Yearly Archives: 2008

Target Scores a Bullseye!

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The Target corporation scores another “bullseye” as the sponsor of the Target® 2009 Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM program! On December 18 a huge box arrived at my home overflowing with beautiful red and white Target gear. It included apparel for my school presentations, warm outerwear, and the cutest little Bullseye dog riding in a Target shopping cart. My grandson Asher quickly laid claim to Bullseye and Jake once again allowed me to dress him in some Target finery.

Last year I had the pleasure of meeting the real Bullseye at the Ceremonial Start of the Iditarod in Anchorage. (I wonder if he will be there this year?) Thank you, thank you Target for all of your help and support of the Iditarod Sled Dog Race!

In particular, I want to thank you for your support of my year as the Target Teacher on the Trail, and the “Don’tForget the Bag” program.

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Teachers Apply for Target 2010 Iditarod Teacher on the Trail

When you think of Iditarod in the classroom, it is easy to imagine the wide variety of projects that students are doing to practice their curriculum skills. Students are using the Internet to research about mushers and follow the race. Math skills are practiced while predicting a team’s speed between checkpoints. Students are reading, writing, and practicing basic skills. But, it isn’t just the students who are completing projects! Some teachers are going beyond using the lessons on our website and writing their own lessons. They are also setting professional goals to become the next Target® Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM.

applications.jpgThis year, ten highly qualified educators have applied for Target® 2010 Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM by submitting a portfolio application that demonstrates their Iditarod thematic units and their goals for being involved in the Target® Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM program.

Why are they applying?

The response from each applicant to our question number one and additional information will help you get to know the teachers who sent in their application with the goal to expand the walls of their classroom and experience the Iditarod Trail first hand and teach globally via Internet as the next Target® Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM.

In one sentence, state your reason for applying for this position.

Nikki Allen, Florida, “It has become my goal to be the 2010 Teacher on the TrailTM not only to succeed with a personal challenge, but also to be a representative of the Iditarod Trail Committee in helping teachers use the Iditarod theme to enrich their curriculums and to engage their students in developing the skills necessary for successful learning.” Nikki teaches Social Studies to 7th and 8th grade students at Fort Braden School in Tallahassee. Her area of expertise is World History and American History. She believes a key to academic success for students is to make the learning real and applicable. Nikki attended the 2008 Summer Camp for Teachers. Nikki says, “The theme can be effectively incorporated into numerous lesson plans for subjects touched on such as: character education, native heritage, concern for global climate changes, and physical fitness.”

Herb Brambley, Pennsylvania, “I am applying for teacher on the trail to further my life-long desire for learning and adventure so that I can share my enthusiasm in a way that will motivate my students to seek their own adventurous learning experiences.” Herb teachers Environmental Education and Technology at the Southern Fulton Elementary K- 6 school in Warfordsburg. He attended the 2008 Summer Camp for Teachers. Prior to being a teacher, Herb had a number of occupations: machinist, tool and dies maker, welder, farrier, blacksmith, and sawyer. “I consider myself very fortunate to have had so many different occupations since I can now take these experiences and incorporate them into real world situations for my students.” Being a tactile learner himself, he recognizes the need to bring real life experiences to students and guides students to learn through experiences.

Julie Burakowski, New York, “I would like to expand my knowledge of the Iditarod sled dog race and Alaska so that I will be better able to share this information with the students in my own school and around NY State.” Julie is a K-4 Gifted and Talented teacher from Country Parkway Elementary School in Willimasville. Julie first integrated the race into her high school English class in a unit designed to focus on the conflict of man verses nature. As she used the theme with elementary students, she noticed that students themselves began to expand their learning outside the classroom and began to find information on their own, which demonstrates the power of an Iditarod unit of study. About teaching, Julie says, “I want every student in my classroom to feel that they have the potential to be successful.”

Amy Dahmus, North Dakota, “I would like to fulfill a personal and professional goal that I have had for many years.” Born and raised in North Dakota, teaching for the past seventeen year in grades 4 – 6, Amy is currently a 5th grade teacher at the Prairie Rose Elementary School in Bismarck. Amy is an explorer and loves the out of doors and nature. She is concerned about the environment and teaching students to be responsible and care for the environment. Amy is always looking to learn something new and adapt it to her classroom and her style of teaching. She is a life- long learner and stresses to her students the importance of being life-long learners. Amy states, “I believe that we need to live each day to the fullest, not with wild abandon but with zest and excitement looking to experience and learn new things.”

Martha Dobson, North Carolina, “I am reapplying for theTarget Teacher on the Trail position because the Iditarod sparks interest and learning as nothing else has done in my classroom and because the challenge the race presents to mushers, dogs, and me is a metaphor for the challenges of life and life opportunities, a strong example of setting goals, determination, and perseverance to run your personal race.” Martha teaches 6th Grade Language Arts at Mount Pleasant Middle School in Mount Pleasant. She attended the 2007 Summer Camp for Teachers. Martha was an Idita-Rider at the start of the 2005 Iditarod. She also attended sessions at the 2005 Winter Iditarod Conference for Educators. Borrowing from Randy Pausch, Martha says, “Iditarod is a great “head fake” because students are so interested in the race they don’t realize they’re learning educational skills.”

Tee Hutton, Tennessee, “It is my hope that my adventurous spirit, love for the outdoors, and never-ending search to discover all I can about the world will lead to my selection as the Iditarod Teacher on the Trail so that I may share all that it entails with not only my junior high science students, colleagues, and stakeholders but also with teachers and pupils across the country in an adventure that will last a lifetime.” Tee is a 7th Grade Science teacher at Adamsville, Jr. / Sr. High School in Adamsville. She attended the 2007 Summer Camp for Teachers and was an Idita-Rider at the start of the 2008 Iditarod. Tee, a native Tennessean has lived her life in West Tennessee. She is an active, outdoor-loving person, who is passionate about photography and enjoys outdoor sports such as golf, softball, and football. “I have aspirations of obtaining my Doctorate of Education.”

Linda Kal Sander, Florida, “I want to be the 2010 Target Teacher on the Trail to demonstrate how one topic as captivating as the Iditarod can be a tool for both professional development and character education.” Linda is Reading Coach and District Trainer at Pompano Beach Middle School in Pompano Beach. She attended the 2008 Winter Iditarod Conference for Educators. Linda’s personal philosophy states “there are only three things in life that are yours forever: education, experience, and faith.” Linda writes curriculum and is a ‘teacher’s teacher’ for the 6th largest school district in the nation, reaching almost a thousand students with her Iditarod theme used throughout the district. She is a nationally recognized presenter of cooperative learning strategies and other areas including curriculum on an international level. “The Iditarod is a gold rush of spirit. The camaraderie of the mushers, volunteers, and fans is a fire that stays with your forever.”

Denise Pfaff, Maryland, “I love dream adventures that I am able to talk about to my students and telling them that you must have a plan and support to have a vision.” Denise teaches Technology K/5 at Johnnycake Elementary School. Denise has attended a workshop at the Baltimore Aquarium which included a sleep over night with the dolphins. This sparked her love of science. She also worked in Anchorage at the Imaginarium, planning a unit for Super Sleuth Week dealing with fire safety. Technology and technology instruction became a new passion allowing her to impact students educationally as they used technology in their curriculum.

Denny Shaffner, Pennsylvania, “I want to be able to better communicate my enthusiasm for and excitement about the North Country, its environment and way of life, through learning firsthand from those who participate in it.” Denny teaches third grade at Clearfield Elementary School in Clearfield. He has taught all grades and lives in a home that he built himself. Denny has been involved in first person portrayals and reenactment projects. As the president of the Clearfield County Historical Society, he is involved in acquisitions, maintenance, and in leading tour groups. His passion and interest in history is reflected in his curriculum writing projects, having developed a 4th grade local history curriculum. Bringing history to life, making learning fun and applicable to real life is the obvious teaching styles. Denny demonstrates through his projects and travels. He has also led educator’s workshops to the Dominican Republic.

Sally Simon, New York, “I want to be a role model of lifelong learning for my students, and to show them that global learning means learning from people in ‘far-away places.” Sally is an Enrichment/Gifted and Talented teacher at Buchanan-Verplanck Elementary School. She states that she “rarely sits still” and is known as a fun teacher that introduces students to interesting topics such as forensics, bees, Leonardo Da Vinci, and of course, the Iditarod. She grew up an explorer, on the go. Sally has acted in and directed plays for Community Theater, organized fund raisers, and traveled to Guatemala and Paris. Sally says she is “an adventurer who marches to the beat of a different drummer, a life-long learner who strives to be creative in all endeavors, a teacher who strives to be a role model for her students…” Her challenge to us is “Catch up with her if you can!”

What have the applicants done so far? What will happen next?

Although ten might not seem like a large number of teachers to apply, keep in mind that applicants for this volunteer position must submit a portfolio document that is often several years in development representing years of classroom application. Prior to beginning their application process, educators often attend an Iditarod Teacher’s conference before the race or during the summer, to further sharpen their skills and knowledge base in quest of their goal to be the selected teacher. The completed portfolio serves as a testimony to what makes a good teacher- a best educator and how the use of Iditarod in the classroom as a highly effective learning tool.

The portfolio application document contains lesson plans and activities, answers to a variety of questions, a job résumé, goals and objectives, letters of recommendation, and examples of student projects. Applicants also submit a 3 – 5 minute video document that introduces the applicant to the committee and provides insight to the teacher’s communication and technology skills. The applicant sends an original and four copies of the portfolio, one for each of the educational selection committee members, to the Education Department by the first of December.

The selection committee, Alaskan educator, Sara Lamont, past Teacher on the Trail alumni, ‘Finney’ (1999), Jeff Peterson (2004), Terrie Hanke (2006), and Diane Johnson (2000) have the responsibility to ‘trek’ through more than 20 pounds of educational materials to review the application documents. Each committee member scores each application portfolio document using a rubric. The applicants are evaluated over a number of identified skills and attributes. The committee holds a teleconference in early January to review the scores, discuss the applicants, and to determine the finalists. The rubric scores and information are sent to all of the applicants, providing each educator who applied with feedback about their portfolio.

On or by January 15, three finalists will receive a phone call that invites them to continue the selection process by traveling to Alaska to attend the 2009 Iditarod Winter Teacher’s Conference (March 3 – 6, 2009) and compete in a selection process which includes personal interviews, presentations at the conference, volunteer responsibilities, and a competition project designed to challenge the finalists to demonstrate their ability to observe, report, write, create curriculum, problem solved, use technology, and be ‘trail ready’ for Iditarod as Target® 2010 Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM.

Teachers not selected as a finalist will receive notification via email and postal mail, containing feedback on their application document should they wish to reapply.

The week before the race is a busy, jam packed time for the finalists. The three finalists will have a personal interview with the committee on March 2. They’ll put in long hours that week competing for the experience of a lifetime that comes to the selected teacher. Seeing the start and the restart will be bonus experiences that week for the teachers. After the finalist completion concludes and the mushers are headed to Nome, the finalists will return to their home communities to wait for early April, when the selection committee announces the decision of the selection of the 12th Teacher on the Trail.

Information will be posted at FOR TEACHERS to share highlights and information about the selection week activities.

iditarod2003025_thm.jpgAndrea “Finney” Aufder Heyde, the first Teacher on the Iditarod Trail (1999) has seen this program grow and expand from her dream to the thematic instructional tool that reaches a global audience of students pre-school through university level. Eleven teachers have followed her example and strived to bring quality teaching and learning to classrooms.

Target® is the Official Sponsor of Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM. Please visit the Target® website, click here.

                   The Target® 2009 Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM, Cathy Walters has many lesson ideas and messages on the website. Click here to look at the lessons and become involved in the projects.

Are you interested in applying for Target® Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM? Click here to view the application document and start making your plans! Use this ‘race season’ as the starting point to build your application. We look forward to seeing your application arrive!
Educators from other countries have inquired about being a future applicant, evidence that the Teacher on the TrailTM program is as vast as the Iditarod Trail and wilderness of Alaska. This program encourages educators to be a life-long learner and improve their own teaching skills. The Teacher on the Trail program is dedicated to helping students to achieve academic success, develop technology skills, solve problems, and live as healthy citizens making positive choices.

Who will make the ‘finalist’ team and head to the start of the Iditarod 2009? Who will be selected as the Target® 2010 Iditarod Teacher on the TrailTM?

Let’s Celebrate Alaska’s 50th Anniversary!

I’d like to introduce my one-year-old Siberian husky. His name is Jake, and he is posing in this picture wearing a reusable Target® bag. Jake is pointing out that sled dogs think it is a very cool idea to help take care of our environment by using cloth or reusable shopping bags. My one-year-old Siberian husky, Jake.He hopes that you will want to join him in cutting down on the use of dangerous and unsightly plastic bags. To encourage your class or school to participate in a “Don’t Forget the Bag Week” program, the Iditarod Education Department would like to issue certificates of participation. In addition, I will post the names of each school that participates on this website

Our goal is to have 50 schools participate. The number 50 was selected to honor the state of Alaska as it celebrates its fiftieth year of statehood in 2009. Please send the name of the sponsoring teacher, school or class, address, and the day of your event to: click here. Then publicize your event and help us reach the goal! I will post the list in mid-March, after the Red Lantern winner has crossed the finish line in Nome.

Jake also reminded me that it was time to post some husky related lessons. So here are two lessons to encourage PK-K students with number readiness. Happy Tails!

Husky Number Cards

Summary: 16 husky number cards help students learn number order and one-to-one correspondence.  The accompanying songs teach adding and taking away one.

Download Lesson Plan:  Husky Number Cards

Download Lesson Supplement:  Husky Take Away Song

Download Lesson Supplement:  Husky Plus One Song

Dog Bone Count

Summary:  This is a fun and easy daily station where students can practice counting and writing numbers independently. 

Download Lesson Plan: Dog Bone Count

Target Sponsors “Don’t Forget the Bag” Program

bagweek-004-1.jpg [singlepic id="534" w="320" h="240" mode="" float="" ]This summer when I was in Alaska I had the opportunity to visit a glacier. As my three friends and I approached this amazing wonder of nature all we could say is, “Wow.” Over and over again we kept repeating: “Wow.” We couldn’t seem to find any other word to express the thrill of being there and the awe of what we were seeing and touching. It was simply a “Wow” experience.

When I returned home to North Carolina, I was struck anew by the beauty of my own surroundings. Unfortunately, Western North Carolina is not as pristine and untouched by human excesses as the Alaskan wilderness. I felt a tug, a call to present a project to children at my school and around the world that would empower them to take steps in their young lives to take care of our planet. As educators, don’t we need to instill a respect for our physical world and its limited resources? After careful consideration, I came up with an environmental awareness project called “Don’t Forget the Bag.” It is a project that shows students they can make a difference and show compassion to their planet by just changing one behavior. The effects of that change can be felt locally and globally. The goal was to not only raise awareness, but to also begin a new habit. For one week, students and their families were asked to use cloth or reusable shopping bags and refrain from using the plastic bags that are provided at checkout counters in most stores.

At my school we kicked off “Don’t Forget the Bag” week with a fifteen minute PowerPoint presentation. The slides gave statistics and showed photographs of the harmful effects of plastic shopping bags on the environment. It was a wonderful eye opener for the students to see how plastic bags pollute our communities, our waterways, our forests, and, in particular, how they endanger wildlife that inhabit each of these places all over the world. targetbags_web-resolution1.jpg To give students an idea of the magnitude of this problem they were asked to bring in all the plastic bags their families used in one week. The week prior to the presentation they were collected in a washing machine sized box in the entry hallway to the school. After the PowerPoint presentation, the curtains on stage were opened and you could hear the audible gasp as they looked upon the mountain of plastic bags gathered in one week. Students were told that we/they don’t have to wait for legislative action to make a difference: “Let’s try to make new habits starting next week by only using reusable bags.”

To conclude the presentation, faculty, staff, and students were presented with reusable fabric bags. Target®, my sponsor as the 2009 Iditarod Teacher on the Trail, provided 800 bags for this project. Thank you Target® for investing in the environmental education of our children.

I have included the PowerPoint, the letter sent home to parents, and the lesson plan for the “Don’t Forget the Bag” week project. Please consider having your own program during your Iditarod studies.

Don’t Forget the Bag Week

Download Lesson Plan: Don’t Forget the Bag Lesson Plan 

Download Lesson Supplement: Cathy’s Presentation Notes

Download Lesson Supplement: Flyer to be sent home

2006 Traveling Quilt

Cathy and her pre-kindergarten class pose in front of the quilt. I’ve had the opportunity this month to take a little trip down memory lane. Two years ago I attended the 2006 Iditarod Summer Conference for Educators in Wasilla, Alaska. During the conference Diane Johnson, the Iditarod Education Director, gave each conference participant a large, square, white handkerchief and asked us to design a square by the end of the week. The square was to reflect the week in some manner: character education, Alaska, the race, the dogs, the mushers, the conference, or the people attending the conference. At the end of the week our squares were to be given to the lovely Carol Helmke, a conference attendee, who volunteered to take all the squares and turn them into a quilt. Carol finished the project by the end of August 2006 and the quilt began its travels. The 2006 Quilt has been to Alaska, Florida, Indiana, Kansas, Wisconsin, Arkansas, Washington, and North Carolina. At each stop it has been displayed, photographed, and loved. Teachers have used the quilt as a teaching tool to inspire the writing of stories and poetry. Others have used the quilt as a spin off for discussions. Why did the artist/author say or write what they did? Is there a message in the square or in the quilt?

North Carolina Quilt I gave my square to Carol in June of 2006. My square is designed like a license plate. There is a cartoon husky running through the mountains of Alaska. It states “Alaska,” “RUN4IT” and the funny thing is I’ve been doing just that for two years. Could this have been a foreshadowing of things to come? Who knows? Finally, two years later and as 2009 Teacher on the Trail, I have seen the completed quilt for the first time, and it is now being displayed in my school. The quilt has been on a remarkable journey, and so have I. I had no idea how that conference would impact my life and the adventure that would unfold. The quilt has brought back a flood of wonderful memories from that first visit to Alaska. It is a vehicle for teachers to inspire their students just as the Iditarod conferences inspire teachers. I have since used the quilt in directing my students to make individual quilts about Alaska and in working together to make a quilt about North Carolina.

Fourth and fifth graders with their Alaska quilts This has given us the opportunity to compare the notable features of both states. It seems there is no end to the lessons learned and spawned by this quilt that began over two years ago in Wasilla, Alaska. It is further confirmation of the rich lessons and fresh ideas offered by the Iditarod educational initiative. (Lesson plans for the 12″ x 12″ Alaska quilt can be found here.)

Alaska Quilt

Summary: Students will create their own 12″ x 12″ Alaskan quilt.

Readers Theater

Summary: Readers Theater is the reading of a text in a play-like fashion. I have written two scripts. The first script is geared towards pre-readers. The teacher reads the portion of the script that movesthe story, and students respond with a refrain or simple lines that are repetitive and easy to learn. The second script is for written for first and second grade students. Although props and costumes can be involved in an elaborate Readers Theater, most involve the children simply reading the text with good fluency. By performing a Readers Theater, students are given an excellent reason to read, reread, and reread a text; they are practicing for a performance.

Polar Bears

Summary: After reading Polar Bears by Gail Gibbons students will complete an ABC or 123 dot-to-dot of a polar bear. The teacher will read the Polar Bear Fact sheet and students willpoint to the corresponding physical feature on their completed dot-to-dot polar bear. For example, when the teacher reads the fact, “Polar bears have small ears so they won’t freeze.” Students point to the ear on their picture. After all the facts have been read, students watch the National Geographic Video. The teacher then introduces the polar bear song to the children.

Happy Labor Day!

Could there be a more exciting time to include Alaska and the Iditarod in your curriculum?  Many of you know that Alaska is preparing for its 50th anniversary as a state in 2009, but the big news of this Labor Day Weekend is the announcement that Alaska Governor Sarah Palin is the Republican Party’s choice for vice president.  With that announcement all eyes turn to Alaska.  Everyone wants to know about this candidate who is the first GOP woman on a presidential ticket.  Where is she from?  What are her views?  What is her background?  Here are a few interesting bits of information about Sarah Palin for Iditarod followers. Before Palin was governor she was the mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, which is where Iditarod Headquarters is located.  In June of 2007 Governor Palin attended the festivities on Musher Sign Up Day at Iditarod Race Headquarters.  And the governor’s husband, Todd, loves to race through the snow, but not on a sled.  He prefers to ride a snow machine (or snow mobile for those of us who live in the lower 48).

Of course with thoughts turning to Alaska many of the political controversies of that state hit the airways.  As I listened to All Things Considered on my favorite National Public Radio station, the topic of global warming came up.  Margaret Williams, Alaska’s director of the World Wildlife Fund, shared her observations of how melting Arctic ice is currently affecting polar bears.  Later in the day questions arose about the pros and cons of drilling for oil in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR).  ANWR consists of 19,049,236 acres in northeastern Alaska often referred to as the North Slope region.  The refuge supports a greater variety of plant and animal life than any other protected area in the Arctic Circle.  This controversy has been going on since the Carter administration.

As we all begin a new school year these political issues give us a marvelous opportunity to educate our students.  Without giving our own political views we can use these topics to educate young people on the importance of researching issues, weighing the pros and cons, and forming an educated position.  So with these issues in mind, I give to you three lessons on Alaskan animals.  I hope you can plug these lessons into your Iditarod studies this year and, as this Labor Day Weekend is the symbolic end of summer, let me wish you a happy and productive 2008-2009 school year!

Alaska’s Arctic Animals

Summary: During the study of Alaska’s Arctic animals and where they live students will be able to tell the teacher one cold fact about each animal. A cold fact is anything that tells how these animals survive in such a harsh environment. Two facts, for example, that help the willow ptarmigan survive are that he turns white in the winter (his camouflage) and that he grows extra feathers in the winter, even on his feet (for warmth). This information is reviewed and reinforced by playing the Arctic Animal Memory Game and Arctic Animal Bingo.

Toothpick Experiment

Summary: Students will look for red, yellow, blue and green toothpicks distributed in a grassy area and discover that the green toothpicks are more difficult to find because they are the color of their surroundings.

Willow Ptarmigan — Master of Disguise

Summary: After conducting the toothpick experiment and reading Gone Again Ptarmigan students will see in this art activity how important camouflage is to Alaska’s state bird, the willow ptarmigan and other Arctic animals. (Other Arctic animals that change their coats or feathers with the season are the Arctic fox, the short-tailed weasel (known as ermine in their winter coats), the snowy owl, and the snowshoe hare. Polar bears keep their camouflage all year long!)

Let’s Sing to Learn!

Kids of all ages love to sing and move to the echo chant song, Iditarod, Iditarod, A Dog Sled Race! It happened twice this weekend. The first time was on Saturday night when I went to see the movie Mamma Mia. I came out of the theater humming ABBA tunes with a smile on my face and a skip in my step. The second time it happened was on Sunday when I heard the National Anthem. Team USA’s men’s 4X100-meter freestyle relay was receiving gold medals at the 2008 Summer Olympics for their amazing victory during the swimming competition. I cried like a baby. In both instances music moved me in a profound way. We all have had this experience, but why does it happen?

Brain research tells us that physiological things happen to us when we listen to and make music. Music causes changes in EEG activity and pulse rate. We as educators can use this research in our teaching strategies because music engages multiple memory pathways and increases receptivity that is known to enhance and accelerate learning (Music with the Brain in Mind by Eric Jensen). Who wouldn’t want to use another mode of instruction to enhance and accelerate learning?! Using this information to incorporate singing and movement in our classrooms is easy, fun, and can happen outside of music class.

I was very fortunate to have the legacy of song writing passed down to me by my friend and mentor, Genevieve Fortuna. Years before the brain research studies were available to the general public she was writing songs as essential pieces of curriculum. She knew that music lifts our spirits and brings joy to our souls; she also knew it was a fun way to deliver information. I learned much from this wise woman, just like husky pups learn from the wise, more experienced sled dogs. Genevieve moved from the classroom several years ago and is currently in the business of parent education, but we continue her music legacy. Now no unit feels quite complete until we have at least one song to go with it!

Where On the Globe is Alaska? Song Chart The lessons I am posting today, August 12, all have accompanying songs. There is a geography song, an art song, an exercise/letter song, an information song, and a fun echo movement song; moreover, they all are about the Iditarod and Alaska. I have posted the words to each song and the tune to which it should be sung. We plan on making the audio recording of each song available to you very soon. I doubt these songs will make you cry like the National Anthem, but they are catchy tunes that really do get stuck in your head. Many parents have shared with me that they hear their children singing these songs around the house. That is strong testimony to the power of a simple song! So when they are available, download the tunes and put a little Iditarod music in your classroom to enhance and accelerate learning!

Iditarod in Rhyme and Song

Summary: Students will learn about the Iditarod by singing and learning a finger play that can also be dramatized.

Literacy and Fluency Instruction

Summary: Students demonstrate understanding of an area that you are emphasizing in your instruction by circling or underlining on the “Five Little Huskies” handout. For example, students can circle all the capital letters in the poem.

Sing to Read

Summary: Students will learn strategies to decode the word “Iditarod.” They will identify all letters by name and sound, place the letters in the correct order and orally read “Iditarod” as a sight word.

Mush! Art Lesson

Summary: Students will observe Jon Van Zyle’s Iditarod art as well as some of his other work showing the beauty of Alaska. They will learn a song about Jon and then draw their own Mush! Art following a step-by-step format.