Skip to content

Mike's History Blog

Reflections & News About Working With the Past

Menu
Menu

Research School Integration on the Eastern Shore

Posted on January 6, 2008February 6, 2025 by Mike

Our son, Kyle, an 11th-grade AP history student at Bohemia Manor High School in Chesapeake City, is working on his 2008 National History Day project.  This year’s theme is conflict and compromise in history.  For the juried project, students must do original research, place the topic in a historical perspective, and interpret their findings. 

For his assignment, he compares how three counties on Maryland’s upper Eastern Shore (Cecil, Kent & Queen Anne’s) handled conflicts and compromises related to school integration. 

bishop levi coppin Cecilton school integration
The Bishop Levi Coppin School in Cecilton. Coppin closed once school integration occurred in 1965.

Over the Christmas holiday, Kyle started his documentary research, collecting primary materials such as newspaper accounts, school board minutes, and so on.  Right now, he is focused on interviewing individuals with first-hand knowledge of that time, and he did his first interview with a lady from Kent County this evening. It was fascinating to hear the digital recording of that interview as he successfully applied new research skills to acquiring data and got information that provided deeper insights and understanding. 

He plans to become a high school history teacher, and it’s great to see him developing the profession’s skills with this learning opportunity.  It provides valuable first-hand experience in working with primary sources and interpreting bodies of data.  I will enjoy watching his effort unfold over the next few months while hearing about his work and seeing the final results.

Share this:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email

Like this:

Like Loading…

Related

E-mail me

E-mail me

Websites

  • Mike's Website

Blogroll

  • Reflections on Delmarva's Past
  • Window on Cecil County's Past

Follow Mike on Facebook

Categories

Pages

  • About Me
  • Blogging History
  • Delmarva Pandemic of 1918 Archive
  • Mike’s History Blog Archive
  • Research Resources & Links

Comments

  • Mike on Philadelphia General Hospital Nurses Faced Double Threats of Pandemic and World War
  • John Gardner on Philadelphia General Hospital Nurses Faced Double Threats of Pandemic and World War
  • Mike on The Clerk of the Court & 19th Century Court Records
  • Kevin Hemstock on The Clerk of the Court & 19th Century Court Records
  • Mike on Influenza Hit New Castle County Workhouse Hard in 1918

RSS American Association for State & Local History Bog

  • Explore the History of Enslavement in Bristol, RI
  • AASLH Rejects White House Report on Smithsonian’s NMAH
  • The 250th Belongs to All of Us
  • Advocacy Alert: Take Action against Proposed OMB Changes

RSS National Archives Blog

  • The Second Continental Congress Convenes 
  • Lexington and Concord: 22 Hours and a Shot Heard Around the World
  • Presidential Transitions – Roosevelt to Truman
  • NARA Turns 40

Mike's History Blog

Top Posts

John Brown's Body:  The Long Road to the Final Resting PlaceJohn Brown's Body:  The Long Road to the Final Resting PlaceMay 18, 2024Mike
Ending Segregation at Harford Memorial HospitalEnding Segregation at Harford Memorial HospitalSeptember 29, 2019Mike
Revolutionary War Maps: The British Campaign of 1777 on the Upper Delmarva PeninsulaRevolutionary War Maps: The British Campaign of 1777 on the Upper Delmarva PeninsulaJune 13, 2014Mike

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
© 2026 Mike's History Blog | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme
%d