May 08, 2008 10:51 am
—
By MICHELLE MILLER
Staff Writer
Over 400 middle and high
school students from across
New York State came to Cooperstown
for the annual New
York State History Day competition
Friday, but only one
local student received recognition.
Cooperstown Central
School tenth-grader Alexandra
Rheinhardt will not be
advancing to the National
History Day competition held
at the University of Maryland
in June, but received an
award for her senior individual
documentary, ``Sounds of
Conflict: A cultural Divide.’’
``I am honored to receive
this award,’’ said Rheinhardt.
Rheinhardt said she
picked rock and roll as her
topic to write about this year
because she has always liked
the music and thought she
could fit it into this year’s
theme, “Conflict and Compromise
in History.”
The 15-year-old said she
first began competing in the
New York State History Day
competition when she was in
the seventh grade, when it
was given as an assignment,
and has competed ever
since.
Rheinhardt said she received
an award for best research
last year and after
the competition, she went
online and saw where students
could enter two other
competitions using their History
Day competition projects.
This encouraged Rheinhardt
to enter her
documentary, which was on
the women’s professional
baseball league, and she
won.
From May 8 to May 10,
Rheinhardt will be going to
Cornell to compete in another
history competition. She
will be entering her documentary
from this year’s
History Day.
``I look at these projects as
a rehearsal or warm up for
other competitions,’’ said
Rheinhardt.
Rheinhardt said although
history is not her favorite
subject, she enjoys working
on the projects for the History
Day competition.
``It’s better than sitting in
a classroom and learning
from a text,’’ said Rheinhardt.
A lot of work goes into a
History Day competition
project, according to Rheinhardt.
She said she typically
uses the libraries at SUNY
Oneonta and Hartwick College
for resources. Reinhardt
said she also interviews people
and watched documentaries.
All four years Reinhardt
has participated in the state
competition, she has entered
documentaries. In order to
advance to the national competition
students must place
first or second in the category
they enter.
NYSHA has been the
state sponsor of the National
History Day program since
1980, when the program first
went national. New York
State History Day started as
part of NYSHA’s Yorker Program,
which ended in 1998.
For the last 10 years, NYSHA
has hosted the state
competition.
``I always like to say that
History Day is like a science
fair, but history,’’ said Tobi
Voigt, New York State History
Day coordinator.
``The quality of the student
work is amazing,’’ said
Voigt. ``It is college-level
work. Students who participate
in History Day are gaining
valuable life skills in
communication, research,
writing and critical thinking,
and they will leave high
school better prepared for
college and the working
world than many of their
peers.’’
Copyright © 1999-2008 cnhi, inc.