Showing posts with label Design Thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Design Thinking. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

How It Went Down | Empathy Building Robot



A national dialogue has formed around gun violence, thanks to the efforts of very brave young people. The following video chronicles the story of my students using a maker-ed and design thinking challenge to create an object or performance to start a dialogue around the events and central themes in Kekla Magoon's award winning novel How It Went Down.
My instructional design process leveraged methodologies ranging from the human-centered design practices of the LUMA Institute, visible thinking strategies as outlined by Harvard School of Education's Project Zero, and the process of guided inquiry as articulated by Trev MacKenzie.

Our student products and performances were all inspired by the themes of Magoon's novel, including but not limited to the topics of gun violence, underrepresented communities, criminal justice system reform, racial profiling and the way that statistics (on race and violence) are reported, street art, and so much more.

Students built robots, recorded podcasts, created infographics and other forms of data visualizations, composed slide decks for presentations, and wrote spoken word poetry to share at a whole-school assembly. Inspired by the work of the students articulating their vision, many adults and classmates in other grades requested copies of How It Went Down and thus began an impromptu community book club.

The Fluency Project at Carnegie Mellon University's Community Robotics, Education and Technology Laboratory (CREATE Lab) presented powerful stories on building cultures of community around technology and making. I was honored to present our story as a member of the Fluency Project cohort at YOUMedia in Chicago, Illinois.









Sunday, February 26, 2017

ManyLabs Hosts The Fluency Project: Numbers & Narrative Design Workshop

"Paper-meets-electronics-meets-open-data" is an revolutionary concept fueling San Francisco based NEXMAP. With a mission to provide learners with readily accessible, hands-on experiences that "connect the principles of engineering, systems thinking, and creative expression", NEXMAP's Hack Your Notebook Project and Open Data / Open Minds initiatives open-up a new kind of #FutureReady innovation. It is this type of thinking that aspires to support underrepresented and underserved populations in developing the core competencies of creative confidence, problem-solving, critical thinking, and collaboration.




David Cole introduces the themes for the design-thinking workshop and establishes relationships with members of the Fluency Project on our Bay Area research tour. (Photo Credit: J. Lanas)

Our Fluency cohort and team members met David Cole & Elisabeth Sylvan in the indie-industrial workspace of ManyLabs. As is the legacy of many fabled Bay Area / Silicon Valley start-ups, think-tanks, and entreprenurial incubators, this creative collective calls its home-sweet-home the friendly confines of a garage in San Francisco's dog-friendly Soma neighborhood. After touring all three floors of their facility, including the mindblowing, "data-driven food" aquaponics lab run by Eryk Maundu of Kijani Grows, we initiated our design-thinking workshop.



Eryk Maundu demonstrates how the arduino's sensors transmit nutrient information back to an easy-to-understand computer interface. Kijani Grows is a play on the Swahili word for "green", hence the idea "green grows". (Photo Credit: J. Lanas)

The aptly titled workshop "Numbers and Narrative" was broken-into three segments: a hands-on demo working with paper circuitry, an applied-ideation session facilitated by creative process worksheets (polished and beta-tested), and finally designing for data, or a glimpse into how experimentation and fabrication can lead to students collecting and working with data.



Elisabeth Sylvan emphasizes that science is an iterative process of asking and answering questions. (Photo Credit: J. Lanas)

Three immediate take-aways:

  • ManyLabs and The Fluency Project share common goals around developing "habits of mind" and "fluency" around a "process-oriented" approach to Student Learning, Data Literacy, and Technological Integration.
    • In many instances it becomes almost too easy to become enamored of the technology, or maker-ed tinkering components and lose sight of the learning. A process-oriented approach to learning and constructing meaning with empathy at its core is a safeguard to losing sight of what matters most.


Pigeons vs Seagulls: A prototype fabrication and design project to facilitate student data collection and interpretation. (Photo Credit: B. Slezak)

  • Quick-fix approaches to educational disparities too often throw money and an illusive promise of new technology as a panacea that will cure underperforming schools.
    • Shiny new baubles are not designed to address systemic inequity. A pedagogical shift is necessary to ensure that we are meeting our students' diverse needs and cultivating a culture of curiosity that empowers students to take control of their learning.


Brett, Lauren, and I are simply transfixed as we develop ideas for our own data collection prototypes. (Photo Credit: J. Kaminsky)

  • Sound research and strong practices of teaching and learning drive innovation, civic engagement, and data literacy--not just in the classroom, but in all realms of existence.
    • We are helping to shape and mold the next generation of thought-leaders, innovators, and change agents. We want them to represent all of our communities and to design solutions to problems that they face, to answer burning questions that they have, and above all else, to see the power that they already have as vested stakeholders in our collective future.


How might we build inquiry muscle and cultivate a disposition of critically noticing? Authentic inquiry, case making, and advocacy are central tenants that will remake learning, transforming a system built upon compliance to one that empowers all learners to follow their curiosities. (Photo Credit: J. Lanas)

Wow-- talk about exploring just the tip of the iceberg. There is so much more to come from this site visit and trip as a whole... This is just a first draft reflection while it is fresh in my mind. Already I am envisioning the educational implications of this type of design, fabrication, and data collection process in an interdisciplinary project. I dream of empowering my students in this manner.

My gratitude to our hosts, David and Elisabeth of ManyLabs, as well as the awesome CREATE Lab Fluency team, and my incredible Head of School at Holy Family Academy who pledged her support for me to go on this Bay Area tour.
-Jennifer Lanas #thefluencyproject


21st Century Notebooking (Video Credit: NEXMAP)

Monday, November 21, 2016

Giving Thanks | The Fluency Project: The First Quarter PBL


Despite having just crossed the threshold of the first quarter, our enthusiasm is still pretty infectious. We are entering the time of year that we’ve looked toward with mounting anticipation, and perhaps just a modest amount of apprehension: project proposal and action plan season! Needless to say, everyone in Cultural Literacy III has something to look forward to over the next few weeks.




Cultural Literacy III students at Holy Family Academy are encouraged to explore literature and life… to utilize numbers, narratives, and the arts in order to tell powerful stories. (Photo credit: Jennifer Lanas)

In quarter one, our juniors in Cultural Literacy III (Contemporary American Issues) read Kekla Magoon’s How It Went Down and paired it with close-reading and empathy building techniques. Along with preliminary research and narrative storytelling strategies, our Holy Family Academy students ideated wrestled with real-world issues present in the novel and inspired by their own experiences. In turn, students submitted project proposals ideating upon these issues with the goal of bringing the story to a wider audience, promoting awareness, understanding, and empathy. Ultimately, to become change agents we must first be ambassadors of deeply personal stories inspired by literature and life. 



Keshawn is critiquing a proposal using the “think-puzzle-explore” peer-review sheet. Inspired by Agency by Design and Project Zero, this “Think-Puzzle-Explore” method of peer review yielded thoughtful, targeted feedback. (Photo credit: Jennifer Lanas)

To evaluate each other’s work, we adapted a tuning protocol by Agency by Design. It is a systematic way to look at student work and offer feedback to reflective practitioners. My dear friend and colleague, Kristin Alvarez is a member of ABD’s Pittsburgh cohort. When she taught this to our Holy Family Academy teachers, I immediately began thinking of how I might be able to hack it for our Cultural Literacy students to use. The resulting activity yielded some of the best peer-review conferences that I’ve witnessed in my teaching tenure.



Our Holy Family Academy Juniors selected their own topic of exploration and the medium by which they would bring their projects to life. This falls under Trev Mackenzie’s definition of “Guided Inquiry”. (Photo credit: Trev Mackenzie)


Admittedly, it is a challenge facilitating so many different projects among three sections of Cultural Literacy. In a few instances, I am coordinating meetings with teams of students spanning multiple class periods. Moving forward, we are utilizing at least one class period per week (70 minutes) as well as taking advantage of our flexible schedule that gives all juniors a one-hour block of lunch and Independent Learning Time (ILT) three-days per week. Some teams and individuals are more enthusiastic about continuing this process of guided inquiry and project-based-learning than others. These motivated teens are writing podcast scripts, blogging at home, and sketching-out plans for storyboarding mini documentaries or constructing robotics projects. In order to facilitate the project and continue the pacing of our contemporary issues curriculum, we have project benchmarks throughout the month of November and the early part of December. 



Manor New Tech High School located near Austin, Texas is an example of a school pioneering a dynamic PBL model. Their story is featured in this video highlighting PBL success from start-to-finish. We are not quite there, yet… (Photo credit: Education Week / New Tech Network)


I would be a liar if I said that 100% of our students are on-board with this departure from the traditional “culminating project” model that we are all accustomed to. We spend one class period per week studying a mentor text or conducting primary source investigations in addition to the one period that we devote moving forward on our PBL goals. Considering that we only meet three sessions per week, it is imperative that everyone do their collective part to stay focused. I have to be a reflective practitioner and flexible in terms of timing and scheduling. It’s not as though I pitched the project timeline to our juniors and their joyous shouts of approval ensued a celebratory parade down Ohio River Boulevard… Had that occurred, I would request that we ride unicorns and invite sasquatch, chupacabra, and a leprechaun to preside over the festivities.



Botticcelli's Bigfoot will serve as the grand marshall of the parade celebrating teenagers applauding a school initiative that doesn't involve extended vacation and/or the addition of nap pods to the classroom. In all seriousness, my students really seem to enjoy this departure from the ordinary, but it is admittedly more work compared to what they were previously accustomed. (Photo credit: fullfrogmoon.com)


Without a doubt, I consider it a preliminary victory for our students to take control of the story of their learning. They are engaging in deeper learning, becoming experts in the topics that they have selected.  I have become a student in the world that they creating--whereby they are expert researchers and designers of an experience that will educate others. At this phase in the process, our juniors are now looking for an authentic audience to share their work and expert knowledge. I could not possibly be more proud of our students. Needless to say, perhaps I have the most to look forward to and to be thankful for this November.


This post can also be found on #thefluencyproject blog.

Monday, April 25, 2016

Futures Thinking + Design Fiction = Integrated Design Lab

What might the future look like? How might we harness the power of creativity to develop innovative solutions to problems that do not yet exist???

Welcome to the world of futures thinking.



Intermediate Integrated Design Lab (11th, ½ credit)




Only at @HFApgh... 
But I can see how you would think a class like this would be offered at CMU.


I am excited to pitch our 2016-17 course catalog to the students at HFA. In addition to Cultural Literacy and Introduction to Game Design, I am looking forward to teaching Integrated Design. I have been contemplating possible routes for taking our students' work in human-centered design to the next level... And pondering future problems and a world of possibilities looks like the perfect "sandbox" for our juniors to envision their roles as 21st century citizens and collaborators.


A Brief Course Overview: Futures Thinking & Design Fiction



In this course, students will envision the world as it might appear in the future. Together, students will collaborate upon defining the issues facing our society. They will then use design fiction to develop solutions to these problems. Considering the roles of urban planning and human centered design, students will utilize digital media to showcase and share their vision.


An emphasis will be placed upon understanding the current measures that businesses, governments, and philanthropic organizations are taking to improve the quality of life for individuals in our world today. 

Moonshot thinking is strongly encouraged for our students to develop the solutions for the world of tomorrow.



A Key Concept: To freely & frequently engage in moonshot thinking.

As long as your solution doesn't involve magic, it can be the creative spark to stoke the fires of curiosity and wonder


Video credit: Moonshot Thinking | Google



A Vision for Stakeholders in Our Future: Using Technology to Tell Our Story



This is a project-based learning, media production class focused on human centered design, design fiction, social justice, and futures thinking. 

We will rely upon technology to bring about our visions for the future:


Animoto, iMovie & Movie Maker: To create futuristic trailers, commercials, and public service announcements to present a vision of the future


YouTube: To upload digital media to the web and video-blog ideas for prototypes and reflections


Google Drawings: To create concept posters, infographics, and visuals to imagine future scenarios


Blogger: To collaboratively author and share posts presenting research, videos, and project updates

Google Hangouts On Air: To record and archive team meetings and empathy interviews with experts & community stakeholders

Google Forms: To survey individuals and collect data to use in creating design fiction and digital media

Google Maps: To map places where we will innovate and focus on futures thinking and design fiction

Google Slides: To construct a vision deck to present a glimpse of the future and solutions for tomorrow



A Key Concept: To use fiction, improv & role-play as a means of creating the suspension of disbelief.

Imagine a (near) future where anything can happen



Video credit: Productivity Future Vision | Microsoft


The Big Picture: A Showcase of Pitches & Prototypes


We will use our Gallop Strengths Assessment results as well as personality inventories to assemble into "idea teams" that will work cooperatively throughout the course of the semester. Idea teams will meet benchmark dates for submitting proposals, pitches, and prototypes. 

The culmination of the class will be a showcase of student learning. The students will present their vision for the future to our school as well as to an authentic audience of stakeholders from the community. 

Now, the specifics for this will vary, but the idea is that we will utilize a network of local partners and others within out expanded networked learning ecosystem. These experts will serve as consultants at different phases of the planning portion of the project, as well as offer guidance as mentors in their areas of expertise. 

Again, it is all dependent on the subjects that the students wish to explore and the mentors connecting with our students.


A PBL Rubric for Design Thinking and Process Evaluation:


Our Head of School / Chief Learning Officer shared this dynamite rubric that I've based the skeleton outline of this course upon. It comes from the Urban Assembly Maker Academy <www.uamakernyc>

1) Discover
2) Define
3) Design
4) Develop
5) Deliver

This is another portion of the course that is still in the "idea phase"... Hence the legal pad snapshot :^)




A Plausible Scenario: Making The Vision a Reality - Step by Step from Inception to Completion


1) Idea teams formulate a problem facing the City of Pittsburgh within the next 25 years.

2) Students begin an email correspondence with officials in Mayor Peduto's office and arrange a Google Hangout "focus-group panel" todiscuss issues

3) Students plan, make, and iterate based upon the initial discussion and subsequent research; they keep track of ideas via blog posts featuring written reflections, snapshots of prototypes, videos, etc.

4) Experts from the mayor's office (and new stakeholders/experts wanting to invest in our students' work) comment on the blogs, offering insights, guidance, and general mentorship

5) Students iterate and improve upon their vision, using design fiction and futures thinking to "flesh-out" problems and develop solutions

6) Idea teams construct video prototypes via Legos and/or other resources to make a low resolution prototype articulating this vision

7) All collaborators compile their work to assemble a vision deck to present at the showcase

8) We take the show on the road... first practicing and presenting in school, then making our way to the City County Building on Grant Street



Inspiration for Intermediate Integrated Design Lab


Thomas Steele-Maley 
- GEMS World Academy, Chicago, IL
Speculative Futures in Education: Using Design Fiction to Suspend Disbelief in Change

Backstory: Holy Family's Head of School / Chief Learning Officer Dr. Lisa Abel-Palmieri introduced me to Thomas Steele-Maley at the Active Learning Summit in July, 2015. Both are leaders in educational innovation. Like a moth to a flame, I am drawn to passionate leaders with a bold vision.

So, when I found myself in Chicago the following week, I was honored that Thomas took time out of his busy schedule to show me the view from the 10th floor of GEMS World Academy Campus, just bordering Millennial Park. The school has the look and feel of Google or IDEO's offices, like something out of Stanford's d-school. I was intrigued...

The week after that, I had a very similar experience back in Pittsburgh. Though Holy Family's Campus and program may not be in the heart of the Chicago financial district, it has heart and soul that makes it unique in every possible way.

I was not so much intrigued as inspired. This is a start-up high school of ninety students in two grades. The Pittsburgh equivalent of High Tech High, HFA is helping teens to build a new vision of themselves... I had the chance to be a part of something spectacular, to get in on the proverbial ground floor.

Lisa's vision to make Holy Family Academy an innovative independent Catholic High School serving families of limited economic means is a mission I subscribe to. Once upon I was a Theology student and President of the Students for Social Justice at St. Vincent College. This school was not just an opportunity for me to transform my practice in my eighth year of teaching... It represented an invitation to rediscover my vocation.

Now, I had a decision to make--would I leave my position of nearly 8 years as a teacher in a rural-suburban public high school (which happened to be in the town where I grew up) to become a part of Lisa's team at this new educational start-up school?

Needless to say--I saw a near future that could only become a reality if I took this chance. So I dove in, head first... I'm still swimming, navigating new and challenging waters of remaking learning. 

Looking back, as this school year draws to a close, it was the only choice that I could make.  I believe in the bold vision that is Holy Family Academy--our mindsets and the ability, as a teacher and coordinator of field based learning, to transform my own practice for a group of students who stand to benefit the most from an innovative and empathetic approach to maker-centered ed.  

This is the shorthand version of how I became a teacher and Coordinator of Educational & Cultural Affairs at Holy Family Academy. It began with a bold vision. Lisa and Thomas are the living embodiment of design thinker leaders, and I am immensely grateful for the both of them.


Intermediate Integrated Design Lab as a class is inspired by Thomas' presentation on "Design Fiction" and an "Aha-Moment" of clarity that I had (in the shower) thinking about taking action on this notion. And so, have been combing and cultivating resources for months. It's my educational head-nod to innovative design.

It is also a great reason to justify my income tax write-off of my subscription to Fast Company... Check out the haiku that I submitted on creativity - a concept we can all relate to!


Conclusion: Anab Jain's Thoughts on the Future & Unintended Consequences - The Need to Develop Context







How Will We Live? | Next Conference

The Above video from the Next Conference is a talk by Superflux's Director, Anab Jain. She is a rockstar, my friends. 

Jain’s video “How Will We Live?” is a bold vision in near futures thinking featuring an elderly man fed-up w/the smart fork & cane that his well-meaning children gave him to eat better & exercise. He gamed the sensors & ended up worse off than before. It is a paradigm for the way that unintended consequences can spiral out of control, especially when we merely focus on the "optics" of a situation--like big data taken out of its proper context. It can get very messy, very quick...

Every story needs to be framed within its proper context. Most importantly, to borrow a page from Pittsburgh Pirates manager Clint Hirdle, we must not neglect the "human analytics" of things as we begin to dream of innovating for the world of tomorrow.

More thoughts on this topic after we pitch the courses to students in mid-May.
-j

--As Detective Columbo would say, "Just one more thing..."

How might you inspire students to build, make, and create a world in which they are the new generation of innovators, social entrepreneurs, leaders, dreamers, and doers???


JFK's Moon Speech | Festival of Curiosity | Courtesy of JFK Homecoming

Friday, January 29, 2016

Creative Synergy: Good Partners In Crime & Adventures in Curriculum Hacking

Freshly picked ideas are worth climbing to the highest branches. Luckily, we need not always scurry up a tree, but rather we can find inspiration in much closer confines. Today's post is about the brainstorming and spitballing that makes classroom magic happen.


Cultural Literacy at Holy Family Academy

As part of a dynamic duo teaching Sophomore Cultural Literacy at HFA, I work closely with my partner in crime and co-conspirator, Ro Vigilante @vigilantewords. Together, we integrate American literature into the cultural context of 20th century American history and culture. 

This means that the students are truly developing a sense of the world in which they immerse themselves. In a way, we develop a taste for what it was like to live within the world that once was--to test its boundaries and limitations... To tackle it's challenges and embrace it's opportunities. 

For example, our exploration of the 1930s demonstrates a good mix of complimentary content, skills, and dispositions needed for students to connect with the world of the past, and engage the present moment via 21st century skills and design thinking.

Ro selected a bold play, Clifford Odettes Waiting for Lefty. Together we conducted a table read of the play--I thought this was neat on so many levels: Ro has an extensive background in theatre, so the students experienced Ms. Vigilante not just in her teacher costume, but as a real person, passionate about drama and the arts.

On the heels of this discussion, focusing on the nascent labor movement, a push to unionize, and the plight of young people facing a bleak and uncertain future, we transitioned to the Works Progress Administration and the Alphabet Soup programs designed to get us out of the Great Depression. 

Instead of focusing on content alone as in a traditional history class, we looked closely at the principles of human centered design and embarked upon a collective journey--project based learning and role play. Our students explored the way both the Depression and WPA affected the lives of real Americans. 

Want to learn more? Check out my blog post on using the principles of design thinking to develop Depression Era persona profiles. There's a groovy YouTube video of student perspectives on the making of the persona profiles, too.

The tech skills that we acquired using GAFE and our knowledge of the Depression helped students to build persona profiles. This also helped us to focus our attention on the disposition critical to being a good amateur historian: empathy. 

After students shared their work and posted their persona profiles to our learning management system, they recorded reflections discussing the critical need for empathy when embarking upon a venture such as this. Our students really developed context spanning the bounds of time, geography, race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status. Where else could all of this be possible but in Cultural Literacy, an integrated classroom.

Inspiration comes in many forms... It helps to have a good partner and to work at an innovative school that empowers teachers to have the creative confidence to "go for it" and take their moonshot ideas from the drawing board to the classroom. Needless to say, I have rediscovered my teaching vocation at HFA this year.


At my former school and alma mater, Trinity High School, I worked closely with a cohort of teachers whom happened to be my lunch buddies, too. In a public school, there are fewer opportunities to modify the curriculum, unless you get the chance to write curriculum. 

I took advantage of this offer when designing the curriculum for AP Lang & Comp a few years back. Last year I shifted gears again, when I jumped at the chance to incorporate 21st century tech and active learning strategies in the 9th Grade Academy. This lead to a bit of curriculum hacking and creative use of resources to build a low resolution Makerspace in my classroom. 

First, it should be noted that freshmen are in a precarious state of knowing all of the answers and being terrified that they will be exposed for not having all of the answers... They are miniature versions of the juniors and seniors that I taught for years, only more malleable. I jest... But with lots of elements of the truth.

In the 9th grade academy, there were no opportunities to rewrite curriculum, but as previously reported, plenty of chances to "hack-curriculum " existed. For instance, Vonnegut's Harrison Burgeron was teamed up with NPR stories about an autistic classroom and their iPad band... The classic short story The Most Dangeroous Game was coupled with a podcast on street violence and a gang of teenagers on Long Island profiling and hunting Latino youth.

My students, predominantly Middle-class teens living in a rural suburb of Pittsburgh, were transfixed. Their ability to make relevant connections to both fiction and the new media that I presented them with skyrocketed. From here, we began to supplement the existing curriculum with digital media that highlighted the relevance of the text. It was 9th grade English remixed and reimagined... 

The addition of digital media and relevant, real world content transformed a short story unit into a decisive turning point in our classroom--to work within the confines of curriculum and Common Core Standards familiar to all public school teachers, but find ways to remake learning for our students.

Again, it goes back to having good partners--people that you can trust with your both your heart and your thoughts: because for teachers, we live a thousand lives within our classrooms, and the spillover into our personal world has few boundaries. 

Case in point: I keep tablets and post its around the house (and in my car's cup holder) to jot down ideas for school--I happen to be blogging at the stove on a Friday night, seasoning a pot of chili...but duty calls! 

Yes, and... It comes down to this: To be a teacher is to be fully alive in your vocation. For you and your students are on a path of learning and discovery; it was written in the eternal dream of God. Your mission is to author that story for future generations. A future of wonder and possibility.

Thanks for looking back with me... 
There are so many of my former colleagues that I wish to thank--and maybe that will be a post down the line. But I really want to tip my cap to special Ed teacher and my partner for over 4 years Jen Rakoczy, my best friend across the hall and Empress of Empathy Diana Denman, my Chewba writing creative consultant Swarrow, my Pirate game companion and the golden voice of Trinity Athletics Matt White, my difference-maker/ keeper of perspective and Frida Khalo fan club president Marna Day, my trifecta of oracles of insights at the far end of the school Erin Helmkamp, Nicole Welch, and Gretchen Mountain, my history pals who always encouraged me to brainstorm about World Affairs Council and to bridge the gaps and help students make the connections between our two fields--Mary Ellen Jutca , Joe Dunn, Lou Majoris--and my carpool partner and rogue educator in constant search of ways to improve educational practice and get kids to actually speak another language "German Josh" Baringer, aka Herr Bear.

These folks, as well as a huge cast of characters from all over the district, helped me to brainstorm some of the most interesting and creative projects for our students. I loved my time at Trinity and I grew so much as a watched eight classes of students graduate... I am forever grateful.

So, find your tribe--in your department, in your school, in your world. Next week, I'll write about online PLNs via Twitter.

Friday, January 22, 2016

Design Thinking: Using Persona Profiles to Gain Empathy & Understanding

Persona Profiles are instrumental to gaining empathy & understanding: Luma & Stanford's d-school offer exceptional resources to help teachers begin to use the principles of design thinking in the classroom.

After sharing a few classroom artifacts via Twitter, I was asked to post a few of my lessons in which I used these principles of design thinking in our Cultural Literacy classroom. One of my favorite examples of using design thinking strategies from this first semester of teaching at Holy Family Academy is the 1930s Great Depression Persona Profile project. 

Our Cultural Literacy students studied aspects of American society in the 1930s. This included learning about the "Alphabet Soup of the Works Progress Administration" and reading Clifford Odettes' groundbreaking play, Waiting for Lefty. 


Props to my partner in crime and co-conspirator, Ms. Ro Vigilante for bringing Lefty into our world--tremendously insightful view of life in the 1930s and labor demonstrations integral for ensuring the rights of workers everywhere.

Stakeholder Map - This is the "low-resolution" starting point for our project. We began by thinking of different types of people who would be affected by the economic hardships of The Great Depression. It became evident that the damage inflicted upon American citizens crossed boundaries of class, gender, race, and ethnicity. Everyone was caught-up in the wake of this economic crisis that swept the nation and broader global community.

Demo - WPA Employee: Zora Neale Hurston, Federal Writer's Project
(I taught Zora's "How It Feels To Be Colored Me" for six years as an AP Lang & Comp teacher... I just had to honor her spirit! What an inspiration.)

Demo - Average American Woman
Students really needed to consider factors such as class, gender, race, ethnicity, geography and other social circumstances as they pertained to 1930s American life. Talk about digging into serious social implications of "who we are" and "where we are from".

Student Produced Persona Profiles - The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
Domzy, Mason & Tyrell (The Mayor) created dynamic persona profiles to examine the WPA's affect upon a community in Texas. To achieve their objective, they needed to know information about the mission of the CCC and they had to create a stakeholder map identifying the individuals whom would be affected by this WPA program.

We created an Animoto video as a trailer to inspire other classrooms to try using the principles of human centered design and design thinking in education. Warning: the jazz flute in this video is powerful.

I want to thank #dtk12chat, #BFC530 & #remakelearning for connecting me to a global network of educator-innovators. We are passionate about reforming education: to educate this generation of students for the innovation age. It begins with stoking the fires of learning. 

Our Persona Profiles sparked student curiosity about what it meant to live in the 1930s... How life was radically different for individuals based upon their class, gender, race, ethnicity and other social demographics. It was a tremendous opportunity for growth.

Digital media resources, such as the Depression-Era cartoon "Confidence: Starring FDR & Oswald the Lucky Rabbit", helped my students to connect with a topic as big as the Great Depression. Additionally, this video sparked an intriguing discussion on how cartoons are a perfect medium to convey complex ideas for a wide audience. Children and adults of any age can get something out of the subtle and overt messages within this cartoon from 1933. It is an exemplar text for primary source analysis.

The template for the lesson was designed using Google Apps for Education. This prototype is my first iteration of the project--so, it is nice starting point, but definitely a work in progress. Please pass along your adaptations and ideas for improvement. 

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

"How MIGHT we..." Stoking the Fires of Student Inquiry UsingConditional Language


How might we HOOK our kids on LEARNING? Encourage intellectual curiosity in & out of the classroom.


This past July, to mark the one-year anniversary of the Ice Bucket Challenge, I tweeted the PEEL template that I developed for our Tuesdays With Morrie unit. Click the link below to download a PDF.


Mary Cantwell @scitechyedu proceeded to chat with me, as I tagged the tweet #dtk12chat. Mary & my Head of School, Dr.LisaAbel-Palmieri @learn21tech, founded the #dtk12chat. I'm indebted to Mary, even though she nearly gave me heatstroke... We'll talk about that later. She offered insights and advice for effectively implementing this technique--HMW...

"The 4th word is critical", she remarked. It's true, too: just look at how limiting and scripted my "Ice Bucket Challenge" template appears--full of words like "game-change" and specifics such as "social media campaign" or "fight against terminal disease". Sure--I developed it for a very specific part of a unit. But in doing so, I inadvertently put limits on my students' creativity.

This was "just-in-time" intervention. As I spent my summer traveling between Pittsburgh and Chicago, returning from the Active Learning Summit hosted by Lisa, I was in the right frame of mind to self-evaluate. Mary's observations challenged and inspired me. I had become so engrossed in our conversation, I accidentally got off the red line at the wrong stop. Trust me--an added two mile walk in +90* heat couldn't even slow down my momentum.

I love Pittsburgh... I'm a "Pittsburgh Girl"... But, my goodness--public transit in Chicago is just incredible. We have much to learn, Steel City.

Big Take-Aways:

I did not realize that July's Active Learning Summit would inspire me to resign my position of nearly eight school years and take on the role of Cultural Literacy teacher at an innovative start-up high school founded in the tradition of Catholic schooling for urban youth and families of any means. 

I did not realize that a Twitter brainstorming session would lead me to question and redevelop so much of my digital portfolio.

I did realize, though, on that hot-hot afternoon, that we need to be brave enough to look in the mirror and critically take stock of our work. To accept that the iterative process is ongoing and will have necessary setbacks and failures along the way. These missteps are not deal breakers, but on the contrary they are moments of exponential growth. Personally and professionally... If we allow them to be.

I completed a class in Computational Thinking, too. Talk about a truly inspired summer--quality time to push myself as a teacher and lifelong learner.

I've posted a few templates below--some are in varying stages of the iterative process. By no means am I an expert--but I want to share my work to help you to find your best work in and out of the classroom, too. Let's encourage each other and motivate one another!

The key, I believe, is to use conditional language as much as possible... Let's not lock our students into looking for one solution, but encourage free thinking in all of its varying forms. We can hook our kids on learning by creating relevant and thought-provoking discussion starters and writing prompts that tap into cultural movements. So, let the iterative process begin!

Templates:
PEEL + image/INFOGRAPHIC + writing prompt (PEEL = point, explanation, evidence, link to main idea)
HMW + PEEL + image