Monday, July 23, 2018

Poland, the Resiliant

As I have with previous travel fellowships, I asked to extend my stay after my trip finished. When considering where to explore in Europe, I decided that I wanted to see Poland. Given the country's turbulent history and connection to Ashkenazi Judaism, I felt that a trip to this Eastern European country would not only prove to be fascinating from a historical standpoint, but also provide an opportunity to learn more about my family's Polish-Jewish roots. After the conclusion of the TOP program, I spent 8 days in Poland, and was fortunate enough to be joined by my mom! Below is a map of our trip:




Krakow 


We began our journey in the city of Krakow,  famous for it's medieval architecture and well preserved city walls. A popular destination among travelers, Krakow hosted more than 12.9 million tourists in 2016, 2.9 million of which were foreigners. It's easy to understand why: Krakow's stunning architecture,along with it's close proximity to major tourist destinations such as the Wieliczka Salt Mine and Auschwitz/Birkenau make it quite popular. Below are some photos of Krakow's Old Town:

A model of Krakow as it would have appeared in the middle ages. The walls surrounding the city are now a green belt. 


Originally constructed in 1387, St. Mary's Basilica is one of the finest examples of Polish Gothic Architecture. It sits on the edge of the Rynek Główny (The Old Square), pictured in the center of the model in the previous photo. 

St. Mary's Basilica was constructed by one of Poland's most famous rulers, Casmir III the Great. The interior of was also painted by another famous Pole, muralist Jan Matejko, during a 19th century restoration. Photo credit: flickr.com

 In the southern end of the Old Town sits Wawel Castle, a 14th century complex of various architectural styles:

 Wawel Castle was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1978. 

A view of the castle complex from an adjacent tower. Like many other buildings in Krakow, Wawel Castle was also built by Casmir III the Great. Today it is one of the country's premier art museums.

Another popular tourist destination in the region is the Wieliczka Salt Mine, located 30 minutes outside of Krakow. Opened in the 13th century, it became one of the longest operating salt mines until it closed in 2007.  At it's peak, the mine produced 15,000 tons of salt annually. Due to the number of salt carvings and cathedrals hidden within its 2,000 chambers, it was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1978:

Wielizcka Salt mine has 9 levels, and covers 7.5 million cubic meters. We descended 53 flights of stairs to reach the bottom of the mine, and only walked 2% of it's tunnels during our 1.5 hour tour.

Wooden support beams throughout the mine are covered in salt
Chapels were placed throughout the salt mine to allow miners to pray for their safety during their shifts underground.


The Cathedral of St. Kinga, Patron Saint of Salt Miners, and carved entirely out of salt!  It covers 5,000 square meters and is routinely rented out for weddings and concerts. Photo credit:www.wieliczka-saltmine.com


Kazimierz


The most fascinating section of Krakow is Kazimierz, a neighborhood just outside the old city walls. Known as the hub of Jewish life in Krakow, and arguably the hub of pre-war Jewish life in all of Europe, Kazimierz has become a major pilgrimage site for Jews throughout the world. One of the most famous residents was Rema, a 16th century rabbinical scholar  after whom the Rema Synagogue in Kazimierz is named. His codification of Jewish law was so well respected that it not only became the basis for the entire Jewish legal and cultural system, but it  made Kazimierz the center of Jewish learning the world over. Because of him the neighborhood steadily grew, and before the outbreak of World War II, it was home to more than 32,000 Jews and 12 synagogues. For more than seven centuries, Jewish literacy, art, learning, mystical and political thought flourished here.  Until it didn't anymore.

During World War II, over 90% of Poland's Jewish population-a staggering 3,000,000 souls, lost their lives in the Holocaust. We went to the site where 900,000 perished, Auschwitz/Birkenau, during our visit to Krakow. I struggled to write this section of the blog post for quite some time, and have concluded that neither words, nor pictures, can accurately illustrate the intensity and overbearing despair of the site. All the while, while touring Birkenau, I kept thinking of Kazimierz: What would the pre-eminent site of Jewish culture be today had this atrocity not happened? 



Post-war Kazimierz was home to a mere 5,000 Jews, which slowly dwindled as the 20th century came to a close. Emigration to the new country of Israel, as well as religious persecution of Jews under Communism, seemed to rob the community of it's soul. However, with the fall of Communism in 1989, and the  success of 1993's Schindler's List, which details Oskar Schindler's quest to save Kazimierz's Jewish residents from the Nazi's, the neighborhood has taken on a new, albeit it unique, life as a tourist destination.  By the year 2000, an estimated 150 Jews lived in the entire city of Krakow, a 99.994% drop since it's height in 1938. 


This stretch of Jewish restaurants, known by locals as "Jewish Disneyland" features classic Ashkenazi cuisine and Klezmer music. None of these establishments are owned by Jews. 




One of the most perturbing sights during our trip to Poland were these Hasidim figurines in a tourist gift shop, sporting what appears to be a talmud and a gold coin. This perpetual reinforcement of negative stereotypes of Jews as money hoarders in 2018 is alive and well.


Fortunately, there is a museum dedicated to the complicated relationship between Poland and it's Jewish community. Tucked away on a side street of Kazimierz is the Galicia Museum, which operates one of the most prominent Jewish and Holocaust education programs in the world. It's permanent exhibition, "Traces of Memory: A Contemporary Look at the Jewish Past in Poland" illustrates the complex process of memory and responsibility and diversity of narratives as it relates to Holocaust. The exhibition highlights not only Poles who were complicit in turning in Jews, but others who risked their lives saving Jews from the Holocaust. It also illustrates the complex present day issue of preservation and memory of pre-war Jewish sites. Some sites, such as the Rema Synagogue in Kazmierez, has not only been restored, but has an active congregation as well. Other sites have not fared so well: 

The New Cemetery, located on the edge of Kazimierz, is still in disrepair, 70 years after the end of the war. Both the Nazis and local Poles used headstones as paving blocks, both during and after World War II.


The wall of the Rema Synagogue in Kazimierz is made of desecrated headstones from World War II. It is only one of two synagogues in Kazimierz today with an active minyan, or quorum of 10 Jewish adults necessary to hold a service.

Fortunately, we did experience some uplifting moments during our time in Kazimierz. Hours after visiting Auschwitz/Birkenau, we stumbled upon the Jewish Community Center  (JCC) of Krakow. We learned that this JCC is a bit different from the ones we know at home: It was founded in 2008 by the Prince of Wales, who upon visiting Kazimierz, learned that the once grand center of Jewish life lacked a community center. Today, it operates as a pre-school, senior center, welfare services, and outreach center for Polish-Jewish relations.

 Upon entering the building, we quickly realized that almost all of the volunteers, with the exception of the executive director, were not Jewish. I asked one man in his mid 20's why he volunteers his time at the JCC when he doesn't have any Jewish roots of his own. He told me, that as a life long resident of Kazimierz, he feels a connection to the Jewish community. His grandfather, he told me, hid a Jewish family in his basement during the war. That family has been living in Israel for the last 50 years. "Jewish history is Polish history" he said.

Luckily for us, we were just in time to listen to Sophie, a Holocaust survivor and life-long resident of Krakow, speak to a group of visiting scholars. Sophie recounted her life in hiding: Born in 1935, her and her mother's Polish sounding  last name allowed them to live the duration of the war as Christians. She attended Sunday School, was baptized, and had a first communion. Although her father was murdered in Auschwitz, She and her mother survived the war. After she was denied a passport to Israel in the 1950's, she decided to make her permanent home in Poland. In 1968, after an additional 20,000 Polish Jews emigrated to Israel and the United states amid growing persecution of freedom of speech by the Communists, Sophie stayed. It wasn't until the Late 1990's did she return to her Jewish roots, at which time she became involved in the Krakow JCC.

Sophie and I. The sign behind us reads "Building a Jewish Future in Krakow." 
After a wonderful evening at the JCC of Krakow, we went to bed early- we had a train to catch to our next destination, Warsaw! 


Warsaw 

After a 3 hour train ride, and an almost missed train connection in Krakow, we arrived at the central train station in Warsaw. The capital city of 1.7 million inhabitants, locally known as Varsovians, features varied architectural styles that reflect it's turbulent history. From gothic churches to Soviet era apartment blocks and modern skyscrapers, Warsaw proved to be an engaging and stimulating end to our vacation.

One of the most recommended museums in the city is POLIN: Museum of the History of Poland's Jews. Aptly located on the site of the Warsaw Ghetto,  POLIN outlines the rich history of the Jewish community in Poland over the past 1,000 years.   Some highlights include an artifact of the first sentence written in Yiddish in the year 1272, a  recreation of a beautiful wooden Synagogue from Lithuania, artifacts from the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943, and a tragic exhibit on the Holocaust. After my visit, I wasn't surprised to learn that POLIN won the  2016 European Museum of the Year Award.  This is a must-see if you visit Warsaw.


Replica of the Gwózdziec Synagogue in Lithuania.  Erected in 1650, it is one of the finest examples of wood-framed synagogues in Eastern Europe. It was destroyed during World War I, and recreated between 2011 and 2013 specifically for the POLIN Museum. 



In addition to learning about the city's Jewish history, I was equally as interested in learning about  the city's  past. During the 20th century, Poland was the site of some of century's most violent events.
On September 1,  1939, Germany invaded the country and would occupy the area until 1945.  In 1940, the Germans forcibly relocated all of the city's Jewish residents into an area that would become known as the the Warsaw Ghetto. Squalid living conditions, overcrowding, and a lack of food eventually led to an armed revolt in the Spring of 1943. This resulted in the death of over 13,000 Jews, with the remaining 50,000 residents deported to Treblinka Concentration Camp. The ghetto was subsequently leveled by the Germans. Although the revolt was unsuccessful, it planted the seed for a second, much bigger rebellion.

Walking through Warsaw, we stumbled upon this plaque on the ground, commemorating the original location of the Warsaw Ghetto wall.  


By the middle of 1944, more than 600,000 of the Warsaw's 1.3 million people had fled, were murdered, or deported to concentration camps by the occupying German forces.  On August 1st, a ragtag group of Polish rebels fought against a much larger, better equipped army in an attempt to take back the city. Only expecting to last a few days, the uprising lasted until  October 2nd, 1944 and ended with a ceasefire.  64 days after the uprising began, only 1,000 residents remained.

 This heroic chapter in Warsaw's history is magnificently documented at the Warsaw Uprising Museum, aptly located in the Wola District,  where the fiercest fighting occurred. The museum highlights the atrocities committed by the Germans as well as the valiant efforts of the Polish Underground Resistance:



From the exhibition layout to the soundtrack, the museum encapsulates the feeling of chaos and destruction. Throughout the exhibit, audible sounds of gunfire, explosions and heartbeats add a level of anxiety and uncertainty.

Unfortunately, Poland was surrounded by the two largest armies in Europe. To the West, the Nazis. To the East, the Soviets. As the Uprising raged on, the Soviet Red Army waited just over the Vistula River, intentionally staying away. Once the Uprising ended, they invaded, drove the Germans out, and controlled the city for the next 45 years.

By the end of the war, Warsaw lay in ruins.  

Scars from the Warsaw Uprising are still visible to this day. Pictured are bullet holes dating back to World War II. We were told by locals that this particular wall was the site of impromptu executions of Polish resistance fighters by German soldiers. 


In a tragic turn of events, World War II did not grant Poland it's freedom. The country fell under Communist rule and became a satellite state of The USSR until 1989. Warsaw lay in ruins, and the Soviet Union decided to rebuild the city in it's own image:

Pictured is a collage of statues to the Proletariat in Constitution Square. Each statue represents a different type of worker, from coal miners, to teachers, and brick layers. 



One of the most controversial yet iconic examples of the Soviet era of Warsaw is the Palace of Culture and Science. Constructed in 1955 as a "gift" to the people of Poland from Joseph Stalin himself,  the building is the tallest in Poland and serves as an enduring symbol of the city.

 The Palace of Culture and Science was a gift from the Soviet Union in 1955. To this day, Varsovians debate the merit of this building: Is it a source of civic pride or a reminder of Stalinist persecution? 

Communist Poland was a difficult place. We took a fantastic tour through Warsaw Adventures called "Off the Beaten Path Poland" where we learned about life under Communism during the mid 20th century.  One of the most memorable experiences we had was a visit to a milk bar, a typical cafeteria that serves cheap food. Milk bars have come to represent the shortage economy, where common goods were hard to come by. Today, not too many remain, but the one we visited had a shocking recreation of a typical table layout:  

Milk bars routinely bolted down silverware and bowls to the tables to prevent theft because household goods were scarce and highly valued during communist times. 

the Czar PRL: LIfe Under Communism Museum displays artifacts from Communist Poland. Pictured is a state-issued radio, bust of Vladamir Lenin, and manual for the Proletariat
 
We also paid a visit to the Neon Museum in the Praga District. The museum presents over 100 Communist-era neon signs found throughout Warsaw. Unlike neon signs in the West, which were used to advertise products in the Capitalist system, Neon in the Eastern Soviet Bloc took on a different meaning. It signified the prosperity and wealth of the Communist state, since no advertising was necessary. You could only buy state-sanctioned goods and services, anyways. 


Since there were no brand names or privately own shops in communist Warsaw, neon signs simply advertised generic terms such as "jewelry" or "theatre."

In 1989, Poland finally, after 50 years, became independent. The next 30 years were, and continue to be, a period of intense cultural, economic and social growth for the country. As we toured around Warsaw, this growth was clear. Skyscrapers and cranes dot the skyline. New restaurants, shops, and bars are opening weekly, and tourism is on the rise. Yet one of the most impressive places we saw was the city's Old Town. Completely leveled during World War II, it has been entirely rebuilt: 

Old Town after World War II 
Old Town today

In addition to reconstructing it's Old Town, there is a thriving cultural scene in Warsaw as well. Varsovians are opening award-winning restaurants and bars, and beautiful green spaces abound: 



A collage of the Łazienki Park, the largest park in the city. 


Hala Kozyki is a modern, chic food hall that rivals Chelsea Market or Grand Central Market. We had the most delicious Oysters there! 

Night Market is a weekly food pop-up event held in an old train station. It reminded me very much of Smorgasburg in Los Angeles and Brooklyn.


Millenial Varsovians, born after the end of Communism, have a fresh perspective on the city's turbulent past, as evidenced by these socks.  Pictured are a playful take on the Palace of Culture and Science, a controversial symbol of the Communist Era.

Warsaw's affordable cost of living and cheap real estate are attracting multi-national companies from around the world. Photo Courtesy: Youtube.com




Our 8 days in Poland proved to be enlightening, emotional, and inspirational. We came here not knowing much about neither our ancestral roots nor the history of this dynamic country, and left with both a more profound appreciation for our culture and an immense respect for the Polish people.  For a country that has been occupied, destroyed, and persecuted to such a great extent, Poland in the 21st century is a dynamic, engaging, and attractive place.  And for that reason I decided to entitle this post "Poland, the Resilient." If you find yourself in Eastern Europe, this place is an absolute must-see. 

Until next time... 

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Transatlantic Outreach Program, Germany




This past summer, I was awarded a fellowship to travel to Germany for two weeks as a 2018 Transatlantic Outreach Program (TOP) Fellow. Initiated in 2002, The TOP Program is a public/private partnership that seeks to be a leading provider of curriculum and study tour experiences relevant to contemporary Germany for educators. It is a subsidiary of the Goethe Instit, a non-profit German cultural institution that seeks to promote intercultural exchange around the world.   Over two jam-packed weeks,  15 STEM educators from around the country toured cultural sites, schools, and environmentally progressive institutions with the hopes of promoting intercultural understanding between our home communities and Germany. Our two main themes for the study tour were Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) education and vocational education:



We stayed in four areas during our trip: the small town of Adelsheim, Stuttgart, Duisburg, and Berlin.


Adelsheim



Our first destination was the Landesschulzentrum fur Umwelterziehung (LSZU), a school which offers teachers and pupils of all types of schools in the Baden-Wùrttemberg area the opportunity to intensively study environmental education. Teachers from the surrounding region can attend professional development at the school and  bring their classes to the LSZU to use their facilities for instruction.   For the first few days of the study tour, we engaged in professional development with German STEM teachers:  
At the LSZU, we participated in a wonderful experiential lesson for middle school students on the importance of buying fair trade chocolate. The "fair trade" sticker on chocolate certifies that it was not only grown and harvested in a sustainable way, but that it fairly compensates every party involved in the production process. 
The LSZU, along with the German education system as a whole, utilizes the Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) goals set out by the United Nations. Here, the ESD goals are stated in German. 
A farmhouse with solar panel roofing just outside of Adelsheim. Wind turbines and solar panels are quite common in Germany, even in the countryside. 


Our time in Adelsheim was wonderful. We met and collaborated with fantastic STEM educators and gained valuable lesson plan ideas to better implement ESD curriculum in our own school communities.


Stuttgart



Our second destination was Stuttgart, a manufacturing hub of approximately 600,000 people. Stuttgart is also the home to Bosch, Mercedes-Benz, and Porsche's corporate headquarters. Our first stop was the Robert Bosch Ausbildungszentrum to learn about the vocational training program for high school age students.



The private sector in Germany operates on a similar apprentice model. 


Students can choose either the apprenticeship program or dual bachelor degree program. Unlike the United States, Germany does not adopt a "college for all" attitude. Instead, with the help of public-private partnerships, students with an interest in vocational trades can receive on the job skills training from top employers like Bosch. 






In addition to our visit at Bosch, we also visited Trumpf, one of the world's largest producers of machine parts for factories.  We were able to visit the factory floor and learn more about the intricate production methods used to punch, shape, bend and manufacture machine tools.




At Trumpf, the demand for industrial engineers, mechanics, and computer programmers  underscores the importance of aligning K-12 STEM instruction with the needs of private industry. 



This machine has 2,200 pound per square inch of punching power, and completes 1,000 strokes per minute, making it the fastest punching machine in the world!

The finished product! Pieces such as these are used in manufacturing facilities all over the world to produce numerous products you've probably used.

In addition to learning about vocational education programs at large companies, we also had some free time as well. We visited the Mercedes Benz Museum, located on the campus of their corporate headquarters. The museum chronicles the fascinating history of the 92 year old company as it adapted to the various trials and tribulations of 20th century Germany: 


The first truck ever produced was by the parent company of Mercedes Benz in 1898. It had an impressive 12 horsepower! 


1902 Maybach with a top speed of 50mph. Wilhelm Maybach, the inventor of this car, named his company after his daughter, Mercedes. Maybach eventually merged with Karl Benz, forming the Mercedes-Benz we know today. 

Various midcentury limited-edition Mercedes on display. The 300slr, on the far left, is worth an estimated 68 million dollars! This is one of two known to exist in the entire world. 

One of the most memorable experiences in Stuttgart was a delicious meal at a Turkish restaurant.  With more than 4 million people of Turkish ancestry in Germany, Turks are the most sizable minority population in the country.  Oktay Ince, a TOP Fellow of Turkish descent, introduced us to the varied and delicious cuisine of his home country: 

Enjoying a delicious mug of Ayran, a cold savory yogurt based beverage. 


We ordered way too much food at dinner! Fortunately, during our train ride from Stuttgart to Duisburg the next day, we feasted on Turkish leftovers while cruising at 186 miles an hour on the bullet train! 




Duisburg


Our next stop was Duisburg, an industrial city in the state of  North Rhine Westphalia. The greater Duisburg-Essen-Dusseldorf area has a strong history of steel and coal production and is currently undergoing a transformation to renewable energy production. Our first activity was a tour of the inner harbor of Duisburg, one of the largest river-adjacent harbors in the world:



In 2000, 50% of all steel production in Germany occurred in Duisburg. The port provided a convenient way to export coal and steel products all over the world.


One of the most fascinating excursions during the whole trip was to the Zollverein Industrial Complex just outside of Essen, Germany. Founded in 1847, this coal and coking plant operated continuously until 1986. Today, it is a testament to the industrial strength of the area as well as a relic of a bygone era of fossil fuel consumption:

Covering 13 square kilometers, the Zollverien Industrial Complex miraculously survived numerous bombing campaigns by the Allied forces during World War II.

The complex was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2000



By the turn of the 20th century, the North Rhine-Westphalia region had highest concentration of jobs in Europe, thanks to it's strong steel and coal industry. Today, 1 in 3 jobs in the region are in the elder care industry.


The State of North Rhine Westphalia has been undergoing a dramatic shift away from fossil fuels towards renewable energy since the turn of the 21st century. Evidence of this shift can be seen throughout the region: 




This mural was found on the side of a former coking plant. One quote that stands out says:

"Remember the earth is not dying, it is being murdered and the people murdering it have names and addresses..."


Even in a region that relied so heavily on steel and coal for more than a century, they have openly embraced the shift to renewable energy, as evidenced by these provocative murals of pollution




Receptacles like this are common throughout Germany, and illustrate the willingness of Germans to take a few extra seconds to ensure that their trash is properly recycled
We also visited the Europaschule Krupp-Gymnasium, an upper-secondary school that specializes in STEM instruction. Given the high percentage of immigrant families in North Rhine Westphalia, 57% of the students are either immigrants or children of immigrants, with a vast majority from Turkey. They boast an impressive pass rate on the Abitur, a college entrance exam similar to the SAT. 

MINT, (The German equivalent of STEM) is intertwined in every aspect of the school. Europaschule recently celebrated it's 105th anniversary!


TOP Fellows Paul Desruisseaux and Deb Wines assisting students in dissecting a pig heart

We also paid a visit to the Phänomenia Erfahrungsfeld, an experiential playground for children to learn about science concepts. Pictured is yours truly in an optical allusion! 


Next, we went to the Future through Innovotion (zdi) Centre Bochum IST(Innovation Centre School and Technology), a vocational track school that prepares students for vocational occupations at companies like Bosch or Trumpf. There, the principal recounted issues all too familiar to American educators: A lack of interest in STEM, difficulty finding qualified instructors, and the challenge of providing quality STEM education in an era of shrinking budgets. The next day, we boarded a train for our final destination, Berlin!


Berlin


After a 3 hour ride from Essen to Berlin, we finally arrived at the capital city. We began with a tour of  famous sites and monuments: 

The Berlin Victory Column, erected in 1873 to celebrate the victory in the Danish-Prussian and Austro-Prussian War

The Berlin Wall, a 96 mile concrete barricade that stood for 28 years 

A view of Berlin from the top of the Berlin Cathedral 



While the history of the capital city is fascinating, we were there to learn about STEM. We took a memorable day trip to the Feldheim renewable energy village, located 37 miles southwest of Berlin. This village of 150 people relies exclusively on wind and solar energy: 

At 149 meteres tall, these wind turbines produce 7 million kilowatts of electricity a year! The average lifespan is 20 years. 

Here is the service elevator to reach the rotor. You could easily fit 25 people inside the base of the largest wind turbines 


We also visited the ReDi School of digital Integration, a non-profit digital school for tech-interested newcomers in Germany. They offer students training and the opportunity to collaborate with start-up and digital technology firms. With 55,000 available jobs in the tech sector, ReDi School looks to equip the under and unemployed with the skills necessary to access 21st century tech careers. Microsoft, Cisco, Facebook and others partner with the Redi School to teach Python Data Science, IT support and other skills to a largely immigrant student body, free of charge. Given the increasing number of refugees in Germany, ReDi school serves as a vital resource for newcomers to access the burgeoning job market. 

More than 43 nationalities are represented at the ReDi school. Pictured are student's brainstorming ideas on future classes. The philosophy at ReDi School is simple: Stop talking about refugees, and start talking with refugees. 


That evening, we went on a walking tour of Berlin monuments. Free of tourists, the walk provided a great opportunity to familiarize ourselves with a few important historical locations:


The Brandenburg Gate

Checkpoint Charlie


The site of Hitler's Bunker, and presumed site of his suicide attempt. It is nothing more than a parking lot. 

Remembrance Culture 

During the trip, one of my personal goals was to learn more about Remembrance Culture in Germany. Remembrance Culture refers to the way in which a society interacts with and remembers it's past. In an attempt to respectfully and honestly address the war, tyranny and genocide committed by the Third Reich during the 20th century, Germany has enacted a multitude of memorials, plaques, and monuments to the victims of National Socialism: 

Stumbling blocks are raised inscriptions that commemorate the former residences of victims of Nazism. They are designed to protrude from the ground as a way of forcing passerby to notice them.

A Holocaust Memorial at the site of the Stuttgart Deportation site, where the Jewish community was deported to various concentration camps

At the only active synagogue in Duisburg, a police truck stands on watch, 24/7, 365 to prevent vandalism. Per federal law, all synagogues must be protected by the police




In Conclusion

The previous two weeks in Germany have been one of the best professional development experiences I've ever had. I was thoroughly impressed with the thoughtful planning that went into providing a thematically-relevant tour of STEM and vocational education. Equally impressive were my colleagues on the trip: we boasted 3 (!!) PhDs, one state teacher of the year, and decades of teaching and leadership experience. One of the personal highlights for me was watching my colleagues light up when we encountered a theme that directly related to their field. For example, when we visited Adelsheim, the environmental science teachers lit up at the opportunity to learn more about and contribute to environmental education. During our visit to Bosch and Trumpf, the technology and engineering teachers marveled at the technological prowess of the 16 year old apprentices, and the biology teachers lit up at the opportunity to dissect a pig's heart with German high school students.  Overall, the TOP Program gave me a much deeper and profound appreciation for modern Germany and a ton of lesson plan ideas! 



Until next time...