21st Century Skills
 
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Jenna Daugherty is our guest blogger today.  She is the intervention specialist that I (and the students) are lucky enough to work with everyday.  Jenna is a passionate professional that shares Garth and my desire for reflective teaching, change, and taking risks.  She came up with a great lesson after we reflected about starting a "no homework" policy.  Students were engaged in learning!  It made me proud to be a teacher today; a shining moment in my career.  I can only be as good as those with which I collaborate.  Luckily I keep great company in Garth and Jenna.  Thank you for making me better at what I do...

Yesterday, in class, we wanted to get the students thinking about the rest of the year and what things relating to world history they wanted to learn more about.  Instead of coming into class with a pre-generated detailed lesson plan and syllabus on what we were going to teach, what students would be learning and how they would learn it; we gave the reigns to the students. We want students to take ownership of the class and the content we discuss. The goal is to create students that are invested in the discussion, assignments and projects they do within the class.  Students feel empowered to control their learning destiny.  It wasn’t just lip service either; Mike and I are going to make the curriculum fit what students want to study. 

The past couple of weeks we’ve discussed culture and introduced different aspects, or parts, of culture. We started this with a project Garth created called “What was 7th Grade like?”.  Students look into their own lives and family history to uncover culture/cultural diffusion from the recent past; the decade their parent(s) were in 7th grade.  We incorporated higher level questioning skills, interview and research skills with students through this project. Now that students had an idea of what makes “culture”, we introduced the foundation of the class, which is the concept of civilization. 

We posed a question: “what characteristics do you think a group of people have to possess to be considered a civilization?”  Having a list of characteristics for civilizations, we told the students to think… Think about what you want to learn appropriate to a class entitled “world history”.  That was their homework.  Not a worksheet.  No questions or short answers.  Simply to think about class outside of the school.  It is our first attempt at the new “no homework” policy in our class. 

So, today students came prepared to discuss and debate what they had thought about.  Many students came with their lists of questions (which was not required), and those that didn’t necessarily write those down, had a couple minutes to organize their thoughts on paper.

Around the classroom we hung large colored poster boards with the different characteristics of civilizations: geography, government, the arts, economy, religion, social structure and an “everything else” category. We gave each student post-it notes to write their best questions down, whether it was all 5 or just 1. It wasn’t the quantity that mattered; it was the quality.  After writing their questions on separate post-it notes, students stuck them to their desks.  They then had to rotate to a new seat somewhere else in the classroom and were given the task to take another student’s post-it notes and stick them onto the correct colored poster board around the classroom.

This lesson incorporated the different modalities of learning as the students discussed with each other their questions by means of think/pair/share (auditory), wrote down the questions and sorted them onto colored poster boards (visual), and had the opportunity to physically handle the post-it notes while walk around the room to find the right category (kinesthetic). 

Watching this in an inclusion setting with students identified with disabilities, it was impossible to distinguish between students of varying abilities.  Listening the student’s conversations, we heard tons of higher-level questioning as they asked each other questions and debated about certain areas.

...We are developing patient-learners who value quality not quantity


-Jenna

 


Comments

Kim
09/20/2010 17:56

Wow, I never though that letting kids have such freedom to move around the room could actually cause them to be more focused. Love the idea of post-it notes and different colored paper. Kids can move and re-arrange questions to create a hierarchy of importance. I think something like this once a week would truly help keep students engaged. My students could gain so much by an activity like this! Maybe create a giant list of inventions and ideas from different civilizations and do the same type of thing. Love the idea of brainstorming for homework, but being there with students in the room when you are completing activities...takes the fear out of failure and allows students to feel like they can really be free to be creative and expressive. Now all I need is an intervention specialist that is creative!

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Carla Jackson
09/22/2010 12:06

I think ths type of lesson is great. Often times we get so bogged down with lesson plans and worksheets that we lose sight of the fact that learning should be fun and engaging. What better way to keep students engaged than to have them actually become involved. This lesson involves students directly, they serve not only as students but as teachers to one another as well,and I thinks this is a great way to incorporate cooperative learning in the class. This type of hands on creative activity is what I want with my lessons.

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Shannon Conley-Kurjian
09/29/2010 20:26

Critical pedagogy! Learning is so organic...I am watching my own Kindergartner learn to read...it is astounding...she practices because she is curious not because her teacher asked her to! History in not something that needs "practiced" in the sense that Spanish or Math need to be...History needs to be practiced like medicine...it's a venue for solving and growing...LOVE IT!

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Amanda
11/12/2010 07:29

It is such an interesting concept to allow the students to pick what they learn and what order they want to learn it in. It really allows students to take ownership in what they are learning.

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Joan
08/31/2011 16:26

I find this to be very creative for the students in a different aspect of learning. This would definetly help students learn that were not conventional learners. The student that is bored or needs to be challenged would greatly benefit from this type of learning. Students in an integrated learning center would profit from this because they need to feel important, they are owning the learning. The learning is in the hands of the student and they can feel good about the lesson.

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