Saturday, December 5, 2009

Items for One-Room School Blog

To accompany this blog and my interest in one-room schools, I'm trying to develop some materials that others can use. Some will be nostalgic. Others might be something you could use to give a one-room school effect to your teaching.

So...I'm brainstorming. What would be good?
  • Pictures
  • List of old text books
  • Old books if you can find them (I do collect old reading books)
  • My mom's memories in booklet form
  • Illustrations as I create them
  • Gift items

Mary Emma's Learning Activities Blog

Although this isn't really about one-room schools, although it could interest current teachers and does relate to education, I've begun a blog, Mary Emma's Learning Activities, where I can share lesson plans and activities.

I've long wanted to do this...develop activities from the lessons I teach when I'm subbing, working with home schoolers, and conducting at young author workshops. After providing lessons to home schooling moms during a workshop, I decided it was time to get this going.

Since I've just begun my blog, there isn't much there yet. But keep checking. Also, let me know what might interest you.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Sharing One-Room School Memories


I'm pleased to have others share their one-room school memories. We all have the basic experience of receiving an education in a small school. However, there will be some differences.


How do they differ in various parts of the country, and even in different countries. A friend wrote me about attending one of these places of education in Newfoundland. Another is researching one-room schools in Oregon.


What were your experiences like? How long did you attend? What is the history of your school? What is it used for now? Or perhaps it has disappeared from the landscape.
(Image from sxc.hu)

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Dick and Jane Readers

Does anyone remember the Dick and Jane readers? Although I'd learned to read before I started school (Mother had been a one-room school teacher before motherhood), I remember how I enjoyed reading about Dick, Jane, Sally, Spot and Puff.

Nowadays, children usually don't have standard readers. They use a variety of little books at grade level. They might read in groups or individually when they start out. Do they miss the fun we (or at least I) had with our progression of Dick and Jane readers?

I was delighted a few years ago, when I found a compilation and history of these books. Also, I've collected some of these readers, along with others from one-room schooldays.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Contacting Former Schoolmates

I'm contacting my former schoolmates, who attended the one-room school at Poughquag, oh, so many years ago. I'd love to have them add their memories to the comments. We probably all recall something different about our years there.

Some only attended for a year or two, while others spent their first four years at the white school house within sight of Poughquag village.

Do you have one-room school memories of a different school you attended? I'd enjoy hearing from you, too.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Mother's One-Room School Memories


My mom attended a one-room school house in Milan, NY, in the early 1900s with her two brothers and sister. She went on to high school, the only one in her family, in a nearby town and stayed during the week with a friend of her parents, exchanging room and board for housework.

I only have her verbal stories about her one-room school education, with perhaps a reference or two in a letter. I must recall these and write them down before they're lost from our family heritage.

After high school, Mother attended a one-year Teachers' Training course at Pine Plains, NY. Her first teaching position was in a one-room school about 45 miles from her home in 1929, at Gardner Hollow, NY. Upon my urging, Mother wrote her memories about coming to this school, boarding with a local family, and meeting the young man she later married, my dad,

Before marriage, Mother went on to get her teaching degree at New Paltz Normal School (now SUNY New Paltz) and taught for three years before we children were born. In those days, some school districts wouldn't hire married teachers and definitely wouldn't let pregnant ones teach. After New Paltz, Mother taught at Towners, NY.

I must compile memories, photos, certificates, teaching contracts, and Mother's writings to depict her one-room school life and memories as a student and teacher.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Keeping in Contact with One-Room School Classmates


Even though the years have passed, many years, since I attended the one-room school in Poughquag, NY, I'm still in contact with three of my classmates, as well as my sister. We have memories of those few years we acquired learning under Mrs. Reynolds and Mrs. Burr.

We live in different parts of the country and see one another seldom. But we keep in contact by letter, e-mail and Facebook. I've discovered photos of us taken during those years and must make copies to send to the other gals.Bold

We need to share more of our memories and make them available for our children and grandchildren, who will never attend one of these small schools.

How are you preserving your one-room school heritage?
(Image from: sxc.hu)

Monday, August 31, 2009

Many Fascinated by One-Room Schools



  • Whenever I've written about one-room schools and my connection with them, I've discovered that others are fascinsted by them, too.

    They tell stories about their experiences or want to hear about my connection with these places of learning.


    Often they:
  • Attended one

  • Have parents who attended them

  • Taught at one

  • Have family members of the current generation or previous who taught at a one-room school

  • Researched them

  • Interviewed those who attended

  • Took photos of those existing today, either as a school, home or historic building

  • Sketched the schools

  • Visited them

  • Are simply fascinated with them as part of our American heritage
  • Compiled stories about these places of learning

What is your connection with one-room schools?

(Image: sxc.hu)

Attending a One-Room School in Poughquag, NY


My first four years of schooling took place in a one-room schoolhouse, in the village of Poughquag, NY, in the 1940s. My sister and brothers attended, too. Gradually, there were so many students that the townspeople decided to "centralize." That meant becoming part of the Arlington School District.

At first, all students beyond the fourth grade were bussed to the Arlington Central schools on the outskirts of Poughkeepsie, about 15 miles away. However, the bus trip took about an hour and a half because the bus wound around on back roads. My sister, brothers and I were among the first to be picked up and last dropped off.

Eventually the Poughquag school was closed and sold to a family who converted it into a home.

There are many fond memories of school days in a one-room school house. I'll tell more stories about them, as well as my mom's as a teacher in one-room schools.
(Image: sxc.hu)

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

My One-Room School Heritage


I descend from a family with many generations of one-room school students and teachers. Whenever I write about my memories of those days (the first four grades of school for me) and the role one-room schools played in the lives of earlier generations of my family, I receive a tremendous response.


So....I thought I'd better collect some of these memories and write about them here...for my family and others to enjoy.


You're welcome to share your memories in the comments to my posts.


ENJOY!