Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts

MN AATG Workshop -- Samstag, 24. September 2016 -- REGISTER NOW!


German Educators and Supporters:
Please join us for professional development and networking.
Herbst 2016:
MN AATG Workshop
Content and Collaboration in your Classroom
Samstag, 24. September 2016
University of St. Thomas, OEC 317 (St. Paul, MN) Campus map

ab 8.30
Frühstück
9.00
Geschichte im Deutschunterricht der Grund- und Mittelstufe (mehr unten)
11.15
Wie entdeckt man die Schweiz, Österreich und Berlin durch gemeinschaftliches Schreiben?  (mehr unten)
12.00
Mittagessen
12.30
MN AATG Treffen
14.00
Schluss

Seminarleiterinnen
Dr. Susanne Wagner, University of Saint Thomas
Dr. Juliane Schicker, Carlton College
Fr. Katie Casson, Northfield Schools

REGISTRATION:

·  $20.00: AATG-Members who pre-register by Sept 13 (incl. breakfast/lunch)
·  $25.00: Non-Members who pre-register by Sept 13 (incl. breakfast/lunch)
·  Walk-ins: add $5 each
·  Current Board Members and Presenters: Complimentary admission

then make your payment by mail:

Make check payable to:  
MN AATG
Mail to:
Amanda Stenberg
711 Fair Oaks Drive
Mora, MN 55051

Questions? astenberg@moraschools.org / (320)247-2532 (Amanda)

Please share widely with colleagues and friends!

Um 9 Uhr mit Susanne Wagner: Teaching History at the Elementary and Intermediate Levels
                    Language programs have relinquished curricula based solely on grammar-centric textbooks, which restrict meaningful teaching of culture.  Reforms are based on the premise that students learn more effectively, if they focus on narration at the lower level, shift to explanation by the fourth semester, and conclude with argumentation in the most advanced classes, while they learn grammar functions necessary to communicate when they need them and not before.  By integrating course content with proficiency-level appropriate tasks, students engage and re-engage with specific topics throughout their studies.  They not only develop a deeper understanding of target language material, but also acquire multiple literacies.
                   A literacy-based language curriculum lends itself to integrating history as a content strand and foreshadowing historical events, personages, texts, images in the lower levels to allow for deeper engagement in more advanced literature and film courses.  Interweaving history in this fashion allows students to understand how a culture preserves collective and collected knowledge.
In this interactive workshop, participants will learn how to integrate significant historic events into the L2 curriculum, so that students a) understand how history resonates in a nation’s cultural memory, b) allows for a more natural integration of cultural information, and c) are prepared for more in-depth analyses in higher-level courses.  
                  Through this approach, German, as a humanities discipline, furthers skills in communication and interpretation relevant to the 21st century student.  Featured instructional activities highlight pedagogical approaches and demonstrate how a more theme-based curriculum can facilitate reflective acquisition of language so that students, who complete their language studies after the second year, still gain meaningful intercultural skills fostering critical thinking that may be useful for a future career.

Um 11 Uhr mit Juliane Schicker und Katie Casson: Getting to know the German-speaking world in collaboration: AP German/third-semester college German explore Switzerland, Austria, and Berlin together
              Collaborative writing projects have been increasingly advocated for the SLA classroom to expand social interaction, to foster communicative teaching, and to strengthen the students’ self-awareness and self-confidence. Few sources present ideas about connecting high school German learners with college students in this context.
Our collaborative writing project is ideally suited for the third or fourth semester college classroom and the AP high school classroom. Best used when both groups learn about Europe, the project covers the geographical and cultural areas of Switzerland, Austria, and Berlin. It cultivates individual and collaborative learning moments, group dynamics, video watching and text writing. Through short online videos about the two countries and Berlin, students are made familiar with the cultural aspects of the German-speaking world. In a GoogleDocs project, they then discuss aspects from these videos as well as their own impressions of the areas and videos with other students.
This project aims at connecting the K-12 German classroom with the college German classroom. It enhances the students’ learning experiences with peers and improves their confidence in talking/writing in German. They debate, interact socially online, acquire new knowledge together, express their personal likes and dislikes, and collaboratively search for meaning. At the same time, this project strengthens the ties between K-12 and college German education. It opens the college classroom to the community and offers opportunities for high school students to step beyond their AP classroom and realize that college German is not scary at all. In the long run, projects like this can increase enrollments in both high schools and colleges, which will aid the general goal of increasing enrollment in German.

Visit MN AATG online at http://mnaatg.blogspot.com
Follow us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/mnaatg/
Not a member of AATG yet? Check out the benefits and join at http://www.aatg.org/



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440 Minnesota Students Take the National German Exam

Over 21,000 high school students in four different levels took the newly designed exam – 440 from Minnesota. The Exam provides individual diagnostic feedback, creates a sense of accomplishment, and rewards students through an extensive prize program. Exam results are among the criteria used in selecting the recipients of chapter awards and the national AATG/PAD Study Trip Awards, a four-week study trip program in Germany.

Saint John's German Camp -- June 22-27 -- our 40th year!


Saint John's Prep Summer Program

Mission
As a Catholic school in the Benedictine tradition, we prepare students for success in higher education and for a lifetime of learning, service and leadership in a global society.

Vision
Our vision is to be renowned for academic rigor, dynamic programming, and the holistic development of students from all faiths and cultural backgrounds.
Saint John's Prep German Camp
Co-ed, ages 8-16
June 22-27, 2014

The Saint John's Prep German Camp is an entertaining program that allows the camper to grow, learn and have fun in a supportive, creative environment. Daily activities encourage campers to study the German language, discover the differences in cultures and meet new friends.
Campers receive individualized attention and work closely with counselors and each other in small group settings.

Goals:
  • Develop an eagerness to learn new languages
  • Cultivate a positive attitude towards people of other cultures
  • Foster an enthusiasm for living with and making new friends
  • Encourage tolerance and patience for others
  • Instill a concern for the world in which we live

Sample activities:
  • Language classes
  • Authentic food
  • Bonfire & talent show
  • German games
  • Swimming & canoeing
  • Team sports
  • Fine arts projects
  • Nature walks
Three authentic German meals are provided per day.

Campers may be dropped off between 2 and 3 p.m. on Sunday. The camp will conclude with a special cultural program for campers and parents at 5:30 pm on Friday.

Registration and more information are available here
http://www.sjprep.net/about/camps   






Give a conference talk here in Minnesota! Deadline for proposals in one week away.



CALL FOR PROPOSALS -- FALL CONFERENCE 2014
Diversity, Equity, & World Languages: Empowering Teachers for Change

Do you have a passion for teaching diverse learners? Do you have experience helping all of your students succeed? MCTLC would like to invite you to share your knowledge and strategies with other language teachers from around the state. Proposals are now being accepted for one-hour sessions at the 2014 Fall Conference on Friday, October 24th as well as three-hour post conference workshops on Saturday, October 25th. Preference will be given to sessions and workshops that address the conference theme, but proposals addressing any topic of interest and value to world language educators will be considered.

The Call for Proposals will remain open until Tuesday, April 1.  The primary presenter will receive notification of proposal acceptance by May 15 via email from President-Elect Kay Edberg with further instructions to register for the conference with their exclusive presenter discount code. The primary presenter serves as our contact person and is responsible for distributing all instructions to their co-presenters. Presenters and co-presenters agree to register by July 1; sessions of unregistered presenters will not be included in the program.

Our conference depends on Minnesota language professionals' talents and willingness to share them. We commend and thank you for stepping forward.

Complete the form below or click here for the link.

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Our mission is to advance the teaching of languages and cultures in Minnesota.
Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

Dinner and Program at the Gasthaus Bavarian Hunter, Stillwater, MN. Saturday April 12, 2014, Featuring remarks by Christa Tiefenbacher-Hudson, Honorary Consul of the Federal Republic of Germany.

  Minnesota AATG  News Item


Mark Thamert, MNAATG INFOBAHN
Please submit further news items by replying to this email. 

From our Colleague Cheryl A Wason: 

Shoreview Einhausen Web Site: Sister City Association www.sesca.org

The Shoreview Einhausen Sister City Association
Presents the 12th annual German Dinner and Program
Saturday April 12, 2014
Featuring remarks by Christa Tiefenbacher-Hudson, Honorary Consul of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Along with a “German Travelogue” and the story of “Making of the Giggel”
The Shoreview Einhausen Sister City Association (SESCA) is pleased to announce the 12th annual German dinner. Our program will feature a presentation by Christa Tiefenbacher-Hudson, a travelogue of various areas of Germany along with a presentation on the making of the Giggel (Rooster). Follow the creation of Einhausen’s latest mascot from its humble beginnings, along a 6000 mile journey to its new home.
Date: Saturday, April 12, 2014
Place: Gasthaus Bavarian Hunter located at 8390 Lofton Ave N., Stillwater, MN
Time: 5:00 pm Social time – cash bar
6:00 pm German-style buffet dinner
7:30 pm Program
Cost for this event is $30.00 per person for adults and $20.00 for college or high school students and those under the age of 18. The dinner and program is open to all. However, advance registration is required. Seating is limited so early registration is encouraged.
Directions to the Gasthaus Bavarian Hunter: From Interstate Hwy 94 go north on Hwy 694 to Hwy 36. Go East on Hwy 36. At Manning Ave go left and then go left at McKusick Ave. Drive approximately 1/4 miles and take the first left. The Gasthaus Bavarian Hunter is the third driveway on the right.

Email inquiries may be made to sistercity@sesca.org

Deadline for mailing registrations is April 4, 2014. Please mail a check payable to “SESCA”.


To: Roger Hintze, Treasurer
Shoreview Einhausen Sister City Assn.
755 Cottage Place
Shoreview, MN 55126-3817 Please PRINT Name(s)
$30 / Adult
$ 20 / Student
Total


  Minnesota AATG  News Item



Mark Thamert, MNAATG INFOBAHN
Please submit further news items by replying to this email. 
MNAATG INFOBAHN  mthamert@csbsju.edu





Great Opportunities to Present a Talk -- Deadline April 15, 2014 -- Get Involved in State Activities!

Thank you, Anita Ratwik, for the following:

Central States Conference (on the Teaching of Foreign Languages) i.e. CSCTFL, will be in Minneapolis March 12- 14, 2015. 
It is co-sponsored by MCTLC. CSC is one of the five regional organizations of ACTFL. CSC's web address is www.CSCTFL.org 

We especially want to have sessions for German teachers and to have good attendance by world language teachers in Minnesota. This conference includes 17 states, and we expect close to 1000 participants. All right in our own backyard!

Please consider presenting a session. The website for proposals is http://www.web-reg.com/csc-prop/
The deadline for submission is April 15, 2014.  You can even do one presentation at the MCTLC conference in October 2014 and use the same one for CSC 2015 the following March!

This conference will also require many volunteers from Minnesota. I will send out information as that time comes closer. Please consider volunteering. It is one of the best ways to get to know other language teachers and networking. Participants and presenters to CSC come from all 17 CSC members states, plus many additional states.

This year's CSC conference is in St Louis, MO, March 20-22, 2014. In preparation for CSC 2015, we are responsible for an exhibit booth at this year's conference. We need volunteers to help staff that booth. If any of you will be at CSC 2014 in St Louis, please consider helping staff that booth for a couple of hours. No need to bring anything, but a smile and energy to talk with perspective attendees who might also want information about Minneapolis and Minnesota.

If you are willing, please contact Anita Ratwik, at ratwi001@umn.edu 

Lots to think about, many opportunities.
Thank you.

Anita Ratwik
CSCTFL 2015 Local Liaison



Thank you Mark for maintaining this list for us.

AATG Testing Program -- Oral Interviews and Awards Banquet Dates are Set


Dear All, 

I would like to introduce myself to you as the new AATG MN Testing Chair and thank Lisa Ohm for her help and support in making this transition as smoothly as possible. 

Please save the following two dates in connection with the National German Exam:

Oral Exams:
Saturday, March 8, 2014, 8:00-12:00 noon University of St. Thomas (Saint Paul Campus: OEC Classrooms)
 
Award Banquet:
Sunday, April 27, 2014 (12:00-3:00 pm +/-) University of St. Thomas (Saint Paul Campus: Woulfe Alumni Hall)


I will send out more information concerning the events soon, and of course will ask you for your support.  Most importantly, I would like to request your help with the oral interviews.

 Please feel free to email me any time with questions or comments.

 Looking forward to a great testing year.  Good luck to all your students.

Susanne.

 
Dr. Susanne M. Wagner, Assistant Professor of German & Program Director University of St. Thomas | Department of Modern & Classical Languages | O'Shaughnessy Education Center 320-H


AATG/Goethe-Institut Mentor/Teacher Trainer, http://www.aatg.org Testing Chair, AATG Minnesota, http://mnaatg.blogspot.com

 

 

MNAATG Fall Meeting -- Friday, October 18 -- Panera Bread -- 6064 Shingle Creek Parkway


MNAATG Fall Meeting

Friday, October 18

5:15 PM

Panera Bread (near Earle Brown Center and MCTLC conference)

6064 Shingle Creek Parkway

Brooklyn Center

 

We are looking for nominations for Vice President (must be current k-12 teacher and MNAATG member) and Secretary (open to all MNAATG members).  We will also be discussing future development opportunities, support offered by AATG, changes to German Day at the Zoo, and other ways of strengthening our programs/organization.  All are welcome!

 

Jae Cody

Five MCTLC Scholarships Available -- DEADLINE: September 15


Announcing the addition of FIVE First-Time Attendee Scholarships in 2013

MCTLC is pleased to offer five (5) first-time attendee fall conference scholarships to world language teachers.

Teachers who meet the criteria may self-nominate or may be nominated by a colleague or administrator.

Criteria:
Nominee must be in their first three (3) years of teaching a world language;
  1. Nominee must be a first-time attendee to an MCTLC Fall Conference; and
  2. Nominee must be a paid regular member of MCTLC upon nomination.

DEADLINE: September 15


 

Our mission is to advance the teaching of languages and cultures in Minnesota.

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

 

 
Dr. Elizabeth A. Kautz

German 1003 Coordinator and

Liaison to the CLA Language Center

Dept. of German, Scandinavian and Dutch

University of Minnesota

 


612-626-6016 (Jones 105c)
612-625-0738 (Folwell 328b)

Come to the Rededication of the Schiller Sculpture in Como Park, May 11


        
Public Art Saint Paul announces
Restored Schiller Sculpture to be re-dedicated
as The Minnesota Chorale performs Ode to Joy
Saturday, May 11, 2013
10:00am
Como Park, Saint Paul MN
For 105 years, a sculpture of German literary giant Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller (1759–1805) has presided over the gateway to Como Park.  It was commissioned from artist Ignatius Taschner by St. Paul’s German American community and gifted to the City in 1907.  Having braved over a century of Minnesota winters, this cultural treasure has been completely restored by Public Art Saint Paul.
The community is invited to rededicate the sculpture with triumphant fanfare and choral voices on Saturday, May 11th at 10:00am.  The rededication will be held at the Schiller sculpture site near the Como Park gateway at Lexington and Eastbrook drive.  In case of rain, the program will move indoors to the Como Park Visitor Center Auditorium.
     A Minnesota Chorale performance of Ode to Joy from Beethoven’s 9th Symphony will celebrate the sculpture’s rededication.  Saint Paul City Councilmember Amy Brendmoen will officiate, along with Honorary German Consul Christa Tiefenbacher Hudson, Saint Paul Parks and Recreation Director Michael Hahm, and Public Art Saint Paul President Christine Podas-Larson.   University of Minnesota Professor Rick McCormick will speak of Schiller and students of the Twin Cities German Immersion School will recite a Schiller poem.
Who Was Schiller?
A playwright, poet and philosopher who is considered one of the most important literary figures in European history, Friedrich Schiller’s writings promoted freedom and democracy.  Schiller was inspired by the American and French Revolutions and made the struggle for freedom and justice one of the main themes of his dramas, poems and philosophical writings.  Schiller’s literary output transitions from the Age of Enlightenment to the era of Romanticism. In 1792, he was made an honorary French citizen, along with George Washington.  His poem is the "Ode an die Freude" ("Ode to Joy,” 1785), the lyrics of which are in the finale of Beethoven's “Ninth Symphony.”
The Schiller Sculpture’s History
In 1905, members of Saint Paul’s German-American community, led by Theodore Hamm, Dr. Justus Ohage and Frederick Weyerhaeuser were determined to celebrate the famous playwright, poet and philosopher on centennial of his death and to express their pride and gratitude as immigrants who had found a home in Saint Paul.  With stirring encouragement from eminent architect Cass Gilbert, the committee to sent Dr. Ohage to Germany to meet with sculptor, painter and printmaker Ignatius Taschner.  Taschner created a bronze figure 10 feet tall. Schiller confidently strides forward with his right foot, grasping papers in his left hand, his right hand on his hip. His long hair is caught back at the nape of his neck and he is attired in a frock coat, vest, collared shirt and cravat, knee britches, stockings and buckled shoes. He sits atop a two-tiered, Vermont-granite pedestal. The sculpture’s dedication on July 7, 1907 was a day of celebration in Saint Paul; 5,000 people gathered to hear lofty speeches about the life, work and ideals of Schiller.
The Restoration
After 105 years, Schiller needed help! The bronze metal was badly pitted, unstable and actively deteriorating and the surface streaked with green and blue copper carbonate corrosion and black, crusty sulfur-based deposits.  There was considerable damage to the bronze self-base. The sculpture accumulated decades worth of graffiti and carving.
     In 2012, Public Art Saint Paul engaged conservator Kristin Cheronis to undertake the sculpture’s restoration.  She worked on site at Como Park August through October, allowing Como Park visitors to monitor Schiller’s progress to full sculptural health.   Cheronis and her team completed their work in the last warm days of the year and through the long winter Schiller has awaited celebration.  As spring finally arrives, the time has come to speak of liberty and sing of joy.
About Public Art Saint Paul
For 25 years, Public Art Saint Paul has been the prime mover in creating and caring for art in Saint Paul’s civic realm. Public Art Saint Paul has led efforts to inventory, assess condition of and maintain Saint Paul’s historic public art, including restoration of Indian Hunter and His Dog by Paul Manship in Cochran Park and The New York Life Eagle by Augustus and Louis Saint-Gaudens in Summit Lookout Park and it has engaged and trained over 230 stewards who have “adopted” artworks throughout the City.
About the Minnesota Chorale
The Minnesota Chorale (Kathy Saltzman Romey, conductor) concludes its 40th anniversary season with two performances of Beethoven's 9th Symphony, featuring Schiller's "Ode to Joy," with the Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra (William Schrickel, conductor).  Both concerts are offered free of charge.  For more information, visit mnchorale.org.
Saturday, May 18 at 8 pm, Roseville Lutheran Church 1215 Roselawn Ave. West, Roseville
Sunday, May 19 at 4 pm, Dragseth Auditorium/South View Middle School, 4725 South View Lane, Edina
 
Support
The Schiller Restoration project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts - Art Works; with funds provided by the State of Minnesota from the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund through the Minnesota Historical Society, by gifts to Public Art Saint Paul’s Stewardship Fund, and pro-bono contributions.   The project was produced by Public Art Saint Paul in partnership with Saint Paul Parks and Recreation and its Como Park Zoo and Conservatory and the Honorary Consul of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Contacts
Christine Podas-Larson, President, Public Art Saint Paul
cpl@publicartstpaul.org   651-290-0921
 
Michelle Furrer, Campus Manager/Director, Como Park Zoo and Conservatory
 
Christa Tiefenbacher-Hudson, Honorary Counsel of the Federal Republic of Germany
cthudson@tripleink.com 612-342-9790