IDAHO NATIONAL
Idaho
Transportation |
As part of the "Celebrate the Interstate 50th Anniversary campaign", the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) will sponsor National History Day 2006-2007. The year-long national educational event reaches more than 700,000 students and 40,000 educators in grades 6 through 12 in 47 states. National History Day coordinators wrote AASHTO saying, “The history of the Interstate Highway System stands as a triumph of the 20th Century and inclusion in the curriculum book will expose a broad cross section of teachers and students to the compelling history of its development 50 years ago.” “There is a generation of people in this country that take the existence of the Interstate system for granted; not knowing the challenges faced by many of the 20th Century leaders who envisioned a cross-country network of highways that united the states,” said AASHTO Executive Director John Horsley. “By reaching out to students and educating them about what a monumental task this was, we also hope to teach them about the impacts on our lives and how they can be a part of shaping the system’s future.” The significance of transportation in the nation’s development was recently illustrated in this year’s competition in a presentation by Casie Purdeu, a student at D.C. Everest Senior High School in Westin, Wisconsin. Her documentary, “Dr. Kate Pelham Newcomb: An Angel
in the Wisconsin North Woods” told of the doctor’s efforts
to build a hospital to serve the residents of the remote area because
“transportation wasn’t the best” in that area of the
country during the 1930s. This year’s theme is “Taking a Stand in History: People, Ideas, Events.” This year’s week-long competition is June 11-15 at the University of Maryland and next year’s event is June 10-14 at the same location. Published 5-5-06 |