By Jeff Murphy,
April 16, 2024
Lauren Hays, associate professor of education technology at the University of Central
Missouri, leads a group of middle school and high school educators on a tour of Fort
Scott National Cemetery in Fort Scott, Kansas, where they learned about documenting
the lives of underrepresented veterans interred at the cemetery.
WARRENSBURG, MO – An opportunity made possible by collaborative efforts that include
the University of Central Missouri, 20 educators who teach grades 7-12 at the area
surrounding Fort Scott National Cemetery in Fort Scott, Kansas participated in a professional development seminar on April
4 which enabled them to uncover information to document the life stories of African
American Civil War veterans who are interred at the cemetery.
After touring the Natonal Cemetery, the participants returned to Fort Scott Community
College where they learned more about how to research the lives of these veterans
and how to teach their students to do the same. They also learned more about the Veteran
Administration’s Veterans Legacy Memorial program and how to upload biographies of veterans to that platform. The professional development
day ended by having participating teachers provide feedback on a draft handbook that
the UCM team has developed specifically for 7-12 grade teachers about how to conduct
this research and how the research fits within the state standards for teachers.
In August 2023, UCM and its partners received a Veterans Legacy Memorial grant that funded the April 4 professional development event for teachers as part of the
Veterans Voices from the Heartland grant. UCM faculty members who participated and presented at the professional development
event included Lauren Hays, associate professor of education technology; Sara Sundberg,
professor emerita of history; and Jon Taylor, professor of history. Tina Ellsworth,
assistant professor of education, Northwest Missouri State University, served as an
outside consultant for the grant. Other partners included Katie Kline, director of
the Greater Kansas City Writing Project and Katie Smith, director, and Kim Alberg from the Midwest Genealogy Center in Independence, Missouri. UCM History graduate student Emily Hemann and undergraduate
students in History, Emma Fischer and Truman Harrow also participated in the event.
The UCM team is now planning for a two-day professional development seminar for 7-12
grade educators that will presented at the Missouri Veterans Cemetery in Higginsville
and at the Midwest Genealogy Center in Independence on June 17-18. For more information
or to register for the seminar, please see the information in this link or contact Katie Kline at kkline@ucmo.edu.