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April 4, 2022
by: Janet Weyandt

Students get Hands-on Look at How the World Works with 4th/5th Grade World Peace Game

DSC 1893Imagine this: One day in the future, world leaders will be sitting together to work out a thorny international problem and one of the voices at the table will say “When I was in fourth grade, this is how we handled a global water shortage.”

Sound far-fetched? It’s not, thanks to the World Peace Game students at E’tude Elementary School play every couple of years. Led this year by teachers Amanda Hernandez, Jacie Verstegen, and Nick Scharenbroch, the game gives students a hands-on peek at the way nations govern, plan, work together, and, sometimes, disagree. 

“The essential question is ‘How can we better understand each other?’” Hernandez said. “We’re all different. (The game) allows every student a role and a voice.”

The game divides each fourth-grade class into four or five “countries,” chosen by their biome: alpine, arctic, tropical, desert or grassland. Each country has a weather god or goddess, a stock market person, two representatives to the world bank, and one to the United Nations. 

They also each have a budget they have to manage, crises to solve, natural resources and disasters to cope with and both mandatory and optional government institutions to fund and operate.  

Every day, students read about something going on in the world and have time to reflect on what they think as well as how it might affect their country. 

This year’s game, which began halfway through the second trimester and ended with spring break, included a water shortage in the desert nation. 

The arctic country decided to melt glaciers and sell water to the desert country. In the meantime, refugees from the desert fled to the alpine country as the tropical country worked on sending aid. 

In the end, the alpine nation decided to deport all its refugees and build a wall, leading to research on border walls. The desert nation responded by threatening war if they went ahead with the wall. 

The water shortage issue also included some reading on water shortages around the world, which brought it home to some of the students. 

“On the first day of the water shortage, I had three or four little girls sobbing, ‘I’m not sure there will be enough water for me,’” Hernandez said. “They’re visualizing the current events.”

And while nobody wants to see students getting upset about what they’re learning, it’s encouraging to see them figure out how to solve problems, work together and get an age-appropriate understanding of the complexities in the world. 

Scharenbroch, who devised the game based on one authored by educator John Hunter, said students look forward to the game because of what they hear from older friends or siblings.

“We hear about it (when) fifth-graders say it was their favorite part of the year,” he said. “The game is to build collaboration.”

Each country chooses a name, devises a flag, and writes an anthem, with an assist from Etude High School music students. They also create money, emblazoned with students’ faces, in denominations from $1 million to $100 million. 

Their “game board” is a four-level structure depicting space, sky, land, and underwater. 

This is the first year Verstegen has taught the game, and she’s been impressed with how her students have embraced it. 

“All year kids have been asking to play this,” she said. “My students were very excited. Some students really do catch on right away, while others are like ‘give me the power.’ What I really like is that the whole world works together. Just because we are from different places doesn’t mean we should close our minds off. We can get along with each other.”

Hernandez, who has taught the game twice now, said it is giving students a foundation for future understanding of the world as it grows more and more complex.

“The essential question is how can we better understand each other?” she said. “We’re all different. They are the ones who will inherit it. This game gives them that perspective.” 

The game includes a lot of detail: How the world bank operates, what each country’s representative to the UN has to do, how the nations manage their tradespeople and resources, and many other specifics. The students always embrace it. 

“The motive is not to incite war but to keep the peace,” Hernandez said. “We’ve gotten a lot of positive comments from parents.” 

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April 4, 2022
by: Janet Weyandt

Elementary Preview Night

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** DSC 2218 *Please join us!*

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February 3, 2022
by: Janet Weyandt

Beautiful Bugs: Science and Literacy Come Together in Special Kindergarten Unit

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March 31, 2021
by: Ted Hamm

Flags of Resilience

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As you look down 9th St. at Étude Middle School, you will see something a bit different flying from our flag pole. Flying just under the American flag are flags our students created in partnership with the John Michael Kohler Arts Center. The flags represent resilience. Or, I should say the flags represent what our students view as resilience.

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March 24, 2021
by: Janet Weyandt

Building Real Community in the Virtual Classroom

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When the nation shut down last year and students and teachers were abruptly prevented from being in classrooms together, it was a serious blow on every level – to teachers’ workload and planning, to students’ socialization and education progress and a thousand other ways.

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February 16, 2021
by: Special Contribution to the Étude Group

Etude Group Receives New Charter for 5-year Contract

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Etude Group has been awarded its fourth charter with the Sheboygan Area School District, which means the elementary, middle and high schools can continue meeting and exceeding their goals for another five years.

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November 6, 2020
by: Janet Weyandt

Mindfulness Builds Resilience at Étude Elementary

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After lunch at Étude Elementary School, the students come back into the building, pick their favorite spot to sit or lie down and then spend a few minutes breathing, thinking and paying attention to how they feel.

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May 30, 2020
by: Janet Weyandt

Wilderness Wednesday takes learning into the great outdoors

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In the beginning, Wilderness Wednesday at Etude was simply a way for teacher Ali McKeone to get herself and her first graders outside and enjoy a little fresh air.

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April 22, 2020
by: Janet Weyandt

Teachers bring new ‘Mindset’ to math class after workshop

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If there’s one thing that’s become more important than ever in education over the last month, it’s flexibility. Teachers have initiated online learning on the fly, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and students and parents have risen to the challenge.

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September 3, 2019
by: Ted Hamm

First Day of School

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IMG 2332 2 This is my view of the first day of school. Quiet hallways, empty classrooms; not a teacher or student in sight. But, wait! It is the first day of school! The first day and two weeks are an important part of Étude. We use it to intentionally establish our community and culture for the school year. Today is all about culture, building a safe culture.

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