-
“[Don] Rawitsch, a lanky, bespectacled 21-year-old with hair well over his ears, was both a perfectionist and an idealist. He started dressing as historical figures in an attempt to win over his students, appearing in the classroom as explorer Meriwether Lewis.
By now he’d made it through to the western expansion unit, and he had in mind his boldest idea yet.
What he had so far was a board game tracing a path from Independence, Missouri, to the Willamette Valley in Oregon. The students would pretend to be pioneer families. Each player would start with a certain amount of money and buy oxen, clothes, and food. Students would advance with the roll of a die, along the way encountering various misfortunes: broken limbs, thieves, disease. In roughly 12 turns, the kids would simulate the 2,000-mile journey that thousands of pioneers made to the West Coast in the 19th century.
He called it “Oregon Trail.””
-
I hesitate to recommend this, as it’s spread over sixteen different pages, but Shaun Tan is awesome, and some of the drawings are really cute.
3 comments
Comments are closed.
Why did you link to the print version? It looks like hell on my screen, and pops up an annoying dialogue.
I linked to the print version because the non-print version is spread over 2-3 pages, and I hate that.
Yeah, but I can get to the print version from the web version, and vice versa is a lot harder (at least from what i could see). Also, the web version includes things like links to other potentially interesting stuff and ads which help pay for the actual content.