Education Through Entertainment

California School Assemblies Teach Kids That Writing is a Blast!

Posted on Wed, Jun 15, 2011

California School Assemblies Teach Kids That Writing is a Blast!

One of the most difficult tasks a teacher has is teaching kids to write. Children are usually put off by this task and don’t realize how much fun it can be to engage in creative writing.

Many schools, seeking to excite students and prod them into writing turn to famous or not so famous authors of children's literature and arrange a visit from such an author. And, indeed, sometimes this can help. But often the writer of great books is not a great or engaging speaker. Moreover, since writing itself is their principal love, many only visit schools reluctantly and therefore charge exorbitant rates or impose outlandish conditions upon the school. Not quite as bad as rock stars insisting that green M&M’s be removed from the dish backstage, but oftentimes times almost as bad!

Thankfully, a real and delightful alternative exists. Frequent readers will have heard me speak before about Young Authors Day, our creative writing program performed by a classical mime.
This thoroughly entertaining and important program was created by Toma The Mime, a student of famous French classical mime Marcelle Marceau. Toma has drawn rave reviews in this program for almost twenty years and is still getting kids excited about writing all over the midwest, Texas and the East Coast.

But what is a West Coast school to do?
Well, Mobile Ed has you covered! Young Authors Day is such a popular and “in-demand” school assembly that we have had Toma train other performers to carry the program into areas time will not permit him to visit.
In California we are exceptionally fortunate and blessed to have the talents of Karen Lorshbough available to visit our schools and she is magnificent! A skilled and highly trained classical mime in her own right, Karen came to us some years ago and she and Toma hit it off immediately. I have to say it was amusing having them both here in the office simultaneously during training! We never knew what was going to be waiting around any corner in the office!

Karen now lives in Southern California, but travels all over the west for Mobile Ed bringing her performing skills to play and instilling in children a wonderful love of creative writing.

The day starts with a 45 minute program in which Karen demonstrates to the delight of her audience how a story may be told through mime. In the process, the children are not only highly entertained, but also learn how a mime may play multiple characters in the same story. During the program she occasionally breaks character as the mime and becomes “the author”, explaining how she comes up with ideas for stories, how she puts them down on paper, the differences between writing for a reader versus writing for a performer and so on. The children are mesmerized. Toward the end of the assembly she sends the children back to their rooms armed with a simple plot-based rubric for writing stories, and challenged to write their own. During the balance of the morning Karen visits classrooms while the children are writing and offers support, suggestions and other assistance. In the afternoon, students are treated to a reprise performance when in a large group assembly, Karen proceeds to perform stories written by the students that  morning. The excitement and joy is palpable and the day leaves an indelible mark on the kids teaching them that writing is a blast! This energy remains in the classrooms for weeks following a visit.

Some schools capitalize on a visit by also scheduling an evening show so that parents can view the stories written by their sons and daughters. These events are always well attended, as what parent can resist their child begging them to return to the school at night?
So if you are out on the left coast reading this, and you are contemplating picking out the green M&M’s to satisfy some demanding author, why bother? A visit from the lovely Karen is not only more effective, but also so much more fun!

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Michigan School Assemblies - Imported From Michigan

Posted on Thu, Jun 9, 2011

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School Assemblies Return to Utah - The Earth Dome in Salt Lake!

Posted on Wed, Jun 8, 2011

After a three year absence from Utah we are happy to report that Mobile Ed Productions is returning to the Salt Lake area in 2011 and coming back in style with three great school assembly programs!

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School Assemblies in Colorado - The Earth Balloon Visits The Rockies

Posted on Mon, Jun 6, 2011

After a two year absence from Colorado we are happy to report that Mobile Ed Productions is returning to the beautiful Rocky Mountain State in 2011!

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"Stronger Than a Bully" School Assembly Comes to Texas This Winter!

Posted on Fri, Jun 3, 2011

Lest our friends in the great state of Texas feel left out by our last article, we have good news and bad news for them, too!

The good news is that Stronger Than a Bully, Mobile Ed’s highly anticipated new anti bullying program will be touring Texas this coming winter in January and February. This is a great new school assembly program, performed by a wonderful Mobile Ed presenter named Dave Mitchell, whom some of you will remember as our superb Ben Franklin!

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“Stronger Than a Bully” School Assemblies in New Jersey

Posted on Fri, Jun 3, 2011

 As the school year winds down on the East Coast, it is a good time to begin planning for school assemblies for the new year which is right around the corner (much as we would all like to forget that!). We have good news and bad news for schools in New Jersey and all along the North Eastern states.

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Illinois Schools Love Rojo’s School Assemblies!

Posted on Fri, Jun 3, 2011

We have been back in the Chicago area this week with Sky Dome Planetarium, our portable planetarium school assembly, presented in schools there by the exceptional Rojo. He just appeared at a school in Joliet, Illinois, and judging by the reaction I think they liked him!

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School Assemblies and Exotic Pets Part 2

Posted on Thu, Jun 2, 2011

After that last article I thought I owed you something a little friendlier and a little more warm and fuzzy, so here it is!
Last time I wrote about the threat posed by the release into the wild of exotic pets and how creatures like Burmese Albino pythons are endangering natural environments. I went on to discuss how school assemblies like Mobile Ed’s Animals and the Environment are great for getting out the message that bringing exotic “pets” into your home is probably not such a wise idea.
The truth is, that apart from a natural habitat, the only place really equipped for the care and management of wild creatures is a zoo or natural game preserve.
A year or two ago, a zoo in England experienced something unique. For the first time they witnessed in their park the birth of female Rothschild giraffe. Named Margaret, she was born six weeks early and weighed in at just 75 pounds. Standing only 5 feet tall, Margaret was one of the smallest giraffes they had seen and the zookeepers nurtured her with hand feeding techniques. Pretty cool, huh?
Of course, Mobile Ed live animal assemblies will not be bringing a giraffe to your school, but the animals will be unique, suitable for school shows, and a great means for teaching kids about the wildlife of our planet.

Geoff Beauchamp is the Regional Manager of Mobile Ed Productions where "Education Through Entertainment" has been the guiding principal since 1979. Mobile Ed Productions produces and markets quality educational school assembly programs in the fields of sciencehistorywritingastronomynatural sciencemathematicscharacter issues and a variety of other curriculum based areas. In addition, Mr. Beauchamp is a professional actor with 30 years of experience in film, television and on stage. He created and still performs occasionally in Mobile Ed's THE LIVING LINCOLN


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Memorial Day and Celebrating History Through School Assemblies

Posted on Fri, May 27, 2011

This weekend we will all get a day off for Memorial Day. And that means backyard barbecues, getting together with family, maybe going to the lake or the beach (if the weather is good) or a ball game. Relaxing and enjoying some time off. And everyone needs that.
But somewhere in there it wouldn’t hurt to remember that this time honored holiday was established to honor the brave warriors who have served our nation and who gave as Mr. Lincoln observed “ the last full measure of devotion.”
People argue over the exact birth of this traditional day. Some say it began in the southern states as war widows placed flowers on graves of fallen rebel soldiers. But as an officially recognized holiday it came into existence through a proclamation signed in 1868 by General John A. Logan, commander of the Grand Army of the Potomac and intended as a day to honor the fallen from the great Civil War which had ended but three years earlier.
Following World War I the holiday was changed to include honoring the dead from all wars fought by soldiers of our nation.
Sadly, our nation has in so many ways forgotten the meaning of this day, and in doing so, forgotten the sacrifices so many have made to support our freedoms. On Monday, at 3 PM local time (wherever you are) try to take part in our National Moment of Remembrance. Just take a moment, wherever you are, and for a few seconds give thought to those who gave their lives for you. It may seem a small gesture, but it is, indeed, after they gave so much, the least that you can do.
Our children need to know our history. They need to understand the challenges, difficulties and sacrifices of those who have gone before. A wise person once observed “you cannot know where you are going unless you know where you came from.” I would add to that the words “and why.” Teaching our children to truly understand how we got to this moment in time is crucially important. And despite what many Americans think, history does not need to be boring. Far from it! History is just the telling of what is happening today, as told by those of tomorrow. All our great traditions of theatre and entertainment come down to us from origins in story telling and oral history. Warriors around the fire at night retelling the story of the previous days hunt. Or the previous week, or the great hunt of the previous year. This is how the practice of recording history originated. As entertainment. Reliving the excitement of previous times. Your kids can follow in this great tradition and learn their own exciting history quite easily through a school visit from a costumed actor in the role of someone great from a previous time and place. Mobile Ed offers living history for schools through a broad range of educational school assemblies spanning several different era’s and all told with excitement and flair that will keep kids attentively alive just as their ancestors were mesmerized by tales of the hunt. Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King, Ben Franklin, Mark Twain, Thomas Edison and more are alive again and waiting to help your students relive the events of the past that they might better understand the problems of today.
So as you plan for the next year of their lives, please consider arranging a visit from one or more of these great Americans. And maybe they will grow up to remember that “the last Monday in May” is about more than hot-dogs and swimming pools and ball games.

Geoff Beauchamp is the Regional Manager of Mobile Ed Productions where "Education Through Entertainment" has been the guiding principal since 1979. Mobile Ed Productions produces and markets quality educational school assembly programs in the fields of sciencehistorywritingastronomynatural sciencemathematicscharacter issues and a variety of other curriculum based areas. In addition, Mr. Beauchamp is a professional actor with 30 years of experience in film, television and on stage. He created and still performs occasionally in Mobile Ed's THE LIVING LINCOLN
 
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Raccoons, Creativity and School Assemblies

Posted on Wed, May 18, 2011

Last week we had an adventure, of sorts, here in our office. We began to hear strange noises emanating from an interior wall in the back room where we store unused equipment from our school assemblies. Hmmm.

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