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Making Pilgrim Progress
| Prekindergarten teacher Holly
Ralph with Gracyn Custin, left, and Darby Stadick at Independent
Day School's Thanksgiving luncheon. Ralph was teaching her students
about Pilgrim life. |
CARROLLWOOD
- The 17th century Pilgrims didn't have palm trees surrounding picnic
tables for the first Thanksgiving dinner. And they definitely didn't
dine off placemats woven from construction paper or sip from juice
boxes.
But the 21st century Pilgrims and American Indians at Independent
Day School's first feast felt like they understood the early settlers
after two weeks of immersion into their lives. They started on the
Mayflower and ended with turkey and pie.
"It's helping them live in it and really understand what it
was like so many years ago," said prekindergarten teacher Lauren
Bronson.
The "Living Thanksgiving" is a tradition at the private
school that puts history into a context that prekindergarten and
kindergarten classes could grasp. This year it took on a new twist
when teachers decided to cap classroom lessons and outdoor re-enactments
with a Thanksgiving luncheon.
"This year we are really doing it up," Bronson said.
The children arrived in costume and let out whoops and gasps as
they saw the spread. The 3-year-olds dressed as American Indians,
with headbands announcing their "native names," such as
"Happy Feet," "Laughing Vacuum" and "Flying
Peacock." The 4-year-olds and kindergartners came as Pilgrims,
with paper hats and collars.
They ate deli turkey rolled into tubes, mashed potatoes, vegetable
soup and pie.
Holly Ralph said her prekindergarten class studied the hardships
Pilgrims endured but loved the chance to dress like Pilgrims and
looked forward to the feast. The children got to "harvest"
vegetables that teachers had planted, which teachers and volunteers
then washed, peeled and cooked in a soup to serve at the dinner.
The classes' journeys started, appropriately, on the Mayflower,
a wooden structure built like a ship that stays docked on the Carrollwood
campus.
The children signed a ship's log with a quill pen and boarded the
Mayflower, standing elbow-to-elbow in the small space. Kindergarten
teacher Marla Vildostegui said the cramped quarters provided an
authentic touch.
"It's good for them to see these were the types of conditions,"
Vildostegui said.
During the next days, classes took turns going outside to a makeshift
Plymouth, where teachers had set up activities such as stuffing
pillowcases with hay and pine needles and washing clothes in the
river (kiddie pool).
"They didn't have laundry, so they had to wash them in the
river," said Kacy Krig, 5. "We wash them, and then we
hang them on the rack. It's easy."
"Squanto" arrived one day to show the children how to
plant seeds and fertilize soil with fish. While the children were
at home, teachers tucked full-grown vegetables into gardening beds
to surprise them.
"Look what I found," 5-year-old Jay Forsythe said, running
to his teacher with a dirt-covered object she identified as a radish.
"Are they yummy?"
Raegan Maniecki, 5, said she found corn and carrots.
"I pulled that out with my arms," she said.
Kacy thought her class had figured out where the vegetables came
from but insisted that the ones she found had roots.
"We thought people went to the grocery store and stuck them
in there, but they didn't," Kacy said. "It grew, actually."
Reporter Courtney Cairns Pastor can be reached at (813) 865-1503.
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