Teachers, consider planning a trip to Barcelona’s fascinating Parc Guell

Author Terry Lee Marzell and her husband, Hal, visit Barcelona’s Parc Guell. The Art Nouveau serpentine bench designed by architect Antoni Saudi, and the elementary school behind them, are part of the area designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Photo Credit: Hal and Terry Lee Marzell

Spring break is the time that many educators are eager to incorporate travel into their vacation plans. Teachers know that travel, in addition to being fun and intellectually stimulating, is one of the most meaningful learning opportunities available for both themselves and for their students. Recently, I returned from a vacation to Spain, Portugal, and Gibraltar, and while I was there I could see many opportunities for incorporating travel experiences into classroom curriculum.

While visiting Barcelona, I discovered it is impossible to overlook the work of famous architect Antoni Gaudi, known for developing a distinctive Art Nouveau style, which is so prevalent throughout the city. Gaudi was born in 1852 in the Spanish city Reus, and tragically passed away in Barcelona following a road accident in 1926. He is best known for his design of the city’s Sagrada Familia Basilica, whose construction is still in progress. But this famous church is not the topic of today’s post.

In addition to the Sagrada Familia, my husband and I visited Gaudi’s Parc Guell, a public space comprised of gardens and architectural creations designed by Gaudi to serve the needs of residents for a housing project. The architect was hired by Count Eusebi Guell to design a planned community as an entrepreneurial venture. Guell’s intent was to build the residences, along with other community elements, on a tract of land located on the Spanish city’s Carmel Hill. Unfortunately, the residences were never built, but, fortunately, the park was.

I loved Parc Guell far more than I thought I would! I loved the rolling, organic, wavy aspects of Gaudi’s signature style, which is labelled Art Nouveau. Sometimes the style is described as naturalist, but in Barcelona the term used to describe it is Catalan Modernist. I’m not the only one who finds the park’s architectural design fascinating. In fact, the place was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1969.

In his youth, Gaudi had been a sickly child, and as he lay, day after day, staring out his bedroom window, he had plenty of time to observe the organic and animal forms, earthy colors, and polygonal geometries found in nature. These forms made a huge impression on the child, who incorporated them in his architectural designs once he grew to adulthood and launched his career. Gaudi observed that in nature there are no straight lines, so he deliberately avoided straight lines in his designs. I appreciated the curvilinear walking paths, which were innovative in his day, and the roadway bridge supports that resembled the natural lines of tree trunks. And who would think to build nesting areas into those bridge supports, so that birds could build their homes there? Gaudi did.

The park’s grand terrace serves as the focal point of the recreational space. The famous serpentine bench, considered the longest bench in the world, was created around a playground area. Gaudi intended the bench to provide ample seating for mothers who were supervising their children at play and allow for plenty of conversational exchange. Straight-lined benches, he reasoned, restricted interaction. And the architect was ahead of his time, insisting that the seating piece be constructed with recycled materials. Anyone who visits the park can attest that the panoramic view of the city from that terrace is astonishing.

Directly next door to the terrace is the Escola Baldiri Reixac, an elementary school that was converted from Count Guell’s former residence. This probably accounts for the linear construction of this building, which is so different from Gaudi’s typical curvilinear constructions. The school was not opened in Gaudi’s day, but today the structure is in use. More than 17 teachers work there, serving more than 200 young students. As I stood there gazing at the building, I reflected that Gaudi’s decision to build a school in the middle of a park is a demonstration of the architect’s desire to consider the various needs of all the people that would have lived in the community.

Gaudi also incorporated marketplaces and vendor stalls and created an ingenious system of water conservation to serve the planned-but-never-constructed community. He constructed columns to support the terrace from underneath, and these supports served as conduits to direct rainwater flow into cisterns located underneath the marketplace. Really ingenious. Gaudi was more than an architect, he was an urban planner ahead of his time.

Gaudi positioned a ceramic iguana in a fountain built on the staircase that descends from the Parc Guell marketplace. Photo Credit: Terry Lee Marzell

And the icing on this architectural cake? He also designed two little buildings that resemble the gingerbread houses of “Hansel and Gretel” at the foot of a grand staircase. The architect conceived these little structures as a bit of whimsy meant to entertain children. And who couldn’t be charmed by that the big ceramic iguana positioned in the fountain as you descend the staircase to reach the gingerbread houses?

The entire park is captivating, and well worth a visit for any teacher who may be going to Barcelona on vacation. Keep it in mind when you’re planning future travels! Here at home, a study of the Gaudi’s architectural style would be stimulating for drafting students, and all students could benefit from a study of Gouda’s use of recycled materials and his innovative, environmentally-friendly designs for water conservation.

If travel to Spain is not in the near future for yourself or your students, check out this website for additional photographs of the Park Guell, information, and a virtual tour at this link: https://parkguell.barcelona/en/renovation-works-status.

Portugal’s Monument to the Discoveries stimulates further historical inquiry

While on a recent visit of Lisbon, Portugal, author Terry Lee Marzell visits the Monument of the Discoveries located where the Tagus River empties into the Atlantic Ocean. The monument celebrates the Portuguese Age of Discovery. Photo Credit: Hal Marzell

Spring break has finally arrived. This is the time that many educators are eager to incorporate travel into their vacation plans. Teachers know that travel, in addition to being fun and intellectually stimulating, is one of the most meaningful learning opportunities available for both themselves and for their students. Recently, I returned from a vacation to Spain, Portugal, and Gibraltar, and while I was there I could see many opportunities for incorporating travel experiences into classroom curriculum.

While in Portugal, I had the opportunity to visit the Monument to the Discoveries in the city of Lisbon, located on the northern bank of the Tagus River where the river empties into the Atlantic Ocean. The monument celebrates the Portuguese Age of Discovery during the 15th and 16th centuries. This is a fitting location for the construction of such a commemorative landmark, since this is the place where Portuguese ships were launched on perilous voyages to explore India and the Orient. The monument was intended to be a temporary exhibit as part of the country’s World Exhibition in1940, and became so popular that this permanent, enlarged version was constructed in 1960.

The monument displays a Portuguese caravel ship, and features the country’s celebrated Prince Henry the Navigator, a historical 15th-century figure known for being a strong supporter of maritime exploration and trade, particularly along the western coast of the African continent. In fact, it was Prince Henry who designed and financed the building of the caravel, a ship which in its day revolutionized navigational practices.

The Monument to the Discoveries stimulates further inquiry into this fascinating period of European history, not only for students, for history teachers, and for educators who are lifelong learners, but also for anyone interested in world history. Why not incorporate a visit to Lisbon in your future travels, so you can see the landmark with your own eyes?

 

Considering gifts for Teacher Appreciation Day

Teacher Appreciation Day is coming up in just a few weeks! It’s not too early to think about gifting your colleagues or your child’s teachers with a little something to show your appreciation for all their hard work in the classroom. When trying to decide just the right gift consider copies of my books, Chalkboard Champions and Chalkboard Heroes. Each volume is packed with inspirational stories about remarkable educators in American history and the historical implications of their pioneering work.

Among the captivating stories in Chalkboard Champions is the story of Charlotte Forten Grimke, an African American born into freedom who volunteered to teach emancipated slaves as the Civil War raged around her. Read the eyewitness account of the Wounded Knee massacre through the eyes of teacher Elaine Goodale Eastman, and educator Mary Tsukamoto, imprisoned in a WWII Japanese internment camp. Read about Mississippi Freedom Summer teacher Sandra Adickes who, together with her students, defied Jim Crow laws to integrate the Hattiesburg Public Library. Marvel at the pioneering work of Anne Sullivan Macy, the teacher of Helen Keller, the efforts of teacher Clara Comstock to find homes for thousands of Orphan Train riders, and the dedication of Jaime Escalante, the East LA educator who proved to that inner city Latino youths could successfully meet the demands of a rigorous curriculum.

In Chalkboard Heroes, read about dedicated educators who were heroes both inside and outside of the classroom, including WWI veteran Henry Alvin Cameron and Civil War veteran Francis Wayland Parker. Learn about teachers who were social reformers such as Dolores Huerta, Civil Rights activist Robert Parris Moses, suffragist Carrie Chapman Catt, and Native American rights advocate Zitkala-Sa, all of whom put themselves at risk to fight for improved conditions for disenfranchised citizens. Discover brave pioneers who took great risks to blaze a trail for others to follow such as Christa McAuliffe, the first teacher in space; Willa Brown Chappell, the aviatrix who taught Tuskegee airmen to fly; Etta Schureman Jones, the Alaskan teacher who was interned in a POW camp in Japan during WWII; and Olive Mann Isbell, who established the first English school in California while the Mexican american War raged around her.

All these remarkable stories and more can be shared with someone you know this year on Teacher Appreciation Day!

Women’s History Month: Honoring pioneer schoolteachers

In honor of Women’s History Month, we’d like to pay homage today to our country’s pioneer schoolteachers. America’s Wild West was tamed in part due to the talented and dedicated women who served as frontier schoolteachers.

The pioneering women who became teachers during this period of our nation’s history were indeed a special breed. At the turn of the century, females were expected to be dependent upon their husbands, fathers, or other male relatives. It was extremely unusual, and not at all encouraged, for a woman to support herself and function independently. Nevertheless, many intelligent and self-reliant women in search of personal freedom and adventure joined the Westward movement as schoolmarms.

The stereotype of a frontier schoolteacher was that of an unattractive spinster or a prim and proper young miss. In reality, she was often neither of those. Many of these ladies came from influential and affluent Eastern families. A few were filled with burning ambition, and others were seeking a better life, and perhaps some were seeking a husband of like mind. In general, though, they were dedicated practitioners of their profession. Despite primitive working conditions, uninviting classrooms, low wages, and overwork, these stalwart women introduced literacy, culture, and morality to the roughneck communities they served. A few of these teachers became missionaries, others became suffragettes, and one of them—Jeannette Rankin of Montana—even went on to become the first woman to be elected to the United States House of Representatives!

Our society owes these frontier schoolmarms a great debt. Read more about pioneering teachers in my book, Chalkboard Championsavailable through amazon.com or Amazon. Enjoy!