Friday, September 21, 2012

St. Anselm Students Discover Pyramid-Style Structures in Italy

Nick Walsh (class of 2012) and Merike Youngs (class of 2014), two of the St. Anselm’s students who discovered a room with artifacts dating to 1000 BCE (Photos courtesy of Dr. David George and St. Anselm College)


Only such excavation on record anywhere in country


MANCHESTER –
Students from Saint Anselm College have been working on the first-ever excavation of a series of pyramidal structures underneath the city of Orvieto, Italy. The existence of these structures carved into the rock of the tufa plateau on which the city stands were not known until recently. Dr. David B. George of the Department of Classics at Saint Anselm and Dr. Claudio Bizzarri of the Parco Archeogico Ambientale dell¹Orvietano are co-directors of the excavation and the lead archaeologists.  At the time of their discovery, the structures had been largely filled, leaving only the top-most modern layer which had been modified in modern times and was being used as a wine cellar. Within this upper section, there was one feature that caught the archaeologists’ eyes: that was a series of ancient stairs carved into the wall. They were clearly of Etruscan construction. The Etruscans were the people who had controlled Orvieto from 1000 BCE until the Roman conquest of the city in 264 BCE. It was noted the walls tapered up in a pyramidal fashion. As intriguing were a series of tunnels, again of Etruscan construction, that ran underneath the wine cellar, hinting at the possibility of deeper undiscovered structures below. 
The owner of the cellar, Antonio Pagliaccia, was intrigued by the mystery of what it could be and encouraged its exploration. Working with the local inspector for the Soprintendenza per I Beni Archeologici dell¹Umbria, Dr. Paolo Bruschetti, George and Bizzarri helped to obtain a permit to explore the feature through the Fondazione per il Museo C. Faina. 
Excavations commenced on May 21 of this year, at first digging through a mid 20th century floor and trash layer complete with old tennis shoes, mid 20th century broken plates, and other early 20th and late 19th century ephemera. After moving a meter of dirt and debris, the diggers reached a medieval floor. Immediately beneath this floor was a layer of fill that, to the surprise of all, contained material and artifacts, such as Attic red figured pottery from the middle of the 5th century BCE, to 6th and 5th century Etruscan pottery with inscriptions, as well as sundry objects that dated to before 1000 BCE. The excavators were surprised at the leap back in time but explain it as resulting from the structure being sealed at the middle of the 5th century BCE and stumbled upon during the Middle Ages and used as a cellar.  As excavations continued below this layer of fill, they came upon 1.5 meters of gray sterile fill intentionally deposited from a hole in the top of the structure now obliterated by a medieval ceiling.
“Below that material, there exists a layer of a brown material that we continue to excavate,” said George in a press release. “The stone carved stairs which gave the first hints of the structure¹s origins continue down the wall and turn at one corner, below which it appears like some sort of wooden structure had been built into the wall to continue the decent with wooden stairs.”
The material from this level all dates around the middle of the 5th century BCE, with nothing later. At this level, a tunnel running to another pyramidal structure was also found. The tunnel dates from before the 5th century BCE.  To date, the excavators have pushed down three meters and the pyramidal structure continues.  It is now quite cavernous rising about ten meters from the current point of excavation to the current ceiling. The lead archaeologists are still perplexed as the function of the structure
though it is clearly not a cistern. Bizzarri notes that there is nothing like these structures on record anywhere in Italy or the Etruscan world. George believes that it could be part of a sanctuary, and calls attention to the pyramid structures that were described in literary sources as being part of Lars Porsena¹s tomb. Porsena was an Etruscan king who ruled Chiusi and Orvieto at the end of the 6th century. Bizzarri cautions that these parallels are not exact, but intriguing. Both George and Bizarri agree that the answer waits at the bottom probably four or five (or more) meters below the current level.
It was the discovery of a lifetime for the Saint Anselm classics professor and his students. “This is actually a really cool structure,” George said. “It's underneath the city of Orvieto, and it's a pyramid.”
The group’s digging continued through August, unearthing layers of time until they reached the pyramid.
“Right below the medieval floor, we jumped from 1200 A.D. to 400 B.C., nothing in between,” George said.
The structure, which is likely a tomb or some sort of religious structure, had been sealed for centuries. “I mean, students were walking on floors that they were the first to step on in two and a half millennia,” George said.
Tessa Theriault was one of the students who spent six weeks in Italy on the excavation. Inside, they found ancient artifacts and pottery. “(We) got to be part of actually finding the artifacts, as well,” said Theriault, a sophomore at Saint Anselm. She said the experience has been life-changing.
“This trip has pretty much cemented, in my mind, that this is what I want to do as a career and made it that much more real for me,” Theriault said.
It could be some time before it's learned exactly what the structure was used for. The professor and his students will head back to Italy to continue their research next spring.
St. Anselm students who worked with Dr. George on the project are Tessa Theriault, Kiran Ganguly, Merike Youngs, Kristin Harper, Carlo D'Anselmi, Elizabeth Walston, Alexandra Madsen, Caroline Drennan, Ethan Lawrence, and Nick Walsh.

St. Thomas Aquinas High School Teacher to Speak at National Teachers’ Convention

From left to right - Katie Wheeler, Kristina Peterson, Mariah Kirsch, and Bridget Leonardis  - all co-presenters at the National Council of Teachers of English conference in Las Vegas. Kirsch teaches at St. Thomas Aquinas in Dover. (courtesy photo)


DOVER -
The National Council of Teachers of English is a highly influential and well-respected educational organization, often at the forefront of academic innovation.  Each year, thousands of teachers attend the NCTE’s annual convention where they can “get fresh teaching ideas, be inspired, and make lifelong connections.”
This year, St. Thomas Aquinas English Teacher Mariah Kirsch has been selected to present at the annual convention.  She and her co-presenters titled the session “Positively Defiant: Bending Rules to Enhance Student Success.”  An excerpt from the description of this session in the convention program reads: “Good teaching is difficult, especially in an era when creativity and dialogue are limited. Join a panel of teachers (just regular ol’ teachers) as they discuss their dreams for better classrooms and the connections they formed, which empowered them to ignite thinking in their own communities.”
Kirsch met a group of like-minded English teachers at the Literacy Institute at the University of New Hampshire last summer. Her group developed a support network that remained in the fall when they went their separate ways. Out of this collaborative effort came a proposal to present the fruits of their efforts and successes.
Kirsch said she never dreamed the proposal might turn into a speaking engagement. “NCTE only accepts a small percentage of proposals that come their way. My friends and I put together our proposal fully expecting rejection. We thought it would be a good professional experience just to try,” Kirsch said. “We aren’t famous. We aren’t published authors. I guess NCTE saw promise in our collaboration.”
As the group noted, “True collaboration provides teachers with support, validation, and the courage to be ‘positively defiant.’” The group’s panel discussion will focus on three subjects that helped them become teacher leaders:  Mentors and Models, a Support System, and being Positively Defiant.
An eight-year teaching veteran, Kirsch has been a member of the St. Thomas Aquinas English faculty since 2009.  In addition to her teaching duties, she has worked to stay on top of the enormous changes that have occurred in education, from the technological to the pedagogical.
The other teachers in the presentation are Katie Wheeler, from McCormick Junior High in Cheyenne, Wyoming, Kristina Peterson, a teacher at Exeter High School, and Bridget Leonardis, of North Andover Middle School in Massachusetts. The conference is being held in Las Vegas, Nevada, this year.
“People’s reaction has been ‘I know why you applied for that conference,’” she said of the Sin City locale. “But really, the English teacher in me was hoping for something a bit more cultural.”
The group has been hard at work, honing their presentation while collaborating online.
“What we are doing is a panel discussion, splitting time between the four of us. We’re showing how we built up our own communities, and found mentors and strategies to inform our teaching,” she said. “What I’m personally speaking on is how I’ve tried to work on professional development at St. Thomas, to show how teachers can be leaders in our own schools.”
Kirsch started her career in a public school in Delaware, “so I’ve seen both sides,” she said. “It was a very different situation, a Title I school with a high free and reduced lunch rate.”
Now, she says her teaching experience is different at St. Thomas Aquinas, a private, Catholic school.
“At St. Thomas, we’re free to be creative without that aspect of state testing looming over us. Tests are good but can be restrictive,” said Kirsch, who also credits a supportive administration in her success story.
An example of this support occurred when she asked to break school rules regarding cell phone use so she could better illustrate a class lesson.
“We’re hoping to show teachers in different situations,” she said, and plans to take turns with the other panelists, who all teach at public schools. “We’re hoping teachers at the convention will take away the belief that they too can do something like this with little formal experience in presenting.”
Kirsch is a frequent presenter at faculty meetings, and this year was selected by principal Kevin Collins to co-chair the school’s new “Instructional Leadership Team.”. Kirsch plans to speak on her passion for professional development during her panel time at NCTE.
“Professional Development is a major goal for St. Thomas Aquinas,” Collins has said.  “It is vital that our faculty be open to discovering new and effective ways of developing our students’ minds, and to be willing to put in the necessary time to become expert at these techniques. Mariah has been more than willing to be a trailblazer in this regard.”
St. Thomas Aquinas has long prided itself on its academic successes.  Students at STA consistently produce scores above both the state and national level. In addition, the school has devoted efforts to developing and implementing programs as well as investing in the necessary infrastructure to facilitate those programs.
However, as Collins adds, “we view both our teachers and students as true resources for the local community and the world at large. St. Thomas has made great strides in many areas, from community outreach to academically-oriented programs. That’s why we have also encouraged our faculty to share their successes in education, service and other programs with other organization.”
Among the programs that St. Thomas Aquinas has developed recently include its “Saints Taking Action Day of Service,” a summer reading program, and an independent study program.
“We are very proud that Mariah has been selected to share her insights and experiences to a national audience.  We know that they will find her views as compelling and professional as we do,” Collins said.
Each year, the NCTE Annual Convention draws thousands of K-12 teachers, college faculty, administrators, and other educational professionals from around the world. They gather to hear award-winning speakers, attend idea-packed sessions, share best practices, participate in workshops, and test the latest teaching materials. The 2012 Annual Convention will be held November 15-18. For more information, visit http://www.ncte.org/annual.

Rochester Fair Revs Into 2nd Weekend

(courtesy photo)

 
ROCHESTER –
The Rochester Fair got its first taste of bad weather this week, but organizers expect this weekend to feature sunny skies and record-breaking crowds.
The school bus demolition derby last weekend was so popular that the organizers of the 137th installment of the Fair have brought it back for this Saturday, September 22.
Mark Perry, general manager for the 11th year, said he is pleased with the event’s success.
“It’s been excellent - good crowds, the people are happy. Spending seems to be back a little. I’m very very pleased.”
Mother Nature had been kind until Wednesday, when rain and winds stirred up a bit of trouble, but it’s to be expected.
“When you’re a ten-day event, you can’t expect to get perfect weather all ten days,” Perry said. “Especially in this part of the country. Onto the fair, a little rain must fall.” Perry and others who run the popular fair expect a big finish this weekend.
“We try to showcase some of the agricultural activities kids are doing. Too often, you only hear about the bad kids.”
Perry touted the $75,000 in prizes and awards the Fair offers to all types of participants.
There’s a wide range of awards. The giant pumpkin contest offers $750 for first place, while crafts and quilts may win a $10 prize. With thousands of different line items, it adds up to a lot of money, said Perry, crediting the Fair’s success to its longevity..
“It’s been here a while, and there’s a lot of traditional fair kind of entertainment,” he said.
The school bus demolition derby was new this year.
“It was such a runaway hit, we decided to do another one this Saturday night,” Perry said.
Folks can enjoy what seems like an endless array of amusements, including horse pulling, a Paul Bunyon lumberjack show, pig racing, music, carnival rides, food, and games. For more information, visit rochesterfair.com.