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Daybreak Elementary Students Hoping to Make History in State Competition
Description
It is an academic program that has been getting Utah kids excited about history for thirty years. We’re talking about the Utah History Fair.
On this episode of the Supercast, we find out how some Daybreak Elementary students used their knowledge and talents to take first place and qualify for the State History Fair competition. It is a competition that involves more than 10,000 students from Utah, proving that the process of learning about history is a whole lot of fun.
Audio Transcription
Anthony Godfrey:
Hello, and welcome to the Supercast. I'm your host, Superintendent Anthony Godfrey. It is an academic program that has been getting Utah kids excited about history for 30 years. We're talking about the Utah History Fair. On this episode of the Supercast, we find out how some Daybreak Elementary students use their knowledge and talents to take first place and qualify for the State History Fair competition. It is a competition that involves more than 10,000 students from Utah. Proving that the process of learning about history is a whole lot of fun.
We're here with Ramsay O'Connor, one of the sixth grade teachers here at Daybreak Elementary to talk about the Utah State History Fair. And you have a few students who are advancing through regionals to the state competition. Tell me about what made you want to get students involved in this and what that process has been.
Ramsay O'Connor:
So I've been doing history day at Daybreak for, I think this was maybe my third year doing it. So I'm a lot better at it. The first year was kind of trial and error and then with COVID we took two years off. And then this year I wanted to do it again. And since we had that Walk to Read enrichment group time all the sixth grade teachers decided that would be a really good project for some kids that need enriching. So we started with about 30 kids and then I think I had about seven groups compete and two groups made it to the state competition.
Anthony Godfrey:
Well, congratulations first of all, that they've advanced. So tell me about the structure of it. There's a theme for each year and then are there certain categories within which they can submit? And what are their options in terms of a project?
Ramsay O'Connor:
So there's a theme every year. We talked a lot about first choosing a topic that's interesting to you. And so we started with finding a moment in history that you find interesting; world history, local history, American history, they could choose whatever they wanted. And then talked about the categories; an exhibit, a documentary, a website, a paper, which nobody chose, and I think that was it. Those were the oh, and a live performance, which no one chose that either. Then yeah, they just go from there. They pick their category. And then we kind of talked about once they narrowed in on the moment in history that they were most interested in, then we talked about narrowing it down to really meet the theme. And we worked a lot on what's a thesis to help develop their project.
Anthony Godfrey:
I love the deep, personalized learning that happens as a result. They get to pick their topic, they get to pick the medium that they're most comfortable with, and then they get to work with someone else. Teamwork is involved and competition doesn't hurt. It sharpens your focus a little bit and you want to do well. On Friday is the state competition and you have two teams that advance to that level?
Ramsay O'Connor:
Yep. This is the first time I've ever had teams make it to the state level competition, so I'm really excited and proud of them. I'm excited for all the kids that participated because they did great. But to have kids go to the state, I'm really excited because I've never done that before or helped kids get to that point.
Anthony Godfrey:
Well, I wish them the very best and I'll l