
The past two weeks, we have been lucky enough to welcome a new group of 20 Danish kids to our school. And I have been lucky enough to have most of these kids in my third period WHAP class each day. Not unlike two years ago, it has been an incredible experience to have these kids here.
They bring an open mind, enthusiasm, and energy to our school.
Today was our last day with the Danes. We listened to Young Turks ( the Rod Stewart song that I introduced to the class during a lesson on reform in the Ottoman Empire. My students have taken a particular liking to this song and now it has become a bit of a thing. So much so that they turned the Danes on to it.). Then we captured and released the mouse that had eluded us for two days. After this, we competed in a dress-up relay race with mixed teams of Danes and Americans. It was pretty amazing, and hopefully we created memories that will stretch to northern Europe, and last a lifetime.

Do we learn more when they Danes are here? Yes, but it is not textbook learning. We learn that our American experience is sometimes unique, and sometimes part of a larger human experience. So I fully believe that when my students spend time, and build relationships with kids their age from Europe it helps all of us understand the ties that bind us together.
It is my hope that my students gain a greater curiosity about the lives of their new friends, and how this world can seem simultaneously so huge, and so small.
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