Category Archives: Learners

Considering Their Future Selves

This is a guest post from Monica Snellings (@InquiringMonica). The original posts can be found here and here.


Mark Silberberg, middle school principal at LREI (and a big supporter of Inquiring Minds), integrated our lesson, My Future Self, into a class on values. The student’s schedule for this class is only once a week so getting 5th graders to retain their focus and stick with this provocative thought experiment took some ingenuity on his part. Continue reading Considering Their Future Selves

Progressive Approach to Practicing: HS Wind Ensemble’s Peer Evaluations

Every music director has made the following exclamation either out loud or silently while lying awake at night: “Our ensemble needs to experience playing music together after all notes and rhythms have been mastered.” Why? This is when the magic of playing music together happens. We want our students to experience how the joy and art of collective music-making is taken to a heightened state when our minds no longer need to be concerned with “what note is that?” or “how does that rhythm go?” What’s more, when students can play their music effortlessly we can put our energy towards exploring and practicing the many nuances necessary for bringing the music to life. Too often directors and students spend their valuable class time going over things that should be tackled before or after a rehearsal. Continue reading Progressive Approach to Practicing: HS Wind Ensemble’s Peer Evaluations

My Future Self

With our eighth graders off in DC (#lreidc) exploring memorials and monuments and making connections to their humanities inquiry and the seventh graders in Williamsburg (#lreiwb) doing research for their Colonial Museum exhibits, our fifth and sixth graders have gotten to stretch their wings a bit in our middle school spaces. Our fifth grade civilization simulation is just getting under way and sixth graders are using insights gained from the religions they created to begin to explore the impact of religion on life in Europe and the Middle East during the Middle Ages. Our fifth and sixth grade student reps have also been hard at work planning for the activities that they will run at this weekend’s Halloween Fair.

In Fifth Grade Adolescent Issues, we have started a project that asks students to envision their future selves that we’re doing with our friends at Inquiring Minds  (@InquiringMonica  and  @InquiringDK). We started this process by exploring some general thoughts and ideas about the future. We will then will take a trip back into the past as students research  people that they admire to tease out qualities and characteristics that they would like to cultivate in themselves. Students will then use these insights to design a possible future for themselves. Continue reading My Future Self

Framework for Improvisation

Once upon a time, in my tenth year as a music specialist, I was teaching a class of 3rd and 4th graders. We were about to record a 10 minute piece based on what we learned about form, instrumentation, dynamics, and playing together as a group.

Because the piece would be created on the spot, I thought it was important to review the“frameworks for improvisation” I had developed. They were already being used with success by colleagues at other schools. I was eager to try it out on my students.

There was a particularly imaginative and impulsive child who was quite vocal during our preparation. After class he stayed behind to tell me, “Sheri, I really understand why we needed to go over the rules but sometimes I just need the noise.” Continue reading Framework for Improvisation

When the familiar becomes this sort of alien world

At our first divisional faculty meeting, we used some provocative insights from Warren Berger‘s A More Beautiful Question to examine some of our familiar routines and practices through the lens of our important summer learning experiences. We wondered together about how might these powerful experiences reframe how we look at the familiar so as to make it seem new again and open for inquiry. Continue reading When the familiar becomes this sort of alien world

Designing for Innovation

What do you get when you bring together faculty teams from each division and frame mission-focused inquiry around a design thinking framework? You get our first successful Innovation Institute. Over a five-day period this summer, a diverse group of faculty came together to explore the concept of time and how it impacts teaching and learning at LREI. With facilitation by designers from the School of Visual Arts Design for Social Innovation program (@InquiringMonica and @playlabinc), the participants explored how a design thinking mindset can be used to forward our mission through the cultivation of empathy connected to purposeful action. Within in this framework, participants identified questions connected to problems whose solution will have a positive institutional impact on our work and culture. Continue reading Designing for Innovation

Big Time: Prototype 1 (a video)

As part of the first Innovation Institute, our middle school cohort consisting of Susannah, Sherezada, Dave and Matt took on the challenge designing the weekly block of time that will be designated for individual student exploration.  Our initial prototyping dealt with testing out the process through which students will determine their topic of exploration.  We brought in 3 middle school students to test our initial ideas. Here is a video recap:


You can view our slide show presentation here.

 

When Students Take the Lead, Discovery Follows

discoveryLast Friday saw the roll-out of Discovery Afternoon version 2.0. Our 2013 inaugural run of Discovery Afternoon drew on the expertise and passion that exists within our own faculty. It was an opportunity for students and teachers to get to know each other outside of the classroom and to strengthen our middle school community of learners.Discovery Afternoon provided an opportunity for experiential learning guided by teachers through activities that extended beyond the daily academic routine. Activities offered gave teachers an opportunity to share a hobby, passion, or favorite city location with a small group of students. Activities were designed to help students grow intellectually and emotionally as they pursued new interests or explored passions shared with their teachers. It was a great success. Continue reading When Students Take the Lead, Discovery Follows

Pursue your Passion

This year’s Senior Project is nearing the end! Next Friday marks the end of Senior Project 2014. By far, this has been the most successful project in my eight years as principal because, instead of encouraging internships for each member of the senior project, we refocused the project to answer the following question:

You have seven weeks to pursue your passion. What will you do?

Art as Experience

artsIt was a pleasure to see so many of you at last night’s Middle School Art Show and Performing Arts Festival. For an evening that would suggest a focus on product and performance, I was struck by how much emphasis there was on highlighting the artist’s process. Visual art teachers Jeremiah Demster and Nathalie Hall and our young artists were engaged in regular conversations about the evolution of the work throughout the evening. At the same time, performing arts teachers Deborah Damast, Susan Glass, Joanne Magee, and Matt McLean and their students made sure that the evening’s performances were also balanced with insights into each groups working process as well. Continue reading Art as Experience

Drama & Learning

Last week third grade teacher Elaine Chu led a workshop for associate teachers on the use of drama in the classroom.  We were asked to become colonists and to discuss what we could learn about a particular conflict faced by the colonists in New Amsterdam from a letter and a diagram found in a mysterious box.  The third grade teachers have used drama a lot this year to make the social studies curriculum come alive.  For example, this morning the third grade teachers acted out Peter Stuyvesant’s arrival in New Amsterdam and his consulting of his Council of Nine about all the problems in the town.  The teachers were Peter Stuyvesant, the students his Council of Nine. The Council of Nine was asked to come up with possible solutions to some of the town’s problems.
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 Third graders are not the only ones to experience the social studies curriculum coming alive in this way.  Second Grade teachers have been playing the roles of Brooklyn citizens sharing their need for a bridge across the East River with engineer John Roebling (played by Jacob Rasmussen) in the mid 1800’s.  To launch their study of immigration and the Lower East Side, fourth grade teachers invited their students to a formal tea party.  Students dressed up in formal attire and ate delicate snacks. At one point during the party, Jacob Riis arrived (played by fourth grade associate teacher Jake Tiner). Riis proceeded to show the gathered elite his photos of How the Other Half Lives.   Students then discussed, in character, how they might respond to the poverty and squalor they had observed.  One person shared that is was really not his problem; another suggested that a public official should spend a night in one of the tenements.  Children became the people they were studying as a way of better understanding them.
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Kindergarteners create their own puppet shows each week.  In groups of five they first decide what their character will be, and then write the story that connects all five characters, which is no small feat! Students make scenery, practice the play, and perform it for their classmates at the end of the week.  This week’s puppet show was developed out of the social studies curriculum, a study of the school.  It took place in the cafeteria (which they had visited) and something caught on fire.  They called Phil (whose office they had recently visited) and he called the fire department.  “The next day everything is o.k. at LREI and everyone comes back to work.” Kindergarteners try on different personalities, work together to make a story make sense, and figure out ways to include everyone.  Children who are shy sometimes are more comfortable performing for the group when they are behind their puppets.
Second Graders and Fourth Graders will soon be writing plays as culminating social studies activities.

Making Real Room for Student Voice

Last weekend, Mark Silberberg, Middle School Principal, emailed me and other administrators here at LREI the following article:

“Our” Curriculum vs. “Their” Curriculum by Sam Levin

When people talk about student voice, they’re talking about feedback sessions and letting students be part of hiring committees. When they say, “Let’s give students a voice,” they mean, “let’s give them a seat at school board meetings.” That’s not what they need. They need a lot more. We need to give them a pen and a microphone and a hammer and a shovel and a chalkboard. We need to give them a classroom and an audience and blank sheet that says “curriculum” at the top. We need to give them a budget and a building. Kids are disengaged. They aren’t learning, and a lot of what they are learning is no longer relevant to the 21st  Century. Fortunately that’s becoming more kosher to say. It’s no longer radical; people are starting to see the problems. But unfortunately, a lot of the proposed solutions aren’t radical enough. They’re superficial. People talk about giving students a voice. A seat at the table. If we’re going to solve these problems, we’re going to need more than that. We want kids to be engaged in learning, to be excited to show up and happy about school? Give them real agency in their own education. We want kids to be learning, to be passionate about their work? Let them learn things that have real meaning to them. Make them the authors of their curriculum. 

Commenting on the article, educational thought leader Will Richardson added:

I’ve been arguing more and more of late that “curriculum” is a major if not the major problem in schools right now. And it’s not just that our current curriculum is in many ways outdated, irrelevant, and bloated. (I was talking to a teacher at an international IB school last week who described in depressed tones that much of his new curriculum could be summed up by one word: “more.”)

The institutional curriculum almost necessarily denies students agency over their own learning. And this is especially damaging when most kids now have the ability to create a personal curriculum around the things they truly care about learning out of the abundance of information, people, and tools they now have access to. Nothing especially new here, but worth saying again.

But creating (not giving) agency for students to build their own curriculum changes the whole game. It requires equity in tools and access. It requires trust. It requires a whole different narrative in terms of what exactly it is that we’re preparing students to be able to do. It requires being ok with not reading Shakespaere, or not speaking French, or not knowing (or caring) what a polynomial is.

And a lot more. But why wouldn’t we work toward giving kids “a classroom and an audience and a blank sheet that says “curriculum” at the top?” What are we scared of?

I love this article, and I have been sharing it with anyone and everyone.  Not only does it speak to an important consideration for the future of education, but also to what we attempt to do here at the high school with our students. From honors projects, where students design and implement their own curriculum based on a specific passion with the help of a faculty mentor, to senior project, which is really a “passion project” seniors design and implement for their last several weeks of high school, we have examples of students designing their curriculum. When students have choice, they challenge themselves (“challenge with choice” as Assistant Principal Micah Dov Gottlieb puts it), and they are more engaged in their learning when they choose what they want to study!

At the same time, we can do more to support a student’s vision of relevant learning. This year, we are surveying students before determining which electives to offer for the 2014-2015 school year. We want to offer what they want to learn. We are in conversation with students about expanding honors projects into larger, self-designed and self-directed classes for year-long credit, such as the weather balloon project,  “Project Leo,” considered an additional science class for three of our junior class members. They have been working on the project for most of the school year, and they look forward to the balloon launch from a field in Ohio on May 10th. The weather ballon project is just one of many examples of students participating in expansive experiments, all student driven with faculty support.

I encourage you to sit down with your student(s) and have the conversation: write “curriculum” on the top of a piece of paper. Take it from there, and share the results with us here!

A Mindset for Family Conferences: How to Deliver Praise

Today and tomorrow parents and teachers are sitting together for spring conferences and having rich conversations about lower school students. April conferences can be celebratory. There is such a span of growth and so much work to consider from September to April: the stories and poems they’ve written, the math projects they’ve persevered through, the self-portraits they’ve created, the block buildings they’ve erected, the great thinking they’ve done, and the collaborations they’ve experienced.    
What to share with your child when you get home? The simple answer is share all of it. The meaning and importance of the home-school connection is reinforced for children when they hear about their parents and teacher getting together and talking. The trickier question is how to praise your child for their accomplishments and growth at school in ways that build confidence and genuine self-esteem rather than inadvertently undermining it. We’ve all heard the warning against over-praising to avoid raising “praise junkies,” but then how to go about it instead? I recommend praising, highlighting, noticing, and talking about the following: effort, persistence, hard work, and making mistakes and learning from them. There will be plenty of examples from your parent-teacher conference, but if you take this advice to heart, you can apply it in ordinary daily opportunities as well.
Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck has conducted extensive behavioral research that shows that “when we praise children for their intelligence, we tell them that this is the name of the game: Look smart, don’t risk making mistakes.” She counsels parents and teachers to help students focus on how hard they’ve worked rather than on how smart they are. She illustrates how this encourages students to work more tenaciously, take risks, and achieve more. “Emphasizing effort gives a child a variable that they can control,” Dweck explains. “They come to see themselves as in control of their success. Emphasizing natural intelligence takes it out of the child’s control, and it provides no good recipe for responding to a failure.” One piece of practical advice Dweck offers is for parents to regularly share mistakes they’ve made and how they learned from them. She’d like to see a world in which your family’s typical dinner table conversation routine on Friday night is to ask each other, “What mistakes did you make this week? Let’s celebrate those!”
To read more about Dweck’s research, compelling experiments, and advice for parents, check out her terrific book Mindset, or read this not-so-new but very good article about it.   Meanwhile, remember to tell your child how apparent their hard work and effort was to you in all the projects and anecdotes their teachers shared at conference. And if you’re really brave, even consider telling your child how much you enjoyed seeing all the wonderful mistakes in their work!