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The Museum of Teaching and Learning is pleased to provide you a list with links to the posts we have sent out in the past year. It is our mission to enlighten, educate, inspire, and tell stories for all ages. All you have to do is click on the titles below. Pour yourself a cup of coffee or favorite drink, relax and enjoy.
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Learning Something About Mary Remembering Mary McLeod Bethune

11/20/2020

 
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Many years ago, I became part of the founding faculty at a new school named in memory of a marvelous Black educator, suffragist, and civil rights advocate, Mary McLeod Bethune. Our K-6 school was on the West Side of Chicago and the student population was 98% African-American. We were thrilled to have entirely NEW books and desks, along with chalkboards that were green, not black. Part of the excitement of opening the school was that it was named after a prominent African-American, unusual in the array of school names at the time. My sixth-grade students joined me in learning about Mary’s life and work as we helped prepare for the school’s opening ceremony.


By describing some of the things we did—some actually that you, our readers, and your children/grandchildren could enjoy— I hope to help you get acquainted with a noble woman and perhaps make her a more memorable person.
Our class, 34 students and I, learned her story by listening to a read-aloud book and discussing the struggles that Mary went through. We found out that she was the fifteenth of seventeen children born to former slaves, Patsy and Samuel McLeod (pronounced muh klawd), in 1875. And when Mary died, in 1955, she was known for her lifetime of tireless work on behalf of education, women’s rights, and civil rights for all. She had been an advisor to Presidents Coolidge, Hoover, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt and was Eleanor Roosevelt’s dear friend.
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Some highlights of her life between 1875 and 1955 include that she:
  • Worked in the fields until, at age 10, she went to school for the first time.
  • Attended Moody Bible Institute, planning to be a missionary, but instead . . .
  • Married Albertus Bethune and moved to Florida.
  • Fulfilled her dream of opening a school for African-American girls.
  • Led the school and then helped it grow to become a prominent college.
  • Was chosen president of the National Association of Colored Women’s Clubs.
  • Opened a hospital during World War II.
  • Worked to bring about civil rights and voter registration.
  • Fought against lynching.
Because Mary sold sweet potato pies in order to start her school for Black girls in Daytona Beach, Florida, we studied the recipe for sweet-potato pie. Then, as part of our Math studies, we expanded the measurements that would be needed to make multiple pies. Mary’s startup school later became Bethune-Cookman Institute, a large institution that was a model for subsequent Black colleges. Many of us made the pie at home to enjoy with our families. Sweet potato pie has long been a delicious treat well-loved in many African-American and Southern homes.

​
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.We also got to decorate the walls of the school with life-size cutouts of sixth graders dressed in school clothes. The kids made them as an Art project by tracing themselves on sheets of butcher paper, painting on colorful school clothes, and cutting them out with care. Then we stuck them on walls throughout the hallways with small circles of duct tape. Mary would have been proud of their attention to detail, industry and creativity. In addition, a small committee used an opaque projector, a common machine from that era, in order to trace and color a large picture of Mary onto butcher paper to hang on our classroom wall.


My sixth graders also wrote paragraphs about why they thought it was a good idea to name the school after Mrs. Bethune. We found that some of her famous quotes were inspirational, including “The whole world opened to me when I learned to read,” and “Knowledge is the prime need of the hour,” as well as “Cease to be a drudge, seek to be an artist.” My eleven-and twelve-year-olds were particularly glad that Mary McLeod Bethune was Black and her hard work and ingenuity had brought her into leadership roles for the entire United States.
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We were all well-prepared to enjoy the opening ceremony on a sunny Sunday afternoon. Families, friends, and dignitaries from the Chicago Public Schools headquarters downtown came to shake hands with founding principal Emmerine Clarkston, hear speeches, listen to students sing the beautiful “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” and roam the halls to visit classrooms during the Open House.


I hope you will take some time out to open your house and heart and add Mary McLeod Bethune to your list of famous Americans you know and admire. Here are several links that can help you learn about Mary and share some activities that will help make her more memorable for your family.
  1. A story of Mary’s life can be found at this site for the National Women’s History Museum (NWHM). Just click on the link to read a piece with details about MMB. Also, you may not know that the NWHM—now in Alexandria, VA—is quite possibly going to become the next Smithsonian museum on the National Mall. There is a movement afoot. Stay tuned!  Mary McLeod Bethune | National Women's History Museum
  2. A children’s book that comes highly recommended was written by Eloise Greenfield, a prolific, award-winning children’s author who writes about the lives of Black families, often through children’s eyes. https://www.amazon.com/Mary-McLeod-Bethune-Crowell-Biographies/dp/0064461688
  3. Here is a recipe, one of many online, that you could use to make sweet potato pie.
    https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/12142/sweet-potato-pie-i/
  4. Here is a link to the lyrics and story behind “Lift Every Voice,” sometimes called The Black National Anthem. https://www.pbs.org/black-culture/explore/black-authors-spoken-word-poetry/lift-every-voice-and-sing/

Submitted by Greta Nagel, PhD
MOTAL President and CEO
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