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SLA Family Night Curriculum Guide
Submitted by Christopher D. Lehmann on Thu, 11/20/2008 - 15:38.
For more information about SLA, download the SLA Family Night Guide -- (PDF Format)
Dred Scott Project
Submitted by Matthew Baird on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:43.
The attachments listed here lead you to my Dred Scott Benchmark project for my 9th grade African-American History class. One of my aims at SLA is to focus on "case studies" as a way of delving into history. (These don't have to be actual court cases, instead they are key access points where students have to understand the events that led up to the critical moment and the consequences/implications of what happened.
Sacrifice in the world and Their Eyes Were Watching God
Submitted by Zachary Chase on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:37.
By the end of the year, I was feeling reasonably secure in my ability to craft a unit plan that engaged the students and pushed them to engage the world around them. The unit plan found here and subequent project descriptions and student work provided me with the first true inkling of what was possible. It led the way for the Othello Unit Plan and the World Change Unit Plan in 10th and the Hamlet and Memoir Unit Plans in 9th. Overall, I'm pleased with how it turned out, but want to add more definition to the benchmark description so that the students feel the guidance they need. I'd also differentiate between the audio and written performance expectations at the outset. Eventually, that happened.
How Tall Is It?
Submitted by Yenche Tioanda on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:34.
For the last Geometry project of the year, students took on the role of writers of the "Do-It-Yourself" booklet series. This time, their challenge is to teach interested minds how to find the heights of tall objects that are hard to measure directly using the geometric concepts of similarity and trigonometry. The project required them to synthesize the methods and concepts they learned in class, data gathered from a series of physical surveying on the field, and several calculations in order to determine the unknown indirectly. It also demanded them to communicate their findings and understanding of mathematical ideas in as thorough a manner as possible, such that the final products (the DIY booklets) would be accessible to novice geometers.
Of all the projects they have done this year, this was one in which students were the most invested and engaged, perhaps due to the hands-on aspects of it and the straightforward nature of the calculations involved. The biggest challenge for many of the students had to do with executing the surveying procedures in accurate and precise manners, as well as with explaining geometric ideas and the logic behind them clearly and correctly.
The project handout and a few exemplary booklets are attached.
30-second Commercial: African American History
Submitted by Gamal Sherif on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:32.
As part of 9th-grade students' investigation in to "integrationism" and "separatism" within African American history, students were asked to create a 30-second commerical about topics from 1865-present. Click on the link below for examples of students' work:
30-Sec Commercial: MLK's "I have a Dream..."
30-Sec Commercial: Emmett Till
For more detailed descriptions of the research and writing process, see "Research/Essay Process" and "30-Second Commerical" notes below.
Research/Essay Process
- Class brainstorm on African American history topics, 1865-present
- Individual brainstorm on students' "top 10" list with 3 "What I know..." and 3 "What I want to know..." questions
- Extended research with identification of three APA-style citations for the top 3 of top 10 topics
- Identification of supporting images
- Coaching for a thesis statement and corresponding outline
- Peer and teacher editing of rough and final essay drafts
30-Second Commercial_Student Guide:
Once students devloped a liteal understanding of an aspect of African American history, they then began to work on the 30-second commerical. Below is an outline of the student guide:
For this assignment, you will take on the role of a video editor/production artist within a publicity firm. Your assignment is to create a 30-second commercial that advances the thesis statement of a much larger and more extensive position paper of the individual or organization who has hired your company. The commerical project outline is based on the thesis statement, research and arguments within the history essay. Although you will be using 21st century tools, you will be appealing to the audience of the time in which your topic ocurred.
In order to complete the project, you will have to present an outline of your commercial to classmates (and teacher) for review. You will upload an MS-word based outline of their 30 second commercial on Moodle and in Print.
The outline should include the following:
- Name and your topic
- Thesis statement
- 6-8 supporting slides (for about 3-5 seconds each); the slides may take on the following format, or you can modify them as needed:
- Introduction phrase
- image
- supporting phrase
- image
- supporting phrase
- image
- concluding phrase (and contact info).
- Production notes:
- sources for images, voice-over, sound files (if any)
- benefits of particular arrangement of texts/words
This outline will be used to guide the PowerPoint, Keynote, or other media* format commercial.
* If you elect to use another media format, please be sure that your colleagues (students, teacher) have the software to open and read it.
La Salud
Submitted by Jillian Gierke on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:27.
As the nice weather was approaching and I overheard students started discussing the latest fad crash diet for whatever reason, I couldn't think of a better time to talk about healthy nutrition and exercise in Spanish class! Before we even started the unit, students blogged for five days about what they ate, how many minutes of exercise and how many hours of sleep they had each night. (My initial plan was to have pen pals from Spain simultaneously blog about their diet, exercise and sleep patterns and then have the two groups of students do a cross-cultural comparison of each others' habits; however, it did not work out and this component of the project was left out.) After talking about using the subjunctive tense, students went back to each others' blogs and reflected on their own habits and make reccomendations for each other.
For the final project, the students turned into personal trainers and made five-day meals plans complete with exercise reccommendations for another student. The first attachement is an explanation of the project and the final two attachments are examples of student work.
Language Autobiography
Submitted by Joshua Block on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:21.
In 10th grade English students read Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neal Hurston. As we completed the book we began an inquiry of language in our lives. During this inquiry the main question we were investigating was "What are the relationships between language, power, and culture?" To investigate this question we analyzed the language in Their Eyes and then we read several different essays that relate to issues of language, identity, and power. For a complete list of the essays click here.
Students were then given the Language Autobiography assignment:
9th Grade Odyssey Unit: Tracing Archetypes and Moral-based Storytelling through Time.
Submitted by Anissa Weinraub on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:18.
Through the 9th grade study of The Odyssey, we explored how the story was crafted to teach its audience basic lessons of the time, (i.e. "How to be a real man." "The importance of loyalty in upholding social order.") Further, we tracked and analyzed how archetypes were used within the story. From this study, we looked to the modern version of this lesson-based, archetype-heavy story, the Fairy Tale. Students were then asked to create an illustrated fairy tale story book. Lastly, they had to reflect on their experiences developed through their own authorship, and then connect those experiences to a deeper understanding of Homer and The Odyssey.
Chemicals in the Environment
Submitted by Matthew VanKouwenberg on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:11.
This was a project wherein students took a chemical from the CDC Third Report on chemical exposure and studied the chemical, why we use it, what are it's effects, etc... Then many students created a Public Service Announcement alerting the public to harm they may be facing. This was very interesting because some of the students were looking at phthalates and bisphenol-A before there was a huge public outcry this past Spring. They liked the fact that something they were studying and knew about then later became big news.
Some of the more exemplary projects include one on PAH's, Mercury, Formaldehyde, Cobalt, and Cadmium but you can see all of them here and here.
Attached are the UbD, Student Guide, and Rubric.
Environmental Impact Study
Submitted by Timothy Best on Fri, 06/20/2008 - 15:08.
For our 10th grade Q1 benchmark, our students gathered soil and water samples from a proposed construction site next the Schuykill river near SLA. We then tested these samples for the presence of various chemicals. The class' lab data was shared electronically, and students wrote an environmental impact study paper based on this data. Each student used the data to support their recommendation as to whether the construction should proceed as planned.
