Arlington School & Family Magazine March/April 2018 | Page 25

Goodman’s Guest List By Kenneth Perkins Every February, Goodman Elementary welcomes to its campus what one might call an impressive and extraordinarily iconic guest list. This year is no different. There’s Muhammad Ali and Michael Jordan, for starters, ballet star Misty Copeland, journalist Ida B. Wells, world- acclaimed performer Josephine Baker, and the Black Panther himself, Huey P. Newton. There’s even a rocking Jimi Hendrix with this guitar at the ready. At Goodman, you can say that Black History comes alive. Almost literally. For the past several years, every third-grade student receives the assignment to research, create and present on African Americans who have made significant contributions to society in politics, literature, the arts, science, sports, religion, civil rights or anywhere else they might find them. What makes these projects unique is that they come with usual written papers and posters with cutout photos. Yet standing next to the presentations are well-crafted dolls made out of plastic bottles and Styrofoam and yarn or even feathers, whatever might make, say, Malcolm X look like Malcolm X. The dolls pretty much dominate the school, staring back at visitors from a large trophy case and stored along hallways so that students who walk by can see them. Third-grade teacher Tarri Miller is the architect of this annual Black History event where the creations look eerily like the real thing. It’s all about the details. There’s Frederick Douglas and the hair made of lots of cotton balls (it almost looks combed). Josephine Baker is wearing pearls, Stevie Wonder has on shades, and Matthew Henson with his fur. Just as unique is Miller’s insistence that the students dig deeper to find African American contributors. For instance, no Dr. Martin Luther King or Ruby Bridges among this bunch. Henson, in fact, was the first African-American Arctic explorer who also served as a navigator and craftsman with Robert Peary, who, as history would have it, routinely earned most of the accolades, such as being the sole discoverer of the North Pole. Henson was not just along for the ride, the presentation explains. “We have Medgar Evers down the hall, and we have the Queen of Sheba,” Miller said. “Everyone knows about Dr. King and Rosa Parks. But not everyone knows that before Rosa Parks there was Claudette Colvin.” Colvin was just 15 when she, like Parks would do months later but with the backing of Dr. King and others, refused to give her bus seat to a white passenger. She would later serve as plaintiff in the landmark legal case that helped end segregation on Montgomery, Alabama, public buses. One student presented Toni Stone, the first women to play in a men’s professional baseball league when she signed up with a Negro League team. For Josephine Baker, Miller said the students were shocked to learn, “she wasn’t just this performer. She was a spy during the war.” While this is only a third-grade project, it envelops the entire school. The dolls are impossible to miss along the hallway. It lures them in to read the poster boards and papers. The third-grade teachers like the educational intangibles to the project. It’s not just about learning of African- American heroes. It’s about learning to do research, to write and to use cognitive skills. Before they select their subject, the students work on folders where they have researched and write about four people. From there comes their specific research project where they talk about their personal life, the early years, their contribution, even maps showing births and deaths. Picking a favorite is always too difficult, but it’s clear that Miller is fond of the Thurgood Marshall project, which shows the first black Supreme Court Justice as a very young lawyer, sitting at a desk made out of Popsicle sticks. “It’s well done, well thought out, original,” Miller said. Or, in third grade lingo, “Just really cool.” Arlington School & Family 23