Sunday, June 08, 2008

AVID Study Trip to Greek Theater and Play


On May 28, the high school AVID classes had the once-in-a-lifetime experience of seeing an original Greek play performed in an original Greek theater, both over 2,300 years old. The play was Agamemnon by Aeschylus, and the theater in Siracusa is one of the few exisiting in the modern world.

Students were lucky to have the expertise of AVID tutor Kathy Vary, a theater major in college, who taught them the entire play and history of Greek theater beforehand. They were then much more equipped to understand and appreciate the production.

Every year in the spring, two original Greek plays are produced in the Siracusa theater in the archaeological park. Our classes raised the money over the schoolyear with snack sales to pay the cost of everyone's ticket. DoDDS provided the transportation.

Mr. Iozzia, Sigonella's Italian teacher, coordinated the ticket purchase. His Italian students joined us on the trip.

Since it was "open seating" night, the theater, which holds over 10,000 was packed with teenagers and young adults, many with school groups. The weather was perfect and the play beautifully produced. To see photos go HERE.

Special thanks to AVID tutors Stacy Hall and Kathy Vary for their help in preparing and chaperoning the students on this trip. Thanks also to Ms. Novak, Ms. Smith, and Ms. Sibayan for their support on this event. It was truly unforgettable for all.


Saturday, December 01, 2007

Study Trip to Roman Mosaic Site

The high school students from Ms. Pienta's and Ms. Novak's AVID classes combined with their teachers and tutors on a study trip to the ancient Roman villa at Piazza Armerina.

Once at the site, students were divided into five groups and assigned to a specific room within the site to study and learn about the floor mosaic. Next, each group chose a "docent," or "expert" to explain their room to the other groups. Students then rotated from room to room, listening to the explanations and asking questions. All the docents did a GREAT job!

The Roman villa is thought to have been the hunting lodge of an emperor of the Roman Empire in the 3rd or 4th century A.D. The villa floors cover 3500 square meters (42 colorful floors in 63 rooms) and are made up of an estimated 30 million little tiles. We had the opportunity on this trip to see the villa undergoing an Xtreme makeover! A grant from either UNESCO or perhaps Italy is paying for the cleaning, restoring, and preservation of this fabulously rich archaeological site. We could still move around and see most of the floors, but we also saw lots of workers, hoses, bags of grout, tiles, glue, air hoses, electrical cords, plastic, etc. It was archaeology at work!






















Another high school AVID study trip is planned for late May or early June to attend an evening performance of an original ancient Greek play in the Greek theater at Siracusa.

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