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The Adventures of Plimoth Plantation

The Adventures of Plimoth Plantation As Told by the Mayflower Mouse

In Celebration of the 400th Anniversary of the Pilgrims' First Thanksgiving in 2021! 

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Watch Hannah's video...

 

Parents, Our First and Lasting Teachers

A rich resource of more than 100 easy, timeless ideas on building strong families, developing the academics, supporting the schools, and more.
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NEW in 2021

In Search of the Great English Writers: An Imaginary Journey Back in Time with Intrepid Reporter Nellie Bly

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First in the series

In Search of the Great American Writers: An Imaginary Journey Back in Time with Intrepid Reporter Nellie Bly

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John Adams: The Voice Heard 'Round the World

"This is an important work! It's a great story; I love it!"

Jean Fritz, award-winning children's author
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David McCullough & Hannah Carlson


Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough narrates Boston Landmarks Orchestra recording, “John Adams: The Voice Heard ‘Round the World” CD accompanies richly-illustrated children’s book. See more...

 

 

American Genius: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

The life story of Longfellow is full of drama, romance, and tragedy.

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Yankee Doodle’s Pen: Wheatley, Washington, and Longfellow

Step back in time and discover what a slave, a general, and a poet have in common.

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HannahCarlson

Welcome!

Make way for your ducklings
Make way for your ducklings!

Introduction

Over many years I’ve learned rich lessons about the great art of being a parent and teacher which are inseparable roles. These years found us living from Boston to San Francisco, working with children of all ages and raising three of our own. One great theme stands out which perhaps parents everywhere know – each child is a work of art which we learn to appreciate as we trust our own abilities and train ourselves where needed. Children come one of a kind and deserve the best handling and care that we’d give to a priceless painting. After all, children are the most valuable investment in the future. The training and inspiration start with the artist before seen in the artwork. Like Michelangelo chipping away at the marble to find the sculpture within, we often need to chip away the self-doubts, limitations, and labels on ourselves and children. Parents have the precious responsibility of developing the whole child, a happy and loved one, who will eventually be ready to give back to society. This complete picture doesn’t happen easily or overnight, but is the result of adding to the “canvas” day by day.

This parent-teacher BLOG is a collection of articles that were published as a syndicated newspaper column while raising our children. When the editors at The Christian Science Monitor asked me to write the Parent/Child column, my reaction was “Who me?” My teaching career in the fine school systems of Lexington and Newton, Massachusetts, and as the director of a nursery school, had given me grist for the parenthood mill. Yet, I knew there are challenges of a new nature with raising your own children. Along with the academics come the social, emotional, physical, spiritual, and character development – an awesome task. What I found while writing the column was a nation-wide parent network with similar concerns and challenges and the resources to meet them. The articles are not a prescription, but a description of lessons, insights, and activities from our family and many other families, authors, administrators, and teachers. It is designed so parents and teachers may add their own notes and ideas. Let’s make EVERY parent/teacher relationship with a child a truly unique masterpiece!

Marian R. Carlson

Photo by M. Carlson, Sculptor Nancy Schon
A few slight changes have been made to these articles since they originally appeared in The Christian Science Monitor

Chatham Author Brings John Adams To Life In Words And Music

Cape Cod Chronicle, The (Chatham, MA)

June 30, 2011
Section: News
Edition: Chatham Edition
Page: 42a

Story and photo by Debra Lawless

Author Marian R. Carlson, a Chatham summer resident since the 1980s, is wearing a necklace with two musical notes around her neck.

This is worth mentioning because Carlson’s newest book, “John Adams: The Voice Heard ‘Round the World” (Schoolmaster Press, 2010), has been set to music as a part of the Landmark Orchestra’s History Through Music Series. The book itself, geared for fourth graders and up, has just been recorded by two-time Pulitzer Prize winning author David McCullough.

“I had 16 working titles,” Carlson said during a recent interview at her Seaview Street home where she is sitting on a screened porch and sipping lemonade. “When I finished my research it just hit me. Adams was the voice heard ’round the world.”

Carlson describes Adams as the “voice” of the Declaration of Independence and Thomas Jefferson as its “pen.”

There’s a lot going on here — Carlson’s richly-illustrated book, the orchestral music, and McCullough’s reading. Mc-Cullough is, of course, famous as the author of “John Adams” (2001), from which a 2008 PBS mini-series was created.

“People see this as something different and fresh, bringing the arts together,” Carlson says. “After they listen to the CD, students get fired up about history. Then there are activities in the back of the book.”

Here’s how this multi-art collaboration came about.

Carlson, whose other home is in Cambridge, serves on the board of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra. The orchestra, whose mission is to provide classical concerts free of charge, was founded in 2001 by the late Charles Ansbacher. Concerts are performed in significant architectural, historical and geographical settings in the Boston area. The orchestra commissions a new work each year to teach history through music. In 2008 Carlson’s narrative, with music composed by Emmy-winning trumpeter Anthony DiLorenzo, was performed seven times. Last fall McCullough entered the picture with his reading of the book.

So here we have a conjunction of history and music.

And let’s not forget architecture and geography. In writing her 1,000-word book, Carlson visited the Adams National Historical Park in Quincy — the birthplace of both John Adams and John Quincy Adams, the second and sixth presidents — and took a private tour with a National Park Service guide. She climbed Penn’s Hill and gazed over at Bunker Hill. It was from here that young John Quincy and his mother, Abigail, watched the Battle of Bunker Hill in June 1775. She met composer DiLorenzo in Los Angeles, and met McCullough near his home on Martha’s Vineyard. Oh, and she spent a week in Washington, D.C. digging up the 33 beautiful illustrations in the book.

Open the 36-page book and you’ll see a map of the 13 original colonies with a quote from Adams: “The 13 clocks were made to strike together.” On the facing page is a head-and-shoulders painting ofAdams.As the story progresses, that same painting of Adams recurs — showing more of Adams each time, until finally you see the entire full-length 1783 portrait by John Singleton Copley. That portrait, considered to be the best of Adams, is now in the Harvard University Art Museum.

Adams was born in Quincy in 1735; in 1776 he led Congress in its move to write and sign the Declaration of Independence. In 1796 he was elected the second president of the United States after serving for seven years as George Washington’s vice president. He died on the Fourth of July 1826.

Carlson tells Adams’s story through the eyes of his son, John Quincy, who was 16 in 1783, the year the book is set.

Last September Carlson ferried over to Martha’s Vineyard and met with Mc-Cullough at the high school. In recording the book McCullough read every line three times so the sound engineer could later remix his voice, using the best enunciation. Carlson described McCullough as “friendly and warm. You think you’re talking to Uncle Dave,” she said.

“He said he loved [the book] and he was trying to get history into the schools,” adds Carlson, a former elementary school teacher in Newton and Lexington. “We were honored that he would drop his work for this.”

Carlson is also the author, with the late Libby Hughes, of “American Genius: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.” Her latest work is “In Search of the Great American Writers: An Imaginary Journey Back in Time with Intrepid Reporter Nelly Bly” (2010). Last year she arranged for a Cape Cod blacksmith and his son to ride horses in Chatham’s Fourth of July parade dressed in tri-corner hats as John and John Quincy Adams.

Carlson, who grew up in Ohio, has a unique connection to Adams: her stepfather was a descendent. Her step-father left her his library on Adams. “I read everything,” she says.

A mother of three, she dedicates “John Adams” to her three young grandchildren: Charlotte, Emma and Paul and “all those who carry a patriotic spirit of freedom in their hearts.”

“Parents, grandparents, neighbors are a wonderful source to communicate our history,” she says.

Carlson will sign copies of “John Adams: The Voice Heard ‘Round the World” at Yellow Umbrella Books in Chatham, immediately after the Fourth of July Parade on Monday, July 4. Copies of the CD will be sold separately.  Author Marian R. Carlson.

(c) 2011, The Cape Cod Chronicle

 

Press Release – New Book!

Where would America be without the great writers who helped shape our national consciousness with their stories and legends?  “In Search of the Great American Writers,” written by educator and author Marian R. Carlson, is a workbook that encourages students at a 4th grade level and above to be inspired by seven of America’s most influential writers: Phillis Wheatley, Washington Irving, Henry W. Longfellow, Emily Dickinson, Louisa May Alcott, Mark Twain, and Nellie Bly.

The workbook links together great writers’ original works, historical trivia, and engaging activities to help students develop a deeper appreciation of great writing and hone their own writing skills. Trailblazing 19th c. journalist Bly “narrates” the students’ journey through the material on each author.

A proven-popular project taught by Carlson in classrooms for 15 years, this workbook is the first in her series about Great Writers worldwide and has been created for classroom or in-home use. Student-tested and results-oriented, the Great Writers program has brought rave reviews from participating students, parents, and teachers. Harvard University recognized the program with an honorary celebration at the Graduate School of Education.

Reviews:
There’s no one who counts more in society than a good teacher. And you are one of those. My guess is your students will remember the project and their part in it the rest of their lives…What a good time they must have with you as their teacher! – David McCullough, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author, in a letter to Marian Carlson

This creative program is designed to help middle grade students become confident, skillful authors who have an appreciation of the great writers of the world. – Teacher, Fiske School, Lexington, Mass.

Schoolmaster Press at Boston Book Festival, Oct. 15h, 2011 – Copley Plaza

Schoolmaster Press will be attending the Boston Book Festival, Oct. 15h, 2011 at the IPNE booth in Copley Plaza.
http://www.bostonbookfest.org/

 

 

Featured Book & CD

Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough narrates Boston Landmarks Orchestra recording, “John Adams: The Voice Heard ‘Round the World” New CD accompanies richly-illustrated children’s book. 


David McCullough and Marian Carlson at recording session for the new CD, John Adams: The Voice Heard ’Round the World.

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