Saturday, September 25, 2010

Welcome to Our Blog

Kia orana. Kia ora. Hello and welcome to our blog. 
Note-taking while listening to a personal history of a soldier at Gallipoli

We are part of the Year 4 Enrichment group and we have been meeting together since Term 2 in April for an hour a week.  At the beginning of our time together we wanted to learn more about the ANZACS. We spent quite a bit of time on the history of the battle in Gallipoli. 

We got interested in World War 2 as well and looked at video clips online to learn about the changes to children's lives. 

We also are thinking about our big theme of sustainability in our classrooms. We decided to look at how we preserve the memories of those who serve in armed conflict and why this might be important.

In Term 3 three more people joined our group which was great.

Why We Chose our Topic: 
We chose our topic because we were interested in history. We chose History on the topic areas and then thought it would be nice to do something about New Zealand's history. We thought about ANZAC Day and then thought how sad it would be if we got taken away from our families. We also chose this topic because it also relates to bullying. Countries can bully other countries and war starts. We thought this topic was fantastic for us. (H-MS & HG)

Designing our EPS History Survey

We are all interested in history and the topic we chose to study was first, the ANZACS and, second, all the ways New Zealanders have served their country in wars.


Our main focus is preserving history and memories. We got interested in finding out how many of our school families have been personally touched by war through relatives serving their country. So we made a survey so people can go on the survey at home and fill in the blank spaces for each question. This is our way to sustain and preserve memories. (Thank you to Ms J our ICT whiz who helped us.)


You can follow this link and go on our survey: http://www.elmpark.school.nz/
The Survey is on our School webpage called Preserving History:How Kiwis have served our country since World War 1. 

We invite you to add your relatives stories so we can get a better understanding of how memories of such important sacrifices are preserved and why this might be important. We need lots more stories on the survey so we can look at the data and make some conclusions.

Some of the things we wanted to find out were:
  • if relatives survived the war
  • how families remember their relatives and preserve their memories
  • how to use the graphs the computer automatically makes for us and draw conclusions
Thank you for helping us if you can.
(TW & AB with editing by SH)

Learning about Gallipoli and the ANZACS

Australia and New Zealand Army Corps




Original sewn poppies designed by a French woman
Lots of research and note-taking, talking and thinking
Listening to a personal story about serving in Gallipoli
Using a question generator to improve our questioning skills and dig deeper

Friday, September 24, 2010

Our Interview with Mr Green, WW2 Veteran


In Term 3 we were lucky enough to have a guest speaker to our session. It was Mr Green who told us about his wartime experiences. He showed us artifacts from his time as a gunner in a Lancaster bomber during World War 2. One of our students videotaped the session -  a remarkable story of courage and comradeship. We are very grateful to Mr Green for sharing his experiences and we treasure this wonderful oral history record. 

Talking about war experiences is hard we suspected but we learnt that Mr Green had never shared his stories to a group of people before. So we are very privileged to hear his experiences and his thoughts about finding other ways to solve conflict in the world. 

We would like to publicly thank Mr Green for sharing his time, memories and for allowing us to copy the story that was written by a teenage member of his family. Each member of the group has a copy to keep.

The following pictures show some of the session. (SH)


Mr Green reading from his flying log ... 1943

Lots of photos brought Mr Green's story alive for us
Listening and thinking about the information shared-forming personal insights

Lots of questions were asked

It took 60 years to acknowledge the effort and sacrifice of the pilots and crew...

Mr Green mainly was in the top gun turret of the Lancaster



The crew: Mr Green is second from right

We interviewed Mr Green. He was in a bomber in WW2. He showed us lots of pictures. He had an old book. His story was really interesting. (AM & AC)
 One of the highlights towards the end of the war was when Mr Green's plane flew very low over a part of Holland that was suffering and they dropped food instead of bombs to all the adults. They also made little parachutes with chocolates tied to them for the children. (LH)

Our insights:
  • war is a very difficult and dangerous business
  • it is not an adventure
  • it is very difficult to deal with after the experience
  • people sometimes do not recognise personal sacrifice (it took 60 years for a newspaper article about the Lancaster pilots and their sacrifices)
  • preserving memories is really important
  • we need to find other ways to solve problems in the world