Solomon School
Chicago, Illinois
Ellen A. Shea, Classroom: 7A

Hannah G. Solomon School
Information
Solomon School is a Chicago Public
School of Excellence, located in the
Peterson Park area, in the northwest
side of Chicago (6200 North and 3700
West). It is an economically and academically
diverse school with a multi-ethnic
population of approximately 400 Pre-K
through 8th grade students comprised
of approximately 40% White, 30% Black,
12% Asian/Pacific Islander.
A Northwest Magnet Cluster school,
Solomon School offers an International
Scholars Program. For example, Mandarin
Chinese is taught throughout all grades.
Technology is integrated across Solomon’s
entire curriculum.
As a result of Solomon’s previous
contribution to Project Exploration
2000, internationally renowned paleontologist
Paul Sereno, from the University of
Chicago, facilitated Solomon’s
current participation in Gear Up,
a college preparatory program for
upper grade students.
Solomon parents are supportive and
involved. As a result, Solomon has
a strong sense of community, celebrating
collective successes.
Class Description
This class consists of sixteen seventh
grade interesting girls and boys.
Among their varied interests are art,
pottery making, acting, reading, traveling
and team sports. They like dinosaurs,
taking walks, animals, music, dancing,
and using the computer.
Several mentioned that their plans
for the future include being a dentist
because the tools look interesting,
a financial analyst, and lawyer. Another
student would like to be a landscaper
or carpenter. Watching television,
playing video games, and going to
movies is a favorite activity that
these seventh graders like to do with
their friends. This group of students
is fun to know.
Student Questions:
- How old were you when
you realized that you wanted to
become a paleontologist and what
was it that interested you in this
area?
Andy Gray: Like
most kids of my generation, I was
pretty down with dinosaurs at a
young age. You know, all those picture
books and toys and what not. I distinctly
recall starring at this picture
of some guys working on the sauropods
of Dinosaur National Monument for
a long time with my brother and
wishing that we could do such cool
things. I work in paleontology,
but am not a paleontologist. I actually
consider myself a field biologist
of junior stature with a diverse
range of interests. I also collect
data on fishing boats for the government.
I've never been sure about what
I want to be, specifically. Over
the years from childhood to this
early, silly stage of being an
"adult" - all of my
life fantasies have involved adventure.
From treasure hunting, dreams
of an Alaskan hermitage, the big
ocean and hopes to someday sail
all over the world on it, there
has always been a drive to run
around and see things. Paleontology
is one way for me to actually
take this universal desire from
dream to reality.
- On the way to your digging
site in the Sahara, did you experience
any surprises or interesting events?
Andy Gray: The
most amazing event for me so far
has been the Cure Salee. At the
end of our first night in In Gall
a bunch of us were standing around
a Fulani dance circle where young,
eligible men hope to get chosen
by a young woman for courtship over
the next year. The men are dressed
up in their finest and often painted,
forming a circle shoulder to shoulder
and facing inward as they stomped,
clapped, and sang an amazing song.It
was very dark and hard to tell what
was really going on, until two older
Fulani men took "Dirty"
Josh Miller and myself by the hand
and lead us into the circle.
It’s hard for me to express
how overwhelmed I was. Perhaps fifty
men surrounded us and the song seemed
to surge all over me. Everyone was
smiling and having a good time as
my new friend, Daguti, lead me around
the circle to check out and encourage
each hopeful youngster. Other older
men were also within, leading the
song and cheering the boys on. And
there was one woman, approaching
and receding from the edge of the
circle to the center, singing and
moving her arms and body. By the
end of the session the circle had
collapsed in on us till only a few
men where left, so close that I
could have touched most of them.
Closer and closer - I almost felt
that the whole thing would collapse
in on us. Then it was over. Relaxed,
the crowd fell into individuals.
She had chosen.
- How did you decide on
this one special place in the Sahara
to look for dinosaurs?
Andy Gray: Our
team leader Paul Sereno settled
on all of the specific areas to
explore on this mission. Using geological
maps of the Sahara desert, he was
able to find exposures of rocks
that are likely to contain dinosaurs.
Currently we are walking over rocks
some 90 million years old, searching
for dinosaurs that have never been
seen before, as there are very few
examples of African dinosaurs from
this age.
- How long does it take
to dig up a whole dinosaur like
Jobaria?
Andy Gray: This
depends on the rocks that hold the
fossils (like how hard they are),
how much of the animal is there,
how big it is and how many people
you have working on it. A huge beast
like Jobaria could take
weeks to dig up, even in relatively
soft rock with half a dozen good
excavators working on it all day,
every day.
- Parent Question: What
evidence can you tell how a dinosaur
died?
Andy Gray: Often
there is very little evidence, unfortunately.
With exceptional preservation, situations
where the bones are very well preserved
and articulated (that is to say,
arranged together as they were in
life), one can sometimes find various
clues in the bones (trauma) or even
in the surrounding rock (struggle
marks) and the general repose of
the skeleton (such as animals stuck
in the mud or covered in a flash
sandstorm).
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