E-Possible Web site.

ADDITIONAL ONLINE RESOURCES ABOUT CALIFORNIA MISSIONS

The California Missions On-Line Project
Rob Garretson's fourth grade students from Rancho Cucamonga, California, prepared this tour of California missions.

Cyber Serra Virtual Mission Tour
Tour twenty-one California missions with the computerized counterpart of Father Junipero Serra, courtesy of fourth grade students from Newhall Elementary.

California Missions - History and Facts
Fourth graders from the Joe Nightingale School created this page of basic information about California missions.



 

Article by Cara Bafile
Education World®
Copyright © 2001 Education World

9/5/2001



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